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BBC World Service Radio FM 100. Broadcasting 24 hours a day. Available in and around Phnom Penh (2007). Apsara Radio FM 97 MHz; Family FM 99.5;MHz; National Radio of Cambodia (RNK) AM 918 kHz and FM 105.7 MHz; Radio Beehive FM 105 MHz; Radio FM 90 MHz; Radio FM 99 MHz; Radio Khmer FM 107 MHz; Radio Sweet FM 88 MHz
The center presently contains the world's largest archive on the Khmer Rouge period with over 155,000 pages of documents and 6,000 photographs. DC-Cam undertakes numerous research, outreach, and educational projects which have resulted in the publication of many books on the Khmer Rouge period, a national genocide education initiative, and support services for victims and survivors of the ...
National Radio Kampuchea; Phnom Penh Radio FM 103; Radio FM 90.5; Radio Beehive FM 105; DaunPenh eFM 87.50Mhz; ABC News FM 107.5; Lotus Radio FM 100.5hz; Radio Free Asia; Radio Khmer FM 107; Radio Love FM 97.5; Radio Town FM 102.3 MHz; Raksmey Hang Meas Radio FM 95.7000; Royal Cambodia Armed Forces Radio FM 98; Voice of America Khmer; Women's ...
National Archives of Cambodia. The National Archives of Cambodia (Khmer: ...
In 1983 a Radio and Television Commission was created. [7] The committee set up Radio Television Cambodge (RTC) for the restored television service. Initially broadcasting three nights a week, by 1986 it broadcast every day, for an average of four to five hours. A few years later, Cambodia's first provincial station opened.
The Khmer Rouge came to power in 1975 through the Cambodian Civil War, where the United States had supported the opposing regime of Lon Nol and heavily bombed Cambodia, [54]: 89–99 primarily targeting communist Vietnamese troops who were allied to the Khmer Rouge, but it gave the Khmer Rouge's leadership a justification to eliminate the pro ...
In 2012, Human Rights Watch described Beehive Radio as "a key platform for promotion of human rights and democracy in Cambodia". The station is one of the few to address controversial topics, including "Cambodian civil society, the fight against HIV/AIDS, maternal mortality and human trafficking, campaigns for women’s rights and gender equality, political and economic transparency, equitable ...
Cambodian rock of the 1960s and 1970s was a thriving and prolific music scene based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, in which musicians created a unique sound by combining traditional Cambodian music forms with rock and pop influences from records imported into the country from Latin America, Europe, and the United States.