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The Phnom Penh Post is also available in Khmer. [3] It previously published a weekend magazine, 7Days, in its Friday edition. [4] Since July 2014, it has published a weekly edition on Saturdays called Post Weekend, [5] which was folded into the paper as a Friday supplement in 2017 and was discontinued in 2018.
Phnom Penh ( / pəˌnɒm ˈpɛn, ˌpnɒm -/; [ 6][ 7][ 8] Khmer: ភ្នំពេញ, Phnum Pénh [pʰnomˈpɨɲ], lit. 'Penh's Hill/Mountain') is the capital and most populous city of Cambodia. It has been the national capital since the French protectorate of Cambodia and has grown to become the nation's primate city and its economic ...
The Nation Post [4] (Khmer) 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)
The Phnom Penh Post, a newspaper founded in 1992 as Cambodia sought to re-establish stability and democracy after decades of war and unrest, said Friday that it will stop publishing in print this ...
Other rooms preserve leg-irons and instruments of torture. They are accompanied by paintings by former inmate Vann Nath showing people being tortured, which were added by the post-Khmer Rouge regime installed by the Vietnamese in 1979. The museum is open to the public from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
The Royal Palace of Phnom Penh and Cambodian royal life. Post Books. ISBN 978-974-202-047-7. Lamant, Pierre-Lucien (1991). La Creation d'une capitale par le pouvoir coloniale: Phnom Penh. Harmattan. Mizerski, Jim (2016). Cambodia Captured: Angkor's First Photographers in 1860s Colonial Intrigues. Jasmine Image Machine. ISBN 9789924905004.
pre-13th century. Kampot pepper ( Khmer: ម្រេចកំពត, mrech Kampot; French: poivre de Kampot) is a cultivar of black pepper ( Piper nigrum) grown and produced in Cambodia. During the early 20th century under the French protectorate within French Indochina it was also known as Indochinese pepper ( French: poivre d'Indochine ...
The fall of Phnom Penh was the capture of Phnom Penh, capital of the Khmer Republic (in present-day Cambodia ), by the Khmer Rouge on 17 April 1975, effectively ending the Cambodian Civil War. At the beginning of April 1975, Phnom Penh, one of the last remaining strongholds of the Khmer Republic, was surrounded by the Khmer Rouge and totally ...