At least 37 people were arrested as a result of the clash, which took place Tuesday morning.
Members of the non-governmental Border Committee say military skirmishes between Cambodia and Thailand have damaged areas of the temple and elsewhere and should be repaired with money from Thailand.
The court, looking again at a 1962 decision, issued a ruling Monday that said land on the “whole promontory of Preah Vihear” belongs under Cambodian sovereignty.
A military standoff that lasted for years arose in 2008 between Cambodia and Thailand, who both lay claim to land near the temple.
At least 168 people were killed in the flooding, which affect 20 provinces and cost an estimated $50 million in damage in recent weeks.
An estimated 300,000 Cambodians enter the job market each year, with many seeking employment abroad, where they often work illegally and are vulnerable to abuse.
Chhouk Bandith was found guilty of injuring three women when he fired into a crowd of garment workers at a protest in Svay Rieng in February 2012.
Polonsky was held for three months in Cambodia earlier this year, after an alleged altercation with a group of Cambodian boatmen off the coast.
Michael Vannak Khem Misiewicz is facing federal charges in a San Diego court, making him the second Cambodian-born serviceman to face courts over military misconduct in recent years.
Chhouk Bandith, former governor of Bavet town, Svay Rieng province, remains at large, despite being found guilty of the shooting.
Following a two-day visit to Phnom Penh, Scot Marciel told reporters he was not in the country “to try to impose any solutions” to the impasse.
Cambodian authorities say they have not prepared a strong reaction to allegations that US spy agencies eavesdropped on regional leaders.
Following the last of closing remarks on Thursday, prosecutors said they want to see a verdict in the atrocities crimes trial of Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan by the middle of next year.
Some panelists suggested cutting aid to Cambodia to pressure the government to change.
Demonstrators marched to the embassies of the United States, France and the UK, delivering a petition that calls for an election investigation.
Defense lawyers for aging Khmer Rouge leader Nuon Chea told the UN-backed tribunal on Thursday that evidence in portions of the case against him were “limited and inconsistent.”
The party expects as many as 50,000 people to attend the three-day protest, which coincides with the anniversary of the 1991 signing of the Paris Peace Agreements.
The Ministry of Interior, meanwhile, issued a statement saying it will allow a gathering of no more than 10,000 people, but not a march through the streets.
Victor Coppe, international defense lawyer, said the court should view decisions made by Nuon Chea in the “larger context” of the time.
Some 100 demonstrators had planned to hold a “people’s assembly” at the government-sanctioned Freedom Park, but that gathering was canceled.
ព័ត៌មានផ្សេងទៀត