Cambodia's government approved a draft law that will jail for five years anyone denying atrocities, including genocide, ...
Under the seven-article bill, people who ‘deny the truth of the bitter past’ will be jailed between one to five years and ...
Cambodia’s Cabinet on Friday approved a draft bill that will toughen penalties for anyone denying atrocities were carried out ...
It ended on January 7, 1979, when Hun Sen, himself a former Khmer Rouge cadre, led Vietnamese forces into the capital to expel the murderous regime. Former prime minister Hun Sen stepped down in ...
Cambodian President of the Senate Hun Sen greets as he arrives at Victory Day to mark the 46th ouster anniversary of the Khmer Rouge regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975 ...
Former Man City owner Thaksin was visited by Hun Sen - who lost an eye fighting the Khmer Rouge in the 1970s - in Bangkok in February 2024, declaring themselves close friends. A police spokesman ...
Some Khmer Rouge leaders have been convicted, while others died during proceedings at the ECCC, which formally concluded in late 2022. In May, Senate president Hun Sen suggested that the law be ...
Lim Kimya, a French-Cambodian citizen who worked as a French bureaucrat before entering the Cambodian parliament for the CNRP ...
Hun Sen, sitting alongside his son, Hun Manet, to mark the 46th anniversary of the ousting of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime that ruled in Cambodia in the late 1970s — and which left some 1.7 million ...
Four people were killed and five others injured as a crowd scrambled for food and cash handouts from one of Cambodia’s richest men as a Chinese Lunar New Year gift ...
The draft law, which imposes penalties on those who deny these crimes, was approved during a cabinet meeting chaired by Prime ...