Family of pro-democracy activist Wanchalearm Satsaksit and the United Nations' Committee on Enforced Disappearances call for more transparency
Cambodia’s new prime minister to make an official visit to China later this week in an apparent attempt to deepen ties with Beijing
Police say freed drug lord is Taiwanese as are some of the suspects. Others are Turkish and Cambodian Americans.
Convict, who was serving a drug sentence, remains at large; six suspects are in custody, police say
Hun Manet assures Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi that Cambodia’s new government will maintain 'unchanged stance' on Bejing’s one-China policy and a 'non-interference policy' toward China
US officials voice suspicions that the facility will be used exclusively by China’s military
Critics say vote was a sham as Prime Minister Hun Sen possibly moves toward transferring power to his eldest son
In interview with Chinese TV, Hun Sen offers most concrete plans for ensuring Hun Manet will become prime minister, as has been long speculated
Rights groups warn of a deteriorating labor rights situation as three garment factories fired 20 workers recently after they attempted to form independent unions.
In a statement Monday, her lawyers called for her to be transferred to the main prison in Phnom Penh, and asked Biden to use his planned visit to Cambodia on November 12-13 to push for her release.
Sea-level rise, riverbed mining, hydropower damming, and groundwater extraction are making once-rich soil unsuitable for crucial food crop
Furious over the U.S. House speaker's visit to Taiwan this week, China says it is suspending talks with the United States on several issues. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with VOA about tensions in the region. Senior Diplomatic Correspondent Cindy Saine reports.
In VOA Khmer interview, he urges calm after Pelosi visit to Taiwan, emphasizes importance of free, fair elections in Cambodia, stresses need for humanitarian relief in Myanmar
Amid soaring tensions over China's military drills in the Taiwan Strait, VOA's Khmer Service Reporter Sun Narin interviewed U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
She says lack of court funding caused breakdown of communications with hundreds of victims who registered as civil parties in the trials
An international lawyer claims a lack of court funding caused a breakdown of communications with hundreds of victims who registered as Civil Parties in the trials.
It was a stark shift after an election that many agree may have been the most free and fair in Cambodia’s modern history. Robertson noted there was far less violence and intimidation from the ruling party than usual, an assessment shared by commune chiefs who spoke with VOA Khmer.
The central challenge for Hun Sen and his diplomats is maintaining regional unity without alienating Beijing — a feat Phnom Penh failed to achieve during its last chairmanship a decade ago.
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