Environmental activists are working to conserve a rare turtle that lives in three provinces of northeastern Cambodia.
The film follows the lives of three Cambodians caught up in the country’s rapid economic development, as they struggle to make ends meet.
The proposed Lower Sesan II dam would be situated on a site in Stung Treng province that saw a 5.2 magnitude quake in 1978, according to a recent impact study.
Filmmaker Mam Kalyanee told VOA Khmer from the festival that the film was meant to show how development in Cambodia “affects our people’s lives and environment.”
US Embassy spokesman John Simmons confirmed the identities of the men and said they had been evacuated to Bangkok.
A source in Kampong Chhnang said the four were training using a 33-mm rocket when it exploded.
An annual meeting of the Mekong River Commission, which includes representatives of Cambodia, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam will be held in Laos on Jan. 17.
Cambodia will send an eight-member team to Laos on a fact-finding mission over the controversial Xayaburi dam project at the end of the month, officials said Thursday.
The European legislation does not just cover oil and mineral wealth, but is extended to forestry resources as well.
The film follows the lives of three Cambodians, as they grapple with the impacts of development in their rural homes.
Cambodia is now seeking to expand its exports of its jasmine rice and other varieties.
Police say the body of journalist Hang Serei Oudom, 44, was found in the trunk of a car in the remote northeast province of Ratanakkiri.
Load more