Foreign investors are rushing into Cambodia's frontier property market. Phnom Penh is rising upward almost overnight, but the rate of construction is raising questions about where all the investment is coming from and what effect it will have on the local market. David Boyle reports from the Cambodi
Rising hopes that the half-century U.S. trade embargo of Cuba might be coming to an end are raising concerns for U.S. cigar makers who could potentially face stiff competition from Cuban cigars. VOA Khmer's Cheoung Pochin narrates.
The International Committee of the Red Cross has started distributing thousands of almond tree plants to Palestinian farmers in the Gaza strip whose lands along the border with Israel have been ravaged by successive wars. VOA Khmer's Sreng Leakhena narrates.
Oil and gold: two key commodities whose up-and-down prices mirror the unsettled world situation. VOA Khmer's Chhim Sumedh narrates.
Labor leaders fear the draft law will make it harder for workers to unionize and demonstrate.
Some 75 percent of Cambodia’s women are employed in agriculture, according to the World Bank.
Forced labor generates about $150 billion a year, according to an estimate by the International Labor Organization.
The peppercorns, which come in white, red and black, are described by gourmet chefs as having a complex flavor with floral overtones.
Hoefinger travelled to Cambodia as a backpacker in 2003, fell in love with the country and befriended many Cambodian women who worked in Phnom Penh’s bars.
Sun Chanthol’s comments mark the second time Cambodian trade officials have shown support for the TPP.
Several low-income settlements outside Nairobi are using a new community-based currency. VOA Khmer's Cheoung Pochin narrates.
Ok Serei Sopheak told “Hello VOA” this week that the meeting, at Sunnylands Estate, in Rancho Mirage, produced a joint declaration that will become a “legacy of US policy.”
Load more