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 ...
The Cambodian government Friday approved a draft law that aims to punish those who ignore, minimize, or deny the crimes ...
Thirty-six years after the Cleveland Elementary School shooting, Stocktonians remember the five children who were lost and ...
People who ‘deny the truth of the bitter past’ could be jailed for up to five years under the law, which still needs ...
However, while it is led by a very right-wing president who has done and said things that should never have been done or said ...
Former information minister Khieu Kanharith credited Ponchaud as “the first to draw world attention” to the plight of ...
On April 17, 1975, the Khmer Rouge entered Phnom Penh, and my family’s world was upended. My father, who ran a small pharmacy, succumbed to dysentery and malnutrition in one of the regime’s labor ...
Pol Pot and his henchmen inflicted unprecedented carnage, genocide, forced labor camps, and sickness, claiming about 2 ...
The draft law, which imposes penalties on those who deny these crimes, was approved during a cabinet meeting chaired by Prime ...