Once scarred by conflict and closed to visitors, several destinations around the world have transformed from battlefields ...
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - A war crimes tribunal will deliver its verdict Monday in the trial of Pol Pot's chief torturer, the first for a top Khmer Rouge cadre 31 years after the fall of a regime blamed ...
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — The international court convened in Cambodia to judge the Khmer Rouge for its brutal 1970s rule ended its work Thursday after spending $337 million and 16 years to convict ...
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - Cambodian staff at a Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal went on strike on Monday, an official said, as a funding crisis deepened at a court already bogged down by resignations, ...
Henry Kissinger, who died on Nov. 29, 2023 at the age of 100, stood as a colossus of U.S. foreign policy. His influence on American politics lasted long beyond his eight-year stint guiding the Nixon ...
Cambodians hoping for a punishment to match their suffering expected more. In its first verdict, the U.N.-backed tribunal established in 2006 to try the leaders and decisionmakers of the Pol Pot ...
The artist Fonki developed a graffiti style that blends ancient motifs with scenes of modern Cambodia. By Mike Ives and Cy Liu Kong Nay, a blind lute player who endured the horrors of a totalitarian ...
Nuon Chea, the most senior surviving leader of Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge movement, was arrested yesterday and charged for involvement in the deaths of more than a million Cambodians in the 1970s. A ...
Two former Khmer Rouge leaders have been found guilty of crimes against humanity by a Cambodian court and sentenced to life in prison. Nuon Chea, who was deputy to the infamous Pol Pot, and Khieu ...
Fifty years and five months ago, Wes Soule still remembers the tension at the Pentagon when his radio team received word of ...
Rob Hamill was 14 when his brother was killed by the Khmer Rouge. The tragedy shaped his decision to raise his family at sea ...
Kong Nay, a blind lute player who endured the horrors of a totalitarian regime, exposed a new generation of Cambodians to their country’s traditional music. By Mike Ives People on both sides of the ...