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The Phnom Penh Post (English) The Phnom Penh WEEK [5] (English) Rasmei Kampuchea Daily (Khmer) Sneha Cheat [6] (Khmer) The Southeast Asia Weekly (English) Sralanh Khmer (Khmer) Thngay Pram Py Makara News [7] The Voice of Khmer Youth (Khmer)
On 15 July 2014, approximately 200 opposition protesters marched at Phnom Penh's Freedom Park when another violence erupted, only with the tables turned. This time, Daun Penh District security forces were beaten severely by protesters, resulting in at least 8 guards injured. The hospitalized security guards called for justice and condemned the ...
Malis (from Khmer: ម្លិះ – "jasmine" [2]) is a Cambodian restaurant opened in 2004 in Phnom Penh, the first Cambodian fine dining restaurant in the city. [3] To design the restaurant's menu chef Luu Meng travelled throughout Cambodia for six months and collected traditional recipes, which he presented using farm-sourced ingredients and modern cooking techniques. [4]
The country began its vaccination programme and detected its largest outbreak to date in February 2021 [28] [29] thought to be related to a Phnom Penh quarantine breach that led to outbreaks at nightlife venues. [30] Cambodia reported its first death on 11 March 2021. [31]
The print edition of The Cambodia Daily was published in Phnom Penh in an A4-size format and was delivered six days a week, Monday to Saturday, until 2017, when it reduced its print run to five days per week. The paper featured four to ten pages of local news daily written by its Cambodian and foreign reporters.
The Vann Molyvann House is a landmark of the city of Phnom Penh [1] built in 1966 by Khmer architect Vann Molyvann as his private house and architecture office. It has been dubbed as the "Cambodian Taliesin" [2] and praised as a "testimony to the unique ability of Southeast Asia's greatest living architect to fuse European modernism with traditional Khmer design in an apparently seamless style."
Svay Pak is located eleven or twelve kilometres (6.8 or 7.5 mi) north of the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh, [5] [6] in the district of Russey Keo, [7] at coordinates As of December 2021, the urban commune had a square footage of 5.675 square kilometres (2.191 sq mi); [2] in January 2003, Svay Pak had a diameter of 150 metres (490 ft).
For instance, the 2018 CDB suggests that 1,474,489 people were living in Phnom Penh municipality, [1] whereas the 2019 census (which only preliminary results have been released for) suggests 2,129,371. [2] The figures listed in the table below are based on the most recently published Commune Database.