Countries: Philippines, Cambodia, Nepal, Thailand Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs Please refer to the attached Infographic. CAMBODIA AND THAILANDFollowing five days of armed hostilities along their shared border, Cambodia and Thailand agreed to an immediate and unconditional ceasefire on 28 July. The agreement was reached during negotiations hosted by Malaysia, in its capacity as ASEAN Chair, with the participation of representatives from China and the United States. Further negotiations are planned to reinforce the ceasefire agreement. The humanitarian impact of the recent clashes is significant. As of 27 July, Thailand’s Ministry of Public Health reported 13 deaths, 36 injuries and more than 138,000 displaced people. Meanwhile, Cambodia’s Ministry of National Defence reported 13 fatalities, including 8 civilians, 50 injuries and at least 80,000 people displaced in Oddar Meanchey province as of 26 July.NEPALOn 23 July 2025, the Government of Nepal officially declared a “Drought Emergency” across eight districts in Madhesh Province for a duration of three months. According to the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Authority (NDRRMA), the drought has affected regions with varying degrees of severity, with Bara, Parsa, parts of Rautahat, and areas within Saptari identified as the most severely impacted. Humanitarian partners are actively providing support to affected communities on the ground.PHILIPPINESThe combined effects of multiple tropical cyclones and the southwest monsoon over the past week have affected over 6.2M people (1.75M families) in 17 out of 18 regions in the Philippines. The National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) is currently validating the casualties with 2 confirmed deaths, 11 injured, and 3 missing. According to the same report over 203,000 people remain displaced and are taking shelter in either one of the 1,419 evacuation centres or with family. With the weather outlook improving, this number is steadily decreasing.The national government and local governments continue to take the lead in response and recovery efforts and have provided over US$10.6M (PHP 624M) worth of assistance to affected communities. As of 28 July, 192 local governments, the majority of which are in regions 3 and 4A, have declared state of calamities allowing them to utilize their allocated calamity funds. Local organizations have likewise activated their rapid response protocols, with some conducting rapid needs assessments. State weather bureau PAGASA reports that two tropical cyclones are present in the Philippine Monitoring Domain. Although these are not expected to make landfall, the agency cautions rainy weather is still expected which may leads to possible flooding and landslide incidents.