These People Were Arrested by the Khmer Rouge and Never Seen Again
Cambodian authorities photographed many of their 2 million victims. These portraits, recently colourised, humanise that tragedy.
Irving Penh: Portraits of Phnom Penh’s riverside sellers
The vendors plying their trade on Phnom Penh's streets play an invaluable but under-appreciated role supporting life in the capital. But using their makeshift riverside studio, two photographers set out to place these overlooked workers in the spotlight.
[Photos] The cyclos, street food and shophouses of 1950s Phnom Penh
This collection of archive images depicts Phnom Penh in April 1953, offering an insight into Cambodia on the brink of independence, a country yet to be touched by the heady development of the 60s or the tragedy of the 70s.
A Cambodian community’s struggle to survive virus economic fallout
Since the outbreak of Covid-19, Cambodia’s urban-poor communities have suffered severe economic shocks and fallen further into poverty. Without a secure social security safety net to fall back on, many are now relying on NGOs to keep them afloat.
War and Beauty photographic exhibition opens at FCC Angkor by Avani
FCC Angkor by Avani presents a photo exhibition entitled “Cambodia: War and Beauty” by award winning documentary filmmaker, Dr. David A. Feingold.
A daughter’s 40-year search for the truth behind the Khmer Rouge’s most haunting photograph
ABC News -
It is one of the Khmer Rouge's most striking and haunting photographs.
Celebrating the unsung heroes
In a country with no formal recycling system, edjais — the Kingdom’s informal waste pickers — have taken the noble responsibility of collecting plastic wastes which are haphazardly thrown on the streets of Phnom Penh.
Cambodia Peace Project as Seen Through the Simple Use Film Camera
Peering through the past with eyes from the present, twenty students from Li Po Chun United World College of Hong Kong documented modern-day life on the streets of Cambodia.
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In Southeast Asia, the horror of Kissinger’s explosive legacy goes on
CNN -
Fifty years after Henry Kissinger drove American foreign policy in Southeast Asia, the region continues to live with the fallout from the bombing and military campaigns backed by the former secretary of state, who died last week.