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 ...
The draft law, which imposes penalties on those who deny these crimes, was approved during a cabinet meeting chaired by Prime ...
Under draft legislation announced last week, anyone denying “the truth of the bitter past” could be imprisoned for up to five ...
The ultra-Maoist movement -- led by "Brother Number One" Pol Pot -- wiped ... It was made at the request of influential former leader Hun Sen who in May claimed that some politicians still refused ...
Mr. Hun Sen handed that job to his son Hun Manet in ... Mr. Pich Kimsrin appears to be the younger brother of Pich Sros, a pro-government politician who is most well-known for filing the complaint ...
In a recent chat, Abhishek Bachchan's I Want To Talk director Shoojit Sircar admitted that the movie's box office collection ...
A tattered Cambodian flag flaps gently in the scorching midday sun on her corner lot, its depiction of the Angkor Wat temple barely still visible, while her brother scoops water from a clay ...
Hun Sen said the law would "define any person or ... Khmer Rouge regime chief Pol Pot, known as "Brother Number One", never faced justice, dying in 1998 before the court was established.