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{{ For|the 1981 song by British singer [[Kim Wilde]]|Cambodia (song) }}
cam goetszzz is from here
{{featured article}}
{{Infobox Country
|native_name = [[Image:Cambodia5-trans.png]]<br/>''Preăh Réachéanachâkr Kâmpŭchea''
|conventional_long_name = Kingdom of Cambodia
|common_name = Cambodia
|image_flag = Flag of Cambodia.svg
|image_coat = Coa cambodia.jpg
|symbol_type = Royal Arms
|image_map = LocationCambodia.svg
|national_motto = [[Image:kh-motto-trans.png]]<br/><small>"Nation, Religion, King"</small>
|national_anthem = ''[[Nokoreach]]''
|official_languages = [[Khmer language|Khmer]]
|usual_languages = [[Khmer language|Khmer]]
|demonym = Cambodian
|capital = [[Phnom Penh]]
|latd=11 |latm=33 |latNS=N |longd=104 |longm=55 |longEW=E
|largest_city = capital
|government_type = [[Constitutional monarchy]]
|leader_title1 = [[King of Cambodia|King]]
|leader_name1 = [[Norodom Sihamoni]]
|leader_title2 = [[Prime Minister of Cambodia|Prime Minister]]
|leader_name2 = [[Hun Sen]]
|sovereignty_type = [[Independence]]
|sovereignty_note =
|established_event1 = from [[France]]
|established_date1 = [[November 9]], [[1953]]
||area_rank = 89th
|area_magnitude =
|area_km2 = 181,035
|area_sq_mi = 69,898 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]-->
|percent_water = 2.5
|population_estimate = 13,971,000
|population_estimate_year = July 2006
|population_estimate_rank = 63rd
|population_census = 11,437,656
|population_census_year = 1998
|population_density_km2 = 78
|population_density_sq_mi = 201 <!--Do not remove per [[WP:MOSNUM]]-->
|population_density_rank = 112th
|GDP_PPP_year = 2006
|GDP_PPP = $36.82 billion
|GDP_PPP_rank = 89th
|GDP_PPP_per_capita = $2,600
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = 133rd
|HDI_year = 2004
|HDI = {{increase}}0.583
|HDI_rank = 129th
|HDI_category = <font color="#ffcc00">medium</font>
|currency = [[Riel (currency)|Riel]] (៛)<sup>1</sup> <!--What's "?"...? Answer: it's not a "?" if you have Khmer Unicode Fonts installed; it's the currency symbol for the Khmer Riel-->
|currency_code = KHR
|time_zone =
|utc_offset = +7
|time_zone_DST =
|utc_offset_DST = +7
|cctld = [[.kh]]
|calling_code = 855
|footnote1 = Local currency, although [[United States dollar|US dollars]] are widely used.
}}

The '''Kingdom of Cambodia''' ({{pronEng|kæmˈboʊdɪə}}, formerly known as '''Kampuchea''' ({{IPA|/kæmpuˈtʃiːə/}}, [[Image:Cambodia5.png]], [[transliteration|transliterated]]: ''Preăh Réachéanachâkr Kâmpŭchea'') is a country in [[Southeast Asia]] with a population of over 13 million people. [[Phnom Penh]] is the capital city. Cambodia is the [[successor state]] of the once powerful [[Hindu]] and [[Buddhist]] [[Khmer Empire]], which ruled most of the [[Indochina|Indochinese Peninsula]] between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries.

A citizen of Cambodia is usually identified as "Cambodian" or "Khmer," though the latter strictly refers to [[Khmer people|ethnic Khmers]]. Most Cambodians are [[Theravada|Theravada Buddhists]] of Khmer extraction, but the country also has a substantial number of predominantly [[Muslim]] [[Cham people|Cham]], as well as ethnic Chinese, Vietnamese and small [[animism|animist]] hill tribes.

The country borders [[Thailand]] to its west and northwest, [[Laos]] to its northeast, and [[Vietnam]] to its east and southeast. In the south it faces the [[Gulf of Thailand]]. The geography of Cambodia is dominated by the [[Mekong]] river (colloquial [[Khmer language|Khmer]]: ''Tonle Thom'' or "the great river") and the [[Tonlé Sap]] ("the fresh water lake"), an important source of fish. Much of Cambodia sits near sea level, and consequently the Tonle Sap River reverses its water flow in the wet season, carrying water from the Mekong back into the Tonlé Sap Lake and surrounding flood plain.

Cambodia's main industries are garments and tourism. In 2006, foreign visitors had surpassed the [http://english.people.com.cn/200701/03/eng20070103_337920.html 1.7 million] mark. In 2005, [http://today.reuters.com/news/articleinvesting.aspx?view=CN&storyID=2007-01-19T094720Z_01_BKK304046_RTRIDST_0_OIL-CAMBODIA.XML&rpc=66&type=qcna oil and natural gas] deposits were found beneath Cambodia's territorial water, and once commercial extraction begins in 2009 or early 2010, the oil revenues could profoundly affect Cambodia's economy.

== Etymology ==
''Cambodia'' is the traditional [[English language|English]] [[transliteration]], taken from the [[French language|French]] ''Cambodge'', while ''Kampuchea'' is the direct transliteration, more faithful to the Khmer pronunciation. The [[Khmer language|Khmer]] ''Kampuchea'' is derived from the ancient Khmer kingdom of [[Kambuja]] (''Kambujadesa''). Kambuja or [[Kamboja]] is the ancient [[Sanskrit]] name of the [[Kambojas]], an early tribe of north [[India]], named after their founder [[Kambu Svayambhuva]], believed to be a variant of [[Cambyses]]. See [[Etymology of Kamboja]].
[[Image:srokkhmer.png|thumb|250px|left|"Khmer Land" in [[Khmer alphabet|Khmer writing]], a local expression which refers to Cambodia]]

''Preahreachanachâk Kampuchea'' means "Kingdom of Cambodia". Etymologically, its components are: ''Preah-'' ("sacred"); ''-reach-'' ("king, royal, realm", from Sanskrit); ''-ana-'' (from [[Pāli language|Pāli]] ''{{IPA|āṇā}}'', "authority, command, power", itself from Sanskrit ''{{IPA|ājñā}}'', same meaning) ''-châk'' (from Sanskrit ''[[chakra]]'', meaning "wheel", a symbol of power and rule).

The name used on formal occasions, such as political speeches and news programs, is ''Prâteh Kampuchea'' ({{lang-km|ប្រទេសកម្ពុជា}}), literally "the Country of Cambodia". ''Prâteh'' is a formal word meaning "country."

The colloquial name most used by Khmer people, is ''Srok Khmae'' ({{lang-km|ស្រុកខ្មែរ}}), literally "the Khmer Land". ''Srok'' is a [[Mon-Khmer languages|Mon-Khmer]] word roughly equal to ''prâteh'', but less formal. ''Khmer'' is spelled with a final "r" in the Khmer alphabet, but the word-final "r" [[phoneme]] disappeared from most dialects of Khmer in the 19th century and is not pronounced in the contemporary speech of the standard dialect.

Since independence, the official name of Cambodia has changed several times, following the troubled history of the country. The following names have been used in English and French since 1954.
*''Kingdom of Cambodia''/''Royaume du Cambodge'' under the rule of the monarchy from 1953 through 1970;
*''Khmer Republic''/''République Khmère'' (a [[calque]] of [[French Republic]]) under the [[Lon Nol]] led government from 1970 to 1975;
*''Democratic Kampuchea''/''Kampuchea démocratique'' under the rule of the communist [[Khmer Rouge]] from 1975 to 1979;
*''People's Republic of Kampuchea''/''République populaire du Kampuchea'' under the rule of the Vietnamese-sponsored government from 1979 to 1989;
*''State of Cambodia''/''État du Cambodge'' (a neutral name, while deciding whether to return to monarchy) under the rule of the United Nations transitional authority from 1989 to 1993;
*''Kingdom of Cambodia''/''Royaume du Cambodge'' reused after the restoration of the monarchy in 1993.

== History ==

{{main|History of Cambodia}}
[[Image:Bayon Angkor Relief1.jpg|left|thumb|200px|A [[Khmer Empire|Khmer]] army going to war against the [[Champa|Cham]], from a relief on the [[Bayon]]]]
The first advanced civilizations in present-day Cambodia appeared in the [[1st millennium]] [[Anno Domini|AD]]. During the [[third century|3rd]], [[fourth century|4th]], and [[fifth century|5th]] centuries, the Indianised states of [[Funan]] and [[Chenla]] coalesced in what is now present-day Cambodia and southwestern Vietnam. These states, which are assumed by most scholars to have been Khmer,<ref name="CS">Country-Studies.com. [http://www.country-studies.com/cambodia/early-indianized-kingdom-of-funan.html ''Country Studies Handbook'';] information taken from US Dept of the Army. Accessed July 25, 2006.</ref> had close relations with [[China]] and [[India]].<ref name="BRIT">Britannica.com. [http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-52477 History of Cambodia.] Accessed July 25, 2006.</ref> Their collapse was followed by the rise of the [[Khmer Empire]], a civilization which flourished in the area from the [[ninth century|9th century]] to the [[thirteenth century|13th century]].

The [[Khmer Empire]] declined yet remained powerful in the region until the 15th century. The empire's center of power was [[Angkor]], where a series of capitals was constructed during the empire's zenith. [[Angkor Wat]], the most famous and best-preserved religious temple at the site, is a reminder of Cambodia's past as a major regional power.

After a long series of wars with neighbouring kingdoms, Angkor was sacked by the [[Thai people|Thai]] and abandoned in 1432. The court moved the capital to [[Lovek]] where the kingdom sought to regain its glory through maritime trade. The attempt was short-lived, however, as continued wars with the Thai and [[Vietnam]]ese resulted in the loss of more territory and the conquering of Lovek in 1594. During the next three centuries, The Khmer kingdom alternated as a vassal state of the Thai and Vietnamese kings, with short-lived periods of relative independence between.{{History of Cambodia}}
[[Image:Norodom-Sihanouk.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Norodom Sihanouk]]]]
In 1863 [[Norodom of Cambodia|King Norodom]], who had been installed by Thailand,<ref name="CHANDLER">{{cite book | last = Chandler | first = D.P. | authorlink = William Shawcross | title = A history of Cambodia (2nd ed.) | publisher = Westview Press | date = 1993 | location = Boulder, CO }}</ref> sought the protection of France. In 1867, the Thai king signed a treaty with France, renouncing [[Suzerainty]] over Cambodia in exchange for the control of [[Battambang]] and [[Siem Reap]] provinces which officially became part of [[Thailand]]. The provinces were ceded back to Cambodia by a border treaty between [[France]] and [[Thailand]] in 1906.

Cambodia continued as a [[protectorate]] of [[France]] from 1863 to 1953, administered as part of the French [[colony]] of [[Indochina]]. After war-time occupation by the [[Japanese empire]] from 1941 to 1945, Cambodia gained independence from [[France]] on [[November 9]] [[1953]]. It became a constitutional monarchy under [[Norodom Sihanouk|King Norodom Sihanouk]].

In 1955, Sihanouk abdicated in favour of his father in order to be elected Prime Minister. Upon his father's death in 1960, Sihanouk again became head of state, taking the title of Prince. As the [[Vietnam War]] progressed, Sihanouk adopted an official policy of [[Neutral country|neutrality]] until [[Cambodian coup of 1970|ousted in 1970]] by a military [[coup d'etat|coup]] led by Prime Minister General [[Lon Nol]] and Prince Sisowath [[Sirik Matak]], while on a trip abroad. From [[Beijing]], Sihanouk realigned himself with the [[communist]] [[Khmer Rouge]] rebels who had been slowly gaining territory in the remote mountain regions and urged his followers to help in overthowing the pro-[[United States]] government of Lon Nol, hastening the onset of [[Cambodian Civil War|civil war]].<ref name="SIHNK">{{cite book | last = Sihanouk | first = Norodom | authorlink = Norodom Sihanouk | title = My War with the CIA, The Memoirs of Prince Norodom Sihanouk as related to Wilfred Burchett | publisher = Pantheon Books | date = 1973}}</ref>

[[Operation Menu]], a series of secret [[B-52]] bombing raids by the [[United States]] on alleged [[Viet Cong]] bases and supply routes inside Cambodia, was acknowledged after Lon Nol assumed power; U.S. forces [[Cambodian Incursion|briefly invaded Cambodia]] in a further effort to disrupt the Viet Cong. The bombing continued and, as the Cambodian communists began gaining ground, eventually included strikes on suspected Khmer Rouge sites until halted in 1973.<ref name="SIDESHOW">{{cite book
| last = Shawcross
| first = William
| authorlink = William Shawcross
| title = Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the destruction of Cambodia
| publisher = Touchstone
| date = 1987
| location = United States}}</ref>

Some two million Cambodians were made refugees by the bombing and fighting and fled to Phnom Penh. Estimates of the number of Cambodians killed during the bombing campaigns vary widely. Views of the effects of the bombing also vary widely. The US Seventh Air Force argued that the bombing prevented the fall of Phnom Penh in 1973 by killing 16,000 of 25,500 [[Khmer Rouge]] fighters besieging the city.<ref>Ibid., p. 298.</ref>Journalist [[William Shawcross]] and Cambodia specialists [[Milton Osborne]], David Chandler and [[Ben Kiernan]] argued that the bombing drove peasants to join the [[Khmer Rouge]]. Chandler writes that the bombing provided "the psychological ingredients of a violent, vengeful and unrelenting social revolution."<ref>''Pacific Affairs'', vol. 56, no. 2, Summer 1983, p. 295.</ref>Cambodia specialist Craig Etcheson argued that it is "untenable" to assert that the [[Khmer Rouge]] would not have won but for US intervention, and that while the bombing did help [[Khmer Rouge]] recruitment, they "would have won anyway."<ref>Etcheson, Craig, ''The Rise and Demise of Democratic Kampuchea'', Westview Press, 1984, p. 97</ref>
[[Image:Khmer Rouge6.jpg|thumb|300px|Some of the Khmer Rouge leaders during their period in power. [[Pol Pot]] is on the left. (Photo on display at the Tuol Sleng)]]
As the war ended, a draft US AID report observed that the country faced famine in 1975, with 75% of its draft animals destroyed by the war, and that rice planting for the next harvest would have to be done "by the hard labor of seriously malnourished people." The report predicted that
<blockquote>without large-scale external food and equipment assistance there will be widespread starvation between now and next February... Slave labor and starvation rations for half the nation's people (probably heaviest among those who supported the republic) will be a cruel necessity for this year, and general deprivation and suffering will stretch over the next two or three years before Cambodia can get back to rice self-sufficiency.<ref>Shawcross, William, ''Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia'', Touchstone, 1987, pp374-375</ref></blockquote>
[[Image:PolPot'75.jpg|thumb|left|180px|[[Pol Pot]] in 1975]]
The [[Khmer Rouge]] reached Phnom Penh and took power in 1975, changing the official name of the country to [[Democratic Kampuchea]], led by [[Pol Pot]]. They immediately evacuated the cities and sent the entire population on forced marches to rural work projects. They attempted to rebuild the country's agriculture on the model of the 11th century. They also discarded Western medicine, with the result that while hundreds of thousands died from starvation and disease there were almost no drugs in the country.<ref>Ibid.</ref>

Estimates vary as to how many people were killed by the [[Khmer Rouge]] regime.
Father Francois Ponchaud, author of ''Cambodia: Year Zero'', suggested 2 million.<ref>http://www.nybooks.com/articles/8215</ref>whilst [[United Nations]] investigators estimated 2-3 million.<ref>Shawcross, William, ''The Quality of Mercy: Cambodia, Holocaust and Modern Conscience'', Touchstone, 1985, pp. 115-116.</ref>
The Vietnamese-backed [[People's Republic of Kampuchea]] government carried out a house-to-house survey and reported 3 million dead but the [[Kimmo Kiljunen]]'s "Finnish Inquiry Commission" estimated 1 million dead, including 75-100,000 from executions.<ref>Kiljunen, Kimmo, ed., ''Kampuchea: Decade of the Genocide: Report of a Finnish Inquiry Commission'', Zed Books, 1984.</ref>
[[Image:ac.khmerrouge.jpg|thumb|140px|Photos of [[genocide]] victims on display at the [[Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum]]]]

[[Image:Ommemorative stupa filled with skulls.jpg|thumb|left|180px|A commemorative [[stupa]] at [[The Killing Fields]] filled with the skulls of the victims.]]
Cambodia specialist Michael Vickery accepts a range of excess deaths from 740,000 "of whom perhaps half were victims of execution" to "something over one million."<ref>Vickery, Michael, Correspondence, ''Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars'', vol. 20, no. 1, January-March 1988, p. 73.</ref> Cambodia specialist [[Ben Kiernan]] of the [[Yale University|Yale]] [http://www.yale.edu/cgp/ Cambodian Autogenocide Project] estimates 1.7 million, [[Amnesty International]] estimated 1.4 million and The Documentation Center of Cambodia carried out a mass graves survey and estimated over 2 million, including over 1.1 million executed.<ref> Craig Etcheson, Documentation Centre of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, Cambodia http://www.mekong.net/cambodia/toll.htm</ref>
Hundreds of thousands more fled across the border into neighbouring [[Thailand]].

In November 1978, [[Vietnam]] invaded Cambodia to stop Khmer Rouge incursions across the border and the genocide of [[Vietnamese people|Vietnamese]] in Cambodia.<ref name="CGG">CambodianGenocide.org.[http://www.cambodiangenocide.org/genocide.htm ''A Brief History of the Cambodian Genocide''.] Accessed July 25, 2006.</ref> Violent occupation and warfare between the Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge holdouts continued throughout the 1980s. [[Modern Cambodia#Peace efforts and the free elections|Peace efforts]] began in [[Paris]] in 1989, culminating two years later in October 1991 in a comprehensive peace settlement. The [[United Nations]] was given a mandate to enforce a ceasefire, and deal with refugees and disarmament.<ref name="USDOS3">US Department of State. [http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2732.htm Country Profile of Cambodia.] Accessed July 26, 2006.</ref>

After the brutality of the 1970s and the 1980s, and the destruction of the cultural, economic, social and political life of Cambodia, it is only in recent years that reconstruction efforts have begun and some political stability has finally returned to Cambodia. The stability established following the conflict was shaken in 1997 during a coup d'état,<ref name="97COUP">UN OHCHR Cambodia {{PDFlink|[http://cambodia.ohchr.org/Documents/Statements%20and%20Speeches/English/40.pdf]|10.3&nbsp;[[Kibibyte|KiB]]<!-- application/pdf, 10649 bytes -->}}</ref> but has otherwise remained in place. Cambodia has been aided by a number of more developed nations like Japan, France, Canada, Australia and the United States, primarily economically. Money raised in schools and community groups in these countries has gone towards the rebuilding of infrastructure and housing.

== Politics and government ==

<!--Please add new information into relevant articles of the series-->
{{main|Politics of Cambodia}}
[[Image:Norodom Sihamoni.jpg|thumb|right|160px|King [[Norodom Sihamoni]] of Cambodia]]
[[Image:Cambodianfinancesummit2007.jpg|thumb|left|260px|Prime Minister [[Hun Sen]] at the National Micro Finance Summit, Phnom Penh 2007]]
The politics of Cambodia formally take place, according to the nation's [[constitution]] of 1993, in the framework of a [[parliamentary system|parliamentary]], [[representative democracy|representative democratic]] [[monarchy]]. The [[Prime Minister of Cambodia]] is the [[head of government]], and of a pluriform multi-party system, while the [[King of Cambodia|king]] is the [[head of state]]. The Prime Minister is appointed by the King, on the advice and with the approval of the [[National Assembly of Cambodia|National Assembly]]; the Prime Minister and his or her ministerial appointees exercise [[executive power]] in government. [[Legislative power]] is vested in both the executive and the two chambers of parliament, the [[National Assembly of Cambodia]] and the [[Senate of Cambodia|Senate]].

On [[October 14]], [[2004]], King [[Norodom Sihamoni]] was selected by a special nine-member throne council, part of a selection process that was quickly put in place after the surprise abdication of King Norodom Sihanouk a week before. Sihamoni's selection was endorsed by Prime Minister [[Hun Sen]] and National Assembly Speaker Prince [[Norodom Ranariddh]] (the new king's brother), both members of the throne council. He was crowned in Phnom Penh on [[October 29]]. The monarchy is symbolic and does not exercise political power. Norodom Sihamoni was trained in Cambodian classical dance. Due to his long stay in the [[Czech Republic]] (then part of [[Czechoslovakia]]) Norodom Sihamoni is fluent in the [[Czech language]].

In 2006, Transparency International rated Cambodia as 151 of 163 countries making it one of the most corrupt countries on earth. [http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi/2006]The BBC reports that corruption is rampant in the Cambodian political arena<ref name="BBC3">BBC Asia-Pacific News (September 19, 2005). [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4183606.stm ''Corruption dents Cambodia democracy''.] Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref> with international aid from the U.S. and other countries being illegally transferred into private accounts.<ref name="REUT">Reuters AlertNet (May 29, 2006). [http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/BKK237403.htm ''World Bank threatens $64 mln Cambodia aid freeze'']. Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref> Corruption has also added to the wide income disparity within the population.<ref name="BBCBUIS">BBC News (29 May 2006). [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/5027168.stm 'Corruption' curbs Cambodia cash.] Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref>

== Geography ==
[[Image:Yak Loum.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Yak Loum]] lake in [[Ratanakiri Province]]]]

{{main|Geography of Cambodia}}
Cambodia has an area of 181,035 square kilometres (69,898&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi), sharing an 800&nbsp;kilometre (500&nbsp;mi) border with [[Thailand]] in the north and west, a 541&nbsp;kilometre (336&nbsp;mi) border with [[Laos]] in the northeast, and a 1,228&nbsp;kilometre (763&nbsp;mi) border with [[Vietnam]] in the east and southeast. It has 443&nbsp;kilometres (275&nbsp;mi) of coastline along the [[Gulf of Thailand]].
[[Image:Old man on tonle sap.jpg|thumb|left|[[Tonle Sap]] Lake]]
The most distinctive geographical feature is the [[lacustrine plain]], formed by the inundations of the [[Tonle Sap]] (Great Lake), measuring about 2,590 square kilometres (1,000&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi) during the dry season and expanding to about 24,605 square kilometres (9,500&nbsp;sq&nbsp;mi) during the rainy season. This densely populated plain, which is devoted to wet rice cultivation, is the heartland of Cambodia. Most (about 75%) of the country lies at elevations of less than 100 metres (330&nbsp;ft) above sea level, the exceptions being the [[Cardamom Mountains]] (highest elevation 1,813&nbsp;m&nbsp;/&nbsp;5,948&nbsp;ft) and their southeast extension the [[Dâmrei Mountains]] ("Elephant Mountains") (elevation range 500–1,000&nbsp;m or 1,640–3,280&nbsp;ft), as well the steep escarpment of the [[Dângrêk Mountains]] (average elevation 500&nbsp;m&nbsp;/&nbsp;1,640&nbsp;ft) along the border with Thailand's [[Isan]] region. The highest elevation of Cambodia is [[Phnom Aoral]], near [[Pursat]] in the centre of the country, at 1,813 metres (5,948 ft).

=== Climate ===
[[Image:Kampong Speu.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Monsoon season in [[Kampong Speu Province]]]]
[[Image:Serendipity 2.jpg|thumb|right|250px|Serendipity Bay, [[Sihanoukville]] ]]
Cambodia's temperatures range from 10° to 38 °C (50° to 100 °F) and experiences tropical [[monsoon]]s. Southwest monsoons blow inland bringing moisture-laden winds from the [[Gulf of Thailand]] and [[Indian Ocean]] from May to October. The northeast monsoon ushers in the dry season, which lasts from November to March. The country experiences the heaviest precipitation from September to October with the driest period occurring from January to February.

It has two distinct seasons. The rainy season, which runs from May to October, can see temperatures raise up to 40 °C around April and is generally accompanied with high humidity. The dry season lasts from November to April when temperatures can drop to 22 °C. The best months to visit Cambodia are November to January when temperatures and humidity are lower.

{{Phnom Penh weatherbox}}

{{main|Law enforcement in Cambodia}}
<!--Please add new information into relevant articles of the series-->

== Administrative divisions ==
{{main|Provinces of Cambodia|Districts and Sections of Cambodia}}
[[Image:Cambodia-map-wiki.png|right|thumb|378px|Map of Cambodia]]

Cambodia is divided into 20 [[province]]s (''[[khet]]'', singular and plural) and 4 [[municipality|municipalities]] (''[[krong]]'', singular and plural). There are further subdivisions into [[district]]s (''[[srok]]''), [[commune]]s (''[[khum]]''), [[village]]s (''[[phum]]''), and [[island]]s (''koh'').
{{columns
|width=270px
|col1 =
'''Municipalities (''Krong'')''':
*[[Phnom Penh]]
*[[Sihanoukville]] (Kampong Som)
*[[Pailin]]
*[[Kep, Cambodia|Kep]]
'''Provinces (''Khett'')''':
*[[Banteay Meanchey]]
*[[Battambang Province|Battambang]]
*[[Kampong Cham Province|Kampong Cham]]
*[[Kampong Chhnang Province|Kampong Chhnang]]
*[[Kampong Speu Province|Kampong Speu]]
*[[Kampong Thom Province|Kampong Thom]]
|col2 =
*[[Kampot Province|Kampot]]
*[[Kandal Province|Kandal]]
*[[Koh Kong Province|Koh Kong]]
*[[Kratié Province|Kratié]]
*[[Mondulkiri]]
*[[Oddar Meancheay]]
*[[Pursat Province|Pursat]]
*[[Preah Vihear Province|Preah Vihear]]
*[[Prey Veng Province|Prey Veng]]
*[[Ratanakiri]]
*[[Siem Reap Province|Siem Reap]]
*[[Stung Treng Province|Stung Treng]]
*[[Svay Rieng Province|Svay Rieng]]
*[[Takéo Province|Takéo]]
|col3 =
'''Islands (''Koh'')''':
*[[Koh Kong (island)|Koh Kong]]
*Koh Polaway
*[[Koh Rong]]
*[[Koh Rong Samlon]]
*[[Koh Sess]]
*[[Koh Tang]]
*Koh Thass
*[[Koh Thonsáy]]
*Koh Traolach
*Koh Treas
}}
Phnom Penh is the largest population center, with over 1 million of Cambodia's 13 million people. Mondulkiri, the hill province in the northeast bordering Vietnam, is the largest province by area but ranks lowest in population density.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.phnompenhtours.com/Mondulkiri.htm | title = Mondulkiri | publisher = Phnom Penh Tours | accessmonthday = September 1 | accessyear =2006}}</ref>

=== Cities and Provinces Size ===
[[Image:Phnom penh palace.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Phnom Penh]]]]
[[Image:Kompong Cham aerial.jpg|thumb|right|250px|[[Kampong Cham Province]]]]
[[Image:Kep wedding.jpg|thumb|right|250px|A wedding in [[Kep]]]]
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! No.
! Cities/ Provinces
! Size ( km² )
|-
| 1
| City of [[Phnom Penh]]
| 290
|-
| 2
| [[Kandal Province]]
| 3568
|-
| 3
| [[Takeo Province]]
| 3563
|-
| 4
| [[Kampong Cham Province]]
| 9799
|-
| 5
| [[Kampong Thom]]
| 13814
|-
| 6
| [[Siem Reap Province]]
| 10299
|-
| 7
| [[Preah Vihear Province]]
| 13788
|-
| 8
| [[Oddar Meancheay Province]]
| 6158
|-
| 9
| [[Banteay Meanchey Province]]
| 6679
|-
| 10
| [[Battambang Province]]
| 11072
|-
| 11
| City of [[Pailin]]
| 803
|-
| 12
| [[Pursat Province]]
| 12692
|-
| 13
| [[Kampong Chhnang Province]]
| 5521
|-
| 14
| [[Kampong Speu Province]]
| 7017
|-
| 15
| [[Koh Kong Province]]
| 11160
|-
| 16
| City of [[Sihanoukville]]
| 868
|-
| 17
| [[Kampot Province]]
| 4873.2
|-
| 18
| City of [[Kep]]
| 335.8
|-
| 19
| [[Prey Veng Province]]
| 4883
|-
| 20
| [[Svay Rieng Province]]
| 2966
|-
| 21
| [[Kratie Province]]
| 11094
|-
| 22
| [[Stung Treng Province]]
| 11092
|-
| 23
| [[Ratanakiri Province]]
| 10782
|-
| 24
| [[Mondulkiri Province]]
| 14288
|-
| 25
| [[Tonle Sap]] lake
| 3000
|-
!colspan="2" rowspan="1"| TOTAL AREA
| '''181035'''
|}

== Foreign relations ==
{{main|Foreign relations of Cambodia}}

[[Image:Khmerevening.JPG|thumb|right|200px|[[Poipet]]]]
<!--Please add new information into relevant articles of the series-->
{{main|Royal Cambodian Armed Forces}}

Cambodia is a member of the United Nations and its specialized agencies such as the [[World Bank]] and [[International Monetary Fund]]. It is an [[Asian Development Bank]] (ADB) member, a member of [[ASEAN]], and joined the [[WTO]] on [[13 October]] [[2004]]. In 2005 Cambodia attended the inaugural [[East Asia Summit]].

Following a return to political normality, Cambodia has established [[diplomatic relations]] with numerous countries; the government reports twenty embassies in the country<ref> Royal Government of Cambodia.[http://www.cambodia.gov.kh/unisql1/egov/english/country.foreign_embassy.html Foreign Embassies].</ref> including many of its Asian neighbours and those of important players during the Paris peace negotiations, including the US, Australia, Canada, China, the European Union (EU), Japan, and Russia.<ref>Catharin E. Dalpino and David G. Timberman. "[http://www.asiasociety.org/publications/cambodia_policy.html Cambodia's Political Future: Issues for U.S. Policy]," ''Asia Society,'' March 26, 1998.</ref>
[[Image:156525w.jpg|thumb|left|160px|A [[Khmer Rouge]] guerrilla officer in the 1970s]]

While the violent ruptures of the 1970s and 80s have passed, several [[border dispute]]s between Cambodia and its neighbours persist. There are disagreements over some offshore islands and sections of the boundary with Vietnam, and undefined maritime boundaries and border areas with Thailand.

In January 2003, there were [[2003 Phnom Penh riots|riots in Phnom Penh]] prompted by rumored comments about [[Angkor Wat]] by a Thai actress wrongly attributed by ''Reaksmei Angkor'', a Cambodian newspaper, and later quoted by Prime Minister [[Hun Sen]].<ref name="USDOS2">Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs of the US Department of State.[http://www.state.gov/p/eap/rls/rpt/20565.htm ''Report to the Congress on the Anti-Thai Riots in Cambodia on January 29, 2003''.]</ref> The Thai government sent military aircraft to evacuate Thai nationals and closed its border with Cambodia while Thais demonstrated outside the Cambodian embassy in [[Bangkok]]. The border was re-opened on [[March 21]], after the Cambodian government paid $6 million [[USD]] in compensation for the destruction of the Thai embassy and agreed to compensate individual Thai businesses for their losses.

== Wildlife of Cambodia ==
[[Image:Indochinese Tiger.jpg|thumb|right|200px|[[Indochinese Tiger]]]]
{{Main|Wildlife of Cambodia}}
:see also ''[[Deforestation in Cambodia]]''
Cambodia has a wide variety of plants and animals, and may even be home to the [[Kting Voar]], a mysterious snake-eating cow whose existence has not been verified but is believed to exist. There are 212 [[mammal]] species, 536 [[bird]] species, 240 [[reptile]] species, 850 freshwater [[fish]] species (Tonle Sap Lake area), and 435 marine fish species.

The country has one of the highest [[deforestation]] rates in the world. Since 1970, Cambodia's primary rainforest cover fell dramatically from over 70 percent in 1970 to just 3.1 percent in 2007. In total, Cambodia lost 25,000 square kilometres of forest between 1990 and 2005— 3340 km² of which was primary forest. As of 2007, less than 3,220 km² of primary forest remain with the result that the future [[sustainability]] of the forest reserves of Cambodia is under severe threat, with illegal loggers looking to generate revenue.<ref>http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/20049/story.htm</ref>

== Economy ==
{{main|Economy of Cambodia}}
[[Image:Rice 02.jpg|thumb|left|250px|Rice cropping plays an important role in the economy]]
Despite recent progress, the Cambodian economy continues to suffer from the effects of decades of [[civil war]], internal strife and rampant corruption. The [[per capita income]] is rapidly increasing, but is low compared with other countries in the region. Most rural households depend on agriculture and its related sub-sectors. Rice, fish, timber, garments and rubber are Cambodia's major exports, and the United States, Singapore, Japan, Thailand, China, Indonesia and Malaysia are its major export partners.<ref name="USDOS3"/>

War and brutal totalitarianism in the 1970s created famine in Cambodia. Desperate farm families consumed their rice seeds and many traditional varieties became difficult to find. In the 1980s the [[International Rice Research Institute]] (IRRI) reintroduced more than 750 traditional rice varieties to Cambodia from its rice seed bank in the [[Philippines]] ''(Jahn 2006,[http://www.irri.org/publications/today/pdfs/6-2/RiceToday%206-2.pdf 2007])''. These varieties had been collected in the 1960s. In 1987, the Australian government funded IRRI to assist Cambodia to improve its rice production. By 2000, Cambodia was once again self-sufficient in rice ''(Puckridge 2004, Fredenburg and Hill 1978)''.
[[Image:Preahkhantreemonks01.JPG|thumb|left|200px|[[Preah Khan]] temple in [[Preah Vihear Province]]]]

The recovery of Cambodia's economy slowed dramatically in 1997–98, due to the [[Asian financial crisis|regional economic crisis]], civil violence, and political infighting. [[Foreign Direct Investment|Foreign investment]] and tourism also fell off drastically. Since then however, growth has been steady. In 1999, the first full year of peace in 30 years, progress was made on economic reforms and [[economic growth|growth]] resumed at 5.0%. Despite severe flooding, GDP grew at 5.0% in 2000, 6.3% in 2001, and 5.2% in 2002. Tourism was Cambodia's fastest growing industry, with arrivals increasing from 219,000 in 1997 to 1,055,000 in 2004. During 2003 and 2004 the growth rate remained steady at 5.0%, while in 2004 inflation was at 1.7% and exports at $1.6 billion [[United States Dollar|US dollars]]. As of 2005, [[Gross domestic product|GDP]] per capita in PPP terms was $2,200, which ranked 178th (out of 233) countries.<ref name="CIARANK">CIA Factbook. [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2004rank.html GDP per Capita rankings]. Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref>

[[Image:Angkor-Wat-from-the-air.JPG|thumb|[[Angkor Wat]], the biggest tourist draw of Cambodia]]
The population often lacks education and productive skills, particularly in the poverty-ridden countryside, which suffers from a lack of basic [[infrastructure]]. Fear of renewed political instability and corruption within the government discourage foreign investment and delay foreign aid, although there has been significant assistance from bilateral and multilateral donors. Donors pledged $504 m to the country in 2004,<ref name="CIACB">[https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/cb.html CIA FactBook.] Accessed September 9, 2006.</ref> while the Asian Development Bank alone has provided $850m in loans, grants, and technical assistance.<ref name=ADB>[http://www.adb.org/Documents/Fact_Sheets/CAM.asp A Fact Sheet: Cambodia and ADB], Asian Development Bank. Accessed September 9, 2006.</ref>

The tourism industry is the country's second-greatest source of [[hard currency]] after the textile industry.<ref name="USDOS3"/> 50% of visitor arrivals are to [[Angkor]], and most of the remainder to [[Phnom Penh]].<ref name="CAGOV">Royal Government of Cambodia.[http://www.mot.gov.kh/statistic.asp Tourist statistics.] Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref> Other tourist hotspots include [[Sihanoukville]] in the southeast which has several popular beaches, and the nearby area around Kampot including the [[Bokor Hill Station]].

== Demographics ==
{{main|Demographics of Cambodia}}
[[Image:Khmer woman fields.jpg|thumb|left|upright|A Khmer woman]]
[[Image:Market Woman in Camodia with Krama.jpg|thumb|right|180px|Market woman wearing a [[Krama]] [[Kampong Thom]]]]
More than 90% of its population is of [[Khmer people|Khmer]] origin and speaks the [[Khmer language]], the country's official language. The remainder include [[Chinese Cambodian|Chinese]], Vietnamese, [[Cham people|Cham]], [[Khmer Loeu]], and [[India]]ns.

The Khmer language is a member of the [[Mon-Khmer]] subfamily of the [[Austroasiatic language]] group. French, once the [[lingua franca]] of [[Indochina]] and still spoken by some, mostly older Cambodians as a second language, remains the language of instruction in various schools and universities that are often funded by the government of France. [[Cambodian French]], a remnant of the country's colonial past, is a dialect found in Cambodia and is frequently used in government. However, in recent decades, many younger Cambodians and those in the business-class have favoured learning English. In the major cities and tourist centers, English is widely spoken and taught at a large number of schools due to the overwhelming number of tourists from English-speaking countries. Even in the most rural outposts, however, most young people speak at least some English, as it is often taught by monks at the local pagodas where many children are educated.

The dominant religion, a form of [[Theravada Buddhism]] (95%), was suppressed by the Khmer Rouge but has since experienced a revival. [[Islam]] (3%) and [[Christianity]] (2%) are also practiced.<ref name="USDOS">Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labour of the US Department of State. [http://www.state.gov/g/drl/rls/irf/2005/51507.htm ''International Religious Freedom Report 2005''.] Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref>
[[Image:Cambodia-demography.png|thumb|Number of inhabitants between 1961 and 2001 in thousands. Note the decrease during the Khmer Rouge years (1975–79). FAO Data, Cambodia]]
Civil war and its aftermath have had a marked effect on the Cambodian population. The median age is 20.6 years, with more than 50% of the population younger than 25. At 0.95 males/female, Cambodia has the most female-biased sex ratio in the Greater Mekong Subregion [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2018.html]. In the Cambodian population over 65, the female to male ratio is 1.6:1.<ref name="CIACB"/> [[UNICEF]] has designated Cambodia the third most [[landmine|mined]] country in the world,<ref name="UNICEF">UNICEF. [http://www.unicef.org/sowc96/9ldmines.htm "The Legacy of Landmines"]. Accessed July 25, 2006.</ref> attributing over 60,000 civilian deaths and thousands more maimed or injured since 1970 to the unexploded landmines left behind in rural areas.<ref name="PBSORG">PBS.org (July 25, 2003). [http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/week647/cover.html ''Cambodia Land Mines''.] Accessed July 24, 2006.</ref> The majority of the victims are children herding animals or playing in the fields.<ref name="UNICEF"/> Adults that survive landmines often require amputation of one or more limbs and have to resort to begging for survival.<ref name="PBSORG"/> In 2006, the number of landmines casualties in Cambodia took a sharp decrease of more than 50% compared to 2005, with the number of landmines victims down from 800 in 2005 to less than 400 in 2006.

== Culture and society ==
{{main|Culture of Cambodia}}
Khmer culture, as developed and spread by the [[Khmer empire]], has distinctive styles of dance, architecture and sculpture, which have strongly influenced neighbouring [[Laos]] and [[Thailand]]. [[Angkor Wat]] (''Angkor'' means "city" and ''Wat'' "temple") is the best preserved example of Khmer architecture from the Angkorian era and hundreds of other temples have been discovered in and around the region. The [[Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum]], the infamous prison of the Khmer Rouge, and [[Choeung Ek]], one of the main [[The Killing Fields|Killing Fields]] are other important historic sites.
[[Image:Tuolsleng1.JPG|thumb|left|200px|The exterior of the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, Phnom Penh]]

[[Bonn Om Teuk]] (Festival of Boat Racing), the annual boat rowing contest, is the most attended Cambodian national festival. Held at the end of the rainy season when the Mekong river begins to sink back to its normal levels allowing the Tonle Sap River to reverse flow, approximately 10% of Cambodia's population attends this event each year to play games, give thanks to the moon, watch fireworks, and attend the boat race in a carnival-type atmosphere.<ref name="KMGOV">[http://www.cambodia.gov.kh/unisql1/egov/english/news.view.html?doc_oid=@140%7C1%7C1 Government of Cambodia Webpage, ''Bonn Om Touk, the Water and Moon Festivals''; accessed July 24, 2006]</ref> Popular games include [[cockfight]]ing, [[soccer]], and kicking a ''sey,'' which is similar to a [[footbag]]. Recent artistic figures include singers [[Sinn Sisamouth]] and [[Ros Sereysothea]] (and later [[Meng Keo Pichenda]]), who introduced new musical styles to the country.
[[Image:របាំទេបអប្សរា.JPG|thumbnail|right|270px|''[[Robam Tep Apsara]]'', a [[Khmer Classical Dance|Classical Khmer Dance]] originally performed only in the royal courts of [[Angkor Wat]].]]

Rice, as in other [[Southeast Asia]]n countries, is the staple grain, while fish from the Mekong and Tonle Sap also form an important part of the diet. The Cambodian per capita supply of fish and fish products for food and trade in 2000 was 20 [[kilogram]]s of fish per year or 2&nbsp;[[avoirdupois|ounces]] per day per person.<ref name="EARTH">{{PDFlink|[http://earthtrends.wri.org/pdf_library/country_profiles/Coa_cou_116.pdf Earthtrends.org Cambodia Country Profile]}}</ref> Some of the fish can be made into [[prahok]] for longer storage. Overall, the [[cuisine of Cambodia]] is similar to that of its Southeast Asian neighbours. The cuisine is relatively unknown to the world compared to that of its neighbours [[Thailand]] and Vietnam.
[[Image:CamboKShowdown.jpg|thumb|left|220px|Cambodian kickboxers of the [[Pradal Serey]] getting ready to attack]]

Football ([[soccer]]) is one of the more popular sports, although professional organized sports are not as prevalent in Cambodia as in western countries due to the economic conditions. The [[Cambodia national football team]] managed fourth in the [[Asian Cup 1972|1972 Asian Cup]] but development has slowed since the civil war. Western sports such as volleyball, bodybuilding, field hockey, [[rugby union]], and baseball are gaining popularity while traditional boat racing maintains its appeal as a national sport. Martial arts are also practiced in Cambodia which include the native art of [[Pradal Serey]], [[Muay Thai]] and [[Bokator]].

== Transport ==
[[Image:Khmer Transport.jpg|thumb|upright|A street scene in [[Phnom Penh]].]]
{{main|Transport in Cambodia}}

The civil war severely damaged Cambodia's transport system, despite the provision of [[USSR|Soviet]] technical assistance and equipment. Cambodia has two rail lines, totalling about 612 [[kilometre|kilometers]] (380&nbsp;[[mile|mi]]) of single, one&nbsp;[[meter]]&nbsp;gauge track.<ref name="CNTRYDTA">[http://www.country-data.com/cgi-bin/query/r-2187.html CountryData.com]</ref> The lines run from the capital to [[Sihanoukville]] on the southern coast, and from Phnom Penh to [[Sisophon]] (although trains often run only as far as [[Battambang]]). Currently only one passenger train per week operates, between Phnom Penh and Battambang.
[[Image:National highway number 1.jpg|thumb|left|260px|[[National Highway 1 (Cambodia)|National Highway 1]]]]

The nation's extensive inland waterways were important historically in international trade. The [[Mekong]] and the [[Tonle Sap]] River, their numerous tributaries, and the [[Tonle Sap]] provided avenues of considerable length, including 3,700 kilometers (2,300&nbsp;mi) navigable all year by craft drawing 0.6 meters (2&nbsp;ft) and another 282 kilometers (175&nbsp;mi) navigable to craft drawing 1.8 meters (6&nbsp;ft).<ref name="CNTRYDTA"/> Cambodia has two major ports, [[Phnom Penh]] and [[Sihanoukville]], and five minor ones. Phnom Penh, located at the junction of the [[Bassac River|Bassac]], the [[Mekong]], and the [[Tonle Sap]] rivers, is the only [[river port]] capable of receiving 8,000&nbsp;[[ton]] ships during the wet season and 5,000&nbsp;[[ton]] ships during the dry season.

With increasing economic activity has come an increase in automobile and motorcycle use, though bicycles still predominate; as often in developing countries, an associated rise in traffic deaths and injuries is occurring.<ref>"Picking Up Speed: As Cambodia's Traffic Levels Increase, So Too Does the Road ''Death Toll''," ''The Cambodia Daily'', Saturday, March 9–10, 2002."</ref> [[Cycle rickshaw]]s ("{{IPA|pʰʊt-pʰʊt}}s") are an additional option often used by visitors.

=== Airports ===
The country has four commercial airports. [[Phnom Penh International Airport]] in Phnom Penh, the main airport in Cambodia, is the largest. [[Angkor International Airport|Siem Reap-Angkor International Airport]] is the second largest and serves the most international flights in and out of Cambodia. The other airports are in [[Kampong Saom|Sihanoukville]] and [[Battambang Province|Battambang]].

== International rankings ==
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Organization
|-
| [[Heritage Foundation]]''
| [[Index of Economic Freedom#Current ratings|Index of Economic Freedom]]
| 102 out of 157
|-
| [[Reporters Without Borders]]
| [[Reporters Without Borders#Worldwide press freedom index|Worldwide Press Freedom Index]]
| 108 out of 167
|-
| [[Transparency International]]
| [[Corruption Perceptions Index]]
| 151 out of 163
|-
| [[United Nations Development Programme]]
| [[List of countries by Human Development Index|Human Development Index]]
| 129 out of 177
|-
| [[World Economic Forum]]
| [[Global Competitiveness Report]]
| 103 out of 125
|-
|}

== See also ==
{{Topics related to Cambodia}}

== References ==
{{reflist|2}}
{{refbegin}}
* [http://www.business-in-asia.com/airports_cambodia.html Business in Asia] report on airports. Accessed [[13 November]] [[2005]]
* [http://www.parish-without-borders.net/cditt/cambodia/khculture.htm Cambodian Culture website] Accessed [[December 11]] [[2004]]
* [http://www.classbrain.com/art_cr/publish/cambodia_economy.shtml Cambodian Economy Information] Accessed [[January 19]] [[2005]]
* [[CIA World Factbook]] U.S. Department of State website
* [http://www.britannica.com/nations/Cambodia Encyclopaedia Britannica's Cambodia Country Page]
* Fredenburg, P. and B. Hill. 2006. Sharing Rice for Peace and Prosperity in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Sid Harta Publishers, Victoria. ISBN 1-921206-08-X. pp271
* [http://www.ifes.org/eguide/resultsum/cambodia_par03.htm IFES] Summary of 2003 legislative election results. Accessed [[January 27]] [[2005]]
*Jahn GC. 2006. The Dream is not yet over. In: P. Fredenburg P, Hill B, editors. Sharing rice for peace and prosperity in the Greater Mekong Subregion. Victoria, (Australia): Sid Harta Publishers. ISBN 1-921206-08-X. p 237–240
*Jahn, GC 2007. Rice and life along the Mekong River. [http://www.irri.org/publications/today/pdfs/6-2/RiceToday%206-2.pdf Rice Today 6(2)]:4.
* Kerlogue, Fiona ''Arts of Southeast Asia''. Thames and Hudson 2004. ISBN 0-500-20381-4
* [http://www.mot.gov.kh/statistic.asp Ministry of Tourism] statistics on tourism. Accessed [[January 27]] [[2005]]
* [http://www.ngoforum.org.kh/index.htm NGO Forum on Cambodia] report on 2003 legislative elections. Accessed [[January 27]] [[2005]]
* Puckridge, D. 2004. The Burning of the Rice. Sid Harta Publishers, Victoria. ISBN 1-877059-73-0. pp326
* [http://www.dxing.info/articles/cambodia.dx Radio Broadcasting in Cambodia] Accessed [[January 23]] [[2005]]
{{refend}}

== External links ==
{{portal}}
{{sisterlinks|Cambodia}}
<div style="font-size:95%;">
'''Official'''
*[http://www.cambodia-tourism.org Cambodia Tourism Information]
*[http://www.norodomsihanouk.info King of Cambodia, Norodom Sihanouk] Official Website of former King Norodom Sihanouk
*[http://www.cambodia.gov.kh/unisql1/egov/english/home.frame.html Cambodia.gov.kh] Official Royal Government of Cambodia Website (English Version)
*[http://www.mfaic.gov.kh Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation]
*[http://evisa.mfaic.gov.kh Cambodia e-Visa, Applying Travel Visa Online]

'''Overviews'''
* [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/cb.html CIA World Factbook - ''Cambodia'']
*[http://digital.library.unt.edu/govdocs/crs/search.tkl?q=cambodia&search_crit=fulltext&search=Search&date1=Anytime&date2=Anytime&type=form Congressional Research Service (CRS) Reports regarding Cambodia]
* [http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/COUNTRIES/EASTASIAPACIFICEXT/CAMBODIAEXTN/0,,contentMDK:21369013~menuPK:293861~pagePK:64027988~piPK:64027986~theSitePK:293856,00.html Sharing Growth: Equity and Development in Cambodia] - a report by the [[World Bank]], launched on [[June 12]], [[2007]] at the [[Cambodia Development Cooperation Forum]] (CDCF)
* [http://www.commonlanguageproject.net/?page_id=41#Cambodia Cambodia Country Factsheet] from The Common Language Project
* Overview Article on Cambodia's Contemporary Political Economy: [http://www.yorku.ca/ycar/CCSEAS%20Papers/Simon%20Springer%20-%20The%20Neoliberal%20'Order'%20In%20Cambodia.pdf "The Neoliberal 'Order' in Cambodia: Political Violence, Democracy, and the Contestation of Public Space"] by Simon Springer, PhD Candidate, Department of Geography, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.

'''Other'''
* [http://www.un.org.kh/undp/?url=/undp/cmdgs/cmdgs CMDGs] - Cambodia [[Millennium Development Goals]]
*{{wikitravel}}
*{{dmoz|Regional/Asia/Cambodia/}}
* [http://www.khmerwebgroup.com Provincial guide] - Destinations in Cambodia...
* [http://www.taiyocambodia.com/photos/ Photos of Cambodia] [http://www.taiyocambodia.com What's new in Cambodia] - Newly Information and Photos of Cambodia...
</div><!--(font-size:95%)-->

{{Template group
|title = Geographic locale
|list =
{{Countries and territories of Southeast Asia}}

}}
{{Template group
|title = International membership and relationships
|list =
{{Cambodia ties}}
{{Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)}}
{{East Asia Summit (EAS)}}
{{La Francophonie|state=collapsed}}
{{Austronesian-speaking}}
{{Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC)|state=collapsed}}
{{Monarchies|state=collapsed}}
}}
{{Countries_of_the_Indosphere}}

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[[Category:Cambodia| ]]
[[Category:ASEAN members]]
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Revision as of 18:31, 27 November 2007

Kingdom of Cambodia

Preăh Réachéanachâkr Kâmpŭchea
Royal Arms of Cambodia
Motto: 
"Nation, Religion, King"
Anthem: Nokoreach
Location of Cambodia
Capital
and largest city
Phnom Penh
Official languagesKhmer
Demonym(s)Cambodian
GovernmentConstitutional monarchy
• King
Norodom Sihamoni
Hun Sen
Independence
• from France
November 9, 1953
Area
• Total
181,035 km2 (69,898 sq mi) (89th)
• Water (%)
2.5
Population
• July 2006 estimate
13,971,000 (63rd)
• 1998 census
11,437,656
• Density
78/km2 (202.0/sq mi) (112th)
GDP (PPP)2006 estimate
• Total
$36.82 billion (89th)
• Per capita
$2,600 (133rd)
HDI (2004)Increase0.583
Error: Invalid HDI value (129th)
CurrencyRiel (៛)1 (KHR)
Time zoneUTC+7
• Summer (DST)
UTC+7
Calling code855
ISO 3166 codeKH
Internet TLD.kh
  1. Local currency, although US dollars are widely used.

The Kingdom of Cambodia (Template:PronEng, formerly known as Kampuchea (/kæmpuˈtʃiːə/, File:Cambodia5.png, transliterated: Preăh Réachéanachâkr Kâmpŭchea) is a country in Southeast Asia with a population of over 13 million people. Phnom Penh is the capital city. Cambodia is the successor state of the once powerful Hindu and Buddhist Khmer Empire, which ruled most of the Indochinese Peninsula between the eleventh and fourteenth centuries.

A citizen of Cambodia is usually identified as "Cambodian" or "Khmer," though the latter strictly refers to ethnic Khmers. Most Cambodians are Theravada Buddhists of Khmer extraction, but the country also has a substantial number of predominantly Muslim Cham, as well as ethnic Chinese, Vietnamese and small animist hill tribes.

The country borders Thailand to its west and northwest, Laos to its northeast, and Vietnam to its east and southeast. In the south it faces the Gulf of Thailand. The geography of Cambodia is dominated by the Mekong river (colloquial Khmer: Tonle Thom or "the great river") and the Tonlé Sap ("the fresh water lake"), an important source of fish. Much of Cambodia sits near sea level, and consequently the Tonle Sap River reverses its water flow in the wet season, carrying water from the Mekong back into the Tonlé Sap Lake and surrounding flood plain.

Cambodia's main industries are garments and tourism. In 2006, foreign visitors had surpassed the 1.7 million mark. In 2005, oil and natural gas deposits were found beneath Cambodia's territorial water, and once commercial extraction begins in 2009 or early 2010, the oil revenues could profoundly affect Cambodia's economy.

Etymology

Cambodia is the traditional English transliteration, taken from the French Cambodge, while Kampuchea is the direct transliteration, more faithful to the Khmer pronunciation. The Khmer Kampuchea is derived from the ancient Khmer kingdom of Kambuja (Kambujadesa). Kambuja or Kamboja is the ancient Sanskrit name of the Kambojas, an early tribe of north India, named after their founder Kambu Svayambhuva, believed to be a variant of Cambyses. See Etymology of Kamboja.

"Khmer Land" in Khmer writing, a local expression which refers to Cambodia

Preahreachanachâk Kampuchea means "Kingdom of Cambodia". Etymologically, its components are: Preah- ("sacred"); -reach- ("king, royal, realm", from Sanskrit); -ana- (from Pāli āṇā, "authority, command, power", itself from Sanskrit ājñā, same meaning) -châk (from Sanskrit chakra, meaning "wheel", a symbol of power and rule).

The name used on formal occasions, such as political speeches and news programs, is Prâteh Kampuchea (Khmer: ប្រទេសកម្ពុជា), literally "the Country of Cambodia". Prâteh is a formal word meaning "country."

The colloquial name most used by Khmer people, is Srok Khmae (Khmer: ស្រុកខ្មែរ), literally "the Khmer Land". Srok is a Mon-Khmer word roughly equal to prâteh, but less formal. Khmer is spelled with a final "r" in the Khmer alphabet, but the word-final "r" phoneme disappeared from most dialects of Khmer in the 19th century and is not pronounced in the contemporary speech of the standard dialect.

Since independence, the official name of Cambodia has changed several times, following the troubled history of the country. The following names have been used in English and French since 1954.

  • Kingdom of Cambodia/Royaume du Cambodge under the rule of the monarchy from 1953 through 1970;
  • Khmer Republic/République Khmère (a calque of French Republic) under the Lon Nol led government from 1970 to 1975;
  • Democratic Kampuchea/Kampuchea démocratique under the rule of the communist Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979;
  • People's Republic of Kampuchea/République populaire du Kampuchea under the rule of the Vietnamese-sponsored government from 1979 to 1989;
  • State of Cambodia/État du Cambodge (a neutral name, while deciding whether to return to monarchy) under the rule of the United Nations transitional authority from 1989 to 1993;
  • Kingdom of Cambodia/Royaume du Cambodge reused after the restoration of the monarchy in 1993.

History

A Khmer army going to war against the Cham, from a relief on the Bayon

The first advanced civilizations in present-day Cambodia appeared in the 1st millennium AD. During the 3rd, 4th, and 5th centuries, the Indianised states of Funan and Chenla coalesced in what is now present-day Cambodia and southwestern Vietnam. These states, which are assumed by most scholars to have been Khmer,[1] had close relations with China and India.[2] Their collapse was followed by the rise of the Khmer Empire, a civilization which flourished in the area from the 9th century to the 13th century.

The Khmer Empire declined yet remained powerful in the region until the 15th century. The empire's center of power was Angkor, where a series of capitals was constructed during the empire's zenith. Angkor Wat, the most famous and best-preserved religious temple at the site, is a reminder of Cambodia's past as a major regional power.

After a long series of wars with neighbouring kingdoms, Angkor was sacked by the Thai and abandoned in 1432. The court moved the capital to Lovek where the kingdom sought to regain its glory through maritime trade. The attempt was short-lived, however, as continued wars with the Thai and Vietnamese resulted in the loss of more territory and the conquering of Lovek in 1594. During the next three centuries, The Khmer kingdom alternated as a vassal state of the Thai and Vietnamese kings, with short-lived periods of relative independence between.

File:Norodom-Sihanouk.jpg
Norodom Sihanouk

In 1863 King Norodom, who had been installed by Thailand,[3] sought the protection of France. In 1867, the Thai king signed a treaty with France, renouncing Suzerainty over Cambodia in exchange for the control of Battambang and Siem Reap provinces which officially became part of Thailand. The provinces were ceded back to Cambodia by a border treaty between France and Thailand in 1906.

Cambodia continued as a protectorate of France from 1863 to 1953, administered as part of the French colony of Indochina. After war-time occupation by the Japanese empire from 1941 to 1945, Cambodia gained independence from France on November 9 1953. It became a constitutional monarchy under King Norodom Sihanouk.

In 1955, Sihanouk abdicated in favour of his father in order to be elected Prime Minister. Upon his father's death in 1960, Sihanouk again became head of state, taking the title of Prince. As the Vietnam War progressed, Sihanouk adopted an official policy of neutrality until ousted in 1970 by a military coup led by Prime Minister General Lon Nol and Prince Sisowath Sirik Matak, while on a trip abroad. From Beijing, Sihanouk realigned himself with the communist Khmer Rouge rebels who had been slowly gaining territory in the remote mountain regions and urged his followers to help in overthowing the pro-United States government of Lon Nol, hastening the onset of civil war.[4]

Operation Menu, a series of secret B-52 bombing raids by the United States on alleged Viet Cong bases and supply routes inside Cambodia, was acknowledged after Lon Nol assumed power; U.S. forces briefly invaded Cambodia in a further effort to disrupt the Viet Cong. The bombing continued and, as the Cambodian communists began gaining ground, eventually included strikes on suspected Khmer Rouge sites until halted in 1973.[5]

Some two million Cambodians were made refugees by the bombing and fighting and fled to Phnom Penh. Estimates of the number of Cambodians killed during the bombing campaigns vary widely. Views of the effects of the bombing also vary widely. The US Seventh Air Force argued that the bombing prevented the fall of Phnom Penh in 1973 by killing 16,000 of 25,500 Khmer Rouge fighters besieging the city.[6]Journalist William Shawcross and Cambodia specialists Milton Osborne, David Chandler and Ben Kiernan argued that the bombing drove peasants to join the Khmer Rouge. Chandler writes that the bombing provided "the psychological ingredients of a violent, vengeful and unrelenting social revolution."[7]Cambodia specialist Craig Etcheson argued that it is "untenable" to assert that the Khmer Rouge would not have won but for US intervention, and that while the bombing did help Khmer Rouge recruitment, they "would have won anyway."[8]

File:Khmer Rouge6.jpg
Some of the Khmer Rouge leaders during their period in power. Pol Pot is on the left. (Photo on display at the Tuol Sleng)

As the war ended, a draft US AID report observed that the country faced famine in 1975, with 75% of its draft animals destroyed by the war, and that rice planting for the next harvest would have to be done "by the hard labor of seriously malnourished people." The report predicted that

without large-scale external food and equipment assistance there will be widespread starvation between now and next February... Slave labor and starvation rations for half the nation's people (probably heaviest among those who supported the republic) will be a cruel necessity for this year, and general deprivation and suffering will stretch over the next two or three years before Cambodia can get back to rice self-sufficiency.[9]

File:PolPot'75.jpg
Pol Pot in 1975

The Khmer Rouge reached Phnom Penh and took power in 1975, changing the official name of the country to Democratic Kampuchea, led by Pol Pot. They immediately evacuated the cities and sent the entire population on forced marches to rural work projects. They attempted to rebuild the country's agriculture on the model of the 11th century. They also discarded Western medicine, with the result that while hundreds of thousands died from starvation and disease there were almost no drugs in the country.[10]

Estimates vary as to how many people were killed by the Khmer Rouge regime. Father Francois Ponchaud, author of Cambodia: Year Zero, suggested 2 million.[11]whilst United Nations investigators estimated 2-3 million.[12] The Vietnamese-backed People's Republic of Kampuchea government carried out a house-to-house survey and reported 3 million dead but the Kimmo Kiljunen's "Finnish Inquiry Commission" estimated 1 million dead, including 75-100,000 from executions.[13]

File:Ac.khmerrouge.jpg
Photos of genocide victims on display at the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum
File:Ommemorative stupa filled with skulls.jpg
A commemorative stupa at The Killing Fields filled with the skulls of the victims.

Cambodia specialist Michael Vickery accepts a range of excess deaths from 740,000 "of whom perhaps half were victims of execution" to "something over one million."[14] Cambodia specialist Ben Kiernan of the Yale Cambodian Autogenocide Project estimates 1.7 million, Amnesty International estimated 1.4 million and The Documentation Center of Cambodia carried out a mass graves survey and estimated over 2 million, including over 1.1 million executed.[15] Hundreds of thousands more fled across the border into neighbouring Thailand.

In November 1978, Vietnam invaded Cambodia to stop Khmer Rouge incursions across the border and the genocide of Vietnamese in Cambodia.[16] Violent occupation and warfare between the Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge holdouts continued throughout the 1980s. Peace efforts began in Paris in 1989, culminating two years later in October 1991 in a comprehensive peace settlement. The United Nations was given a mandate to enforce a ceasefire, and deal with refugees and disarmament.[17]

After the brutality of the 1970s and the 1980s, and the destruction of the cultural, economic, social and political life of Cambodia, it is only in recent years that reconstruction efforts have begun and some political stability has finally returned to Cambodia. The stability established following the conflict was shaken in 1997 during a coup d'état,[18] but has otherwise remained in place. Cambodia has been aided by a number of more developed nations like Japan, France, Canada, Australia and the United States, primarily economically. Money raised in schools and community groups in these countries has gone towards the rebuilding of infrastructure and housing.

Politics and government

File:Norodom Sihamoni.jpg
King Norodom Sihamoni of Cambodia
Prime Minister Hun Sen at the National Micro Finance Summit, Phnom Penh 2007

The politics of Cambodia formally take place, according to the nation's constitution of 1993, in the framework of a parliamentary, representative democratic monarchy. The Prime Minister of Cambodia is the head of government, and of a pluriform multi-party system, while the king is the head of state. The Prime Minister is appointed by the King, on the advice and with the approval of the National Assembly; the Prime Minister and his or her ministerial appointees exercise executive power in government. Legislative power is vested in both the executive and the two chambers of parliament, the National Assembly of Cambodia and the Senate.

On October 14, 2004, King Norodom Sihamoni was selected by a special nine-member throne council, part of a selection process that was quickly put in place after the surprise abdication of King Norodom Sihanouk a week before. Sihamoni's selection was endorsed by Prime Minister Hun Sen and National Assembly Speaker Prince Norodom Ranariddh (the new king's brother), both members of the throne council. He was crowned in Phnom Penh on October 29. The monarchy is symbolic and does not exercise political power. Norodom Sihamoni was trained in Cambodian classical dance. Due to his long stay in the Czech Republic (then part of Czechoslovakia) Norodom Sihamoni is fluent in the Czech language.

In 2006, Transparency International rated Cambodia as 151 of 163 countries making it one of the most corrupt countries on earth. [1]The BBC reports that corruption is rampant in the Cambodian political arena[19] with international aid from the U.S. and other countries being illegally transferred into private accounts.[20] Corruption has also added to the wide income disparity within the population.[21]

Geography

Yak Loum lake in Ratanakiri Province

Cambodia has an area of 181,035 square kilometres (69,898 sq mi), sharing an 800 kilometre (500 mi) border with Thailand in the north and west, a 541 kilometre (336 mi) border with Laos in the northeast, and a 1,228 kilometre (763 mi) border with Vietnam in the east and southeast. It has 443 kilometres (275 mi) of coastline along the Gulf of Thailand.

Tonle Sap Lake

The most distinctive geographical feature is the lacustrine plain, formed by the inundations of the Tonle Sap (Great Lake), measuring about 2,590 square kilometres (1,000 sq mi) during the dry season and expanding to about 24,605 square kilometres (9,500 sq mi) during the rainy season. This densely populated plain, which is devoted to wet rice cultivation, is the heartland of Cambodia. Most (about 75%) of the country lies at elevations of less than 100 metres (330 ft) above sea level, the exceptions being the Cardamom Mountains (highest elevation 1,813 m / 5,948 ft) and their southeast extension the Dâmrei Mountains ("Elephant Mountains") (elevation range 500–1,000 m or 1,640–3,280 ft), as well the steep escarpment of the Dângrêk Mountains (average elevation 500 m / 1,640 ft) along the border with Thailand's Isan region. The highest elevation of Cambodia is Phnom Aoral, near Pursat in the centre of the country, at 1,813 metres (5,948 ft).

Climate

Monsoon season in Kampong Speu Province
Serendipity Bay, Sihanoukville

Cambodia's temperatures range from 10° to 38 °C (50° to 100 °F) and experiences tropical monsoons. Southwest monsoons blow inland bringing moisture-laden winds from the Gulf of Thailand and Indian Ocean from May to October. The northeast monsoon ushers in the dry season, which lasts from November to March. The country experiences the heaviest precipitation from September to October with the driest period occurring from January to February.

It has two distinct seasons. The rainy season, which runs from May to October, can see temperatures raise up to 40 °C around April and is generally accompanied with high humidity. The dry season lasts from November to April when temperatures can drop to 22 °C. The best months to visit Cambodia are November to January when temperatures and humidity are lower.

Template:Phnom Penh weatherbox

Administrative divisions

File:Cambodia-map-wiki.png
Map of Cambodia

Cambodia is divided into 20 provinces (khet, singular and plural) and 4 municipalities (krong, singular and plural). There are further subdivisions into districts (srok), communes (khum), villages (phum), and islands (koh).

Column-generating template families

The templates listed here are not interchangeable. For example, using {{col-float}} with {{col-end}} instead of {{col-float-end}} would leave a <div>...</div> open, potentially harming any subsequent formatting.

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"columns-start" Yes Yes {{columns-start}} {{column}} {{columns-end}}
Columns "div col" Yes Yes {{div col}} {{div col end}}
"columns-list" No Yes {{columns-list}} (wraps div col)
Flexbox "flex columns" No Yes {{flex columns}}
Table "col" Yes No {{col-begin}},
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Can template handle the basic wiki markup {| | || |- |} used to create tables? If not, special templates that produce these elements (such as {{(!}}, {{!}}, {{!!}}, {{!-}}, {{!)}})—or HTML tags (<table>...</table>, <tr>...</tr>, etc.)—need to be used instead. Phnom Penh is the largest population center, with over 1 million of Cambodia's 13 million people. Mondulkiri, the hill province in the northeast bordering Vietnam, is the largest province by area but ranks lowest in population density.[22]

Cities and Provinces Size

Phnom Penh
Kampong Cham Province
A wedding in Kep
No. Cities/ Provinces Size ( km² )
1 City of Phnom Penh 290
2 Kandal Province 3568
3 Takeo Province 3563
4 Kampong Cham Province 9799
5 Kampong Thom 13814
6 Siem Reap Province 10299
7 Preah Vihear Province 13788
8 Oddar Meancheay Province 6158
9 Banteay Meanchey Province 6679
10 Battambang Province 11072
11 City of Pailin 803
12 Pursat Province 12692
13 Kampong Chhnang Province 5521
14 Kampong Speu Province 7017
15 Koh Kong Province 11160
16 City of Sihanoukville 868
17 Kampot Province 4873.2
18 City of Kep 335.8
19 Prey Veng Province 4883
20 Svay Rieng Province 2966
21 Kratie Province 11094
22 Stung Treng Province 11092
23 Ratanakiri Province 10782
24 Mondulkiri Province 14288
25 Tonle Sap lake 3000
TOTAL AREA 181035

Foreign relations

Poipet

Cambodia is a member of the United Nations and its specialized agencies such as the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. It is an Asian Development Bank (ADB) member, a member of ASEAN, and joined the WTO on 13 October 2004. In 2005 Cambodia attended the inaugural East Asia Summit.

Following a return to political normality, Cambodia has established diplomatic relations with numerous countries; the government reports twenty embassies in the country[23] including many of its Asian neighbours and those of important players during the Paris peace negotiations, including the US, Australia, Canada, China, the European Union (EU), Japan, and Russia.[24]

File:156525w.jpg
A Khmer Rouge guerrilla officer in the 1970s

While the violent ruptures of the 1970s and 80s have passed, several border disputes between Cambodia and its neighbours persist. There are disagreements over some offshore islands and sections of the boundary with Vietnam, and undefined maritime boundaries and border areas with Thailand.

In January 2003, there were riots in Phnom Penh prompted by rumored comments about Angkor Wat by a Thai actress wrongly attributed by Reaksmei Angkor, a Cambodian newspaper, and later quoted by Prime Minister Hun Sen.[25] The Thai government sent military aircraft to evacuate Thai nationals and closed its border with Cambodia while Thais demonstrated outside the Cambodian embassy in Bangkok. The border was re-opened on March 21, after the Cambodian government paid $6 million USD in compensation for the destruction of the Thai embassy and agreed to compensate individual Thai businesses for their losses.

Wildlife of Cambodia

Indochinese Tiger
see also Deforestation in Cambodia

Cambodia has a wide variety of plants and animals, and may even be home to the Kting Voar, a mysterious snake-eating cow whose existence has not been verified but is believed to exist. There are 212 mammal species, 536 bird species, 240 reptile species, 850 freshwater fish species (Tonle Sap Lake area), and 435 marine fish species.

The country has one of the highest deforestation rates in the world. Since 1970, Cambodia's primary rainforest cover fell dramatically from over 70 percent in 1970 to just 3.1 percent in 2007. In total, Cambodia lost 25,000 square kilometres of forest between 1990 and 2005— 3340 km² of which was primary forest. As of 2007, less than 3,220 km² of primary forest remain with the result that the future sustainability of the forest reserves of Cambodia is under severe threat, with illegal loggers looking to generate revenue.[26]

Economy

Rice cropping plays an important role in the economy

Despite recent progress, the Cambodian economy continues to suffer from the effects of decades of civil war, internal strife and rampant corruption. The per capita income is rapidly increasing, but is low compared with other countries in the region. Most rural households depend on agriculture and its related sub-sectors. Rice, fish, timber, garments and rubber are Cambodia's major exports, and the United States, Singapore, Japan, Thailand, China, Indonesia and Malaysia are its major export partners.[17]

War and brutal totalitarianism in the 1970s created famine in Cambodia. Desperate farm families consumed their rice seeds and many traditional varieties became difficult to find. In the 1980s the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) reintroduced more than 750 traditional rice varieties to Cambodia from its rice seed bank in the Philippines (Jahn 2006,2007). These varieties had been collected in the 1960s. In 1987, the Australian government funded IRRI to assist Cambodia to improve its rice production. By 2000, Cambodia was once again self-sufficient in rice (Puckridge 2004, Fredenburg and Hill 1978).

Preah Khan temple in Preah Vihear Province

The recovery of Cambodia's economy slowed dramatically in 1997–98, due to the regional economic crisis, civil violence, and political infighting. Foreign investment and tourism also fell off drastically. Since then however, growth has been steady. In 1999, the first full year of peace in 30 years, progress was made on economic reforms and growth resumed at 5.0%. Despite severe flooding, GDP grew at 5.0% in 2000, 6.3% in 2001, and 5.2% in 2002. Tourism was Cambodia's fastest growing industry, with arrivals increasing from 219,000 in 1997 to 1,055,000 in 2004. During 2003 and 2004 the growth rate remained steady at 5.0%, while in 2004 inflation was at 1.7% and exports at $1.6 billion US dollars. As of 2005, GDP per capita in PPP terms was $2,200, which ranked 178th (out of 233) countries.[27]

Angkor Wat, the biggest tourist draw of Cambodia

The population often lacks education and productive skills, particularly in the poverty-ridden countryside, which suffers from a lack of basic infrastructure. Fear of renewed political instability and corruption within the government discourage foreign investment and delay foreign aid, although there has been significant assistance from bilateral and multilateral donors. Donors pledged $504 m to the country in 2004,[28] while the Asian Development Bank alone has provided $850m in loans, grants, and technical assistance.[29]

The tourism industry is the country's second-greatest source of hard currency after the textile industry.[17] 50% of visitor arrivals are to Angkor, and most of the remainder to Phnom Penh.[30] Other tourist hotspots include Sihanoukville in the southeast which has several popular beaches, and the nearby area around Kampot including the Bokor Hill Station.

Demographics

A Khmer woman
Market woman wearing a Krama Kampong Thom

More than 90% of its population is of Khmer origin and speaks the Khmer language, the country's official language. The remainder include Chinese, Vietnamese, Cham, Khmer Loeu, and Indians.

The Khmer language is a member of the Mon-Khmer subfamily of the Austroasiatic language group. French, once the lingua franca of Indochina and still spoken by some, mostly older Cambodians as a second language, remains the language of instruction in various schools and universities that are often funded by the government of France. Cambodian French, a remnant of the country's colonial past, is a dialect found in Cambodia and is frequently used in government. However, in recent decades, many younger Cambodians and those in the business-class have favoured learning English. In the major cities and tourist centers, English is widely spoken and taught at a large number of schools due to the overwhelming number of tourists from English-speaking countries. Even in the most rural outposts, however, most young people speak at least some English, as it is often taught by monks at the local pagodas where many children are educated.

The dominant religion, a form of Theravada Buddhism (95%), was suppressed by the Khmer Rouge but has since experienced a revival. Islam (3%) and Christianity (2%) are also practiced.[31]

File:Cambodia-demography.png
Number of inhabitants between 1961 and 2001 in thousands. Note the decrease during the Khmer Rouge years (1975–79). FAO Data, Cambodia

Civil war and its aftermath have had a marked effect on the Cambodian population. The median age is 20.6 years, with more than 50% of the population younger than 25. At 0.95 males/female, Cambodia has the most female-biased sex ratio in the Greater Mekong Subregion [2]. In the Cambodian population over 65, the female to male ratio is 1.6:1.[28] UNICEF has designated Cambodia the third most mined country in the world,[32] attributing over 60,000 civilian deaths and thousands more maimed or injured since 1970 to the unexploded landmines left behind in rural areas.[33] The majority of the victims are children herding animals or playing in the fields.[32] Adults that survive landmines often require amputation of one or more limbs and have to resort to begging for survival.[33] In 2006, the number of landmines casualties in Cambodia took a sharp decrease of more than 50% compared to 2005, with the number of landmines victims down from 800 in 2005 to less than 400 in 2006.

Culture and society

Khmer culture, as developed and spread by the Khmer empire, has distinctive styles of dance, architecture and sculpture, which have strongly influenced neighbouring Laos and Thailand. Angkor Wat (Angkor means "city" and Wat "temple") is the best preserved example of Khmer architecture from the Angkorian era and hundreds of other temples have been discovered in and around the region. The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, the infamous prison of the Khmer Rouge, and Choeung Ek, one of the main Killing Fields are other important historic sites.

The exterior of the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum, Phnom Penh

Bonn Om Teuk (Festival of Boat Racing), the annual boat rowing contest, is the most attended Cambodian national festival. Held at the end of the rainy season when the Mekong river begins to sink back to its normal levels allowing the Tonle Sap River to reverse flow, approximately 10% of Cambodia's population attends this event each year to play games, give thanks to the moon, watch fireworks, and attend the boat race in a carnival-type atmosphere.[34] Popular games include cockfighting, soccer, and kicking a sey, which is similar to a footbag. Recent artistic figures include singers Sinn Sisamouth and Ros Sereysothea (and later Meng Keo Pichenda), who introduced new musical styles to the country.

File:របាំទេបអប្សរា.JPG
Robam Tep Apsara, a Classical Khmer Dance originally performed only in the royal courts of Angkor Wat.

Rice, as in other Southeast Asian countries, is the staple grain, while fish from the Mekong and Tonle Sap also form an important part of the diet. The Cambodian per capita supply of fish and fish products for food and trade in 2000 was 20 kilograms of fish per year or 2 ounces per day per person.[35] Some of the fish can be made into prahok for longer storage. Overall, the cuisine of Cambodia is similar to that of its Southeast Asian neighbours. The cuisine is relatively unknown to the world compared to that of its neighbours Thailand and Vietnam.

File:CamboKShowdown.jpg
Cambodian kickboxers of the Pradal Serey getting ready to attack

Football (soccer) is one of the more popular sports, although professional organized sports are not as prevalent in Cambodia as in western countries due to the economic conditions. The Cambodia national football team managed fourth in the 1972 Asian Cup but development has slowed since the civil war. Western sports such as volleyball, bodybuilding, field hockey, rugby union, and baseball are gaining popularity while traditional boat racing maintains its appeal as a national sport. Martial arts are also practiced in Cambodia which include the native art of Pradal Serey, Muay Thai and Bokator.

Transport

A street scene in Phnom Penh.

The civil war severely damaged Cambodia's transport system, despite the provision of Soviet technical assistance and equipment. Cambodia has two rail lines, totalling about 612 kilometers (380 mi) of single, one meter gauge track.[36] The lines run from the capital to Sihanoukville on the southern coast, and from Phnom Penh to Sisophon (although trains often run only as far as Battambang). Currently only one passenger train per week operates, between Phnom Penh and Battambang.

National Highway 1

The nation's extensive inland waterways were important historically in international trade. The Mekong and the Tonle Sap River, their numerous tributaries, and the Tonle Sap provided avenues of considerable length, including 3,700 kilometers (2,300 mi) navigable all year by craft drawing 0.6 meters (2 ft) and another 282 kilometers (175 mi) navigable to craft drawing 1.8 meters (6 ft).[36] Cambodia has two major ports, Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville, and five minor ones. Phnom Penh, located at the junction of the Bassac, the Mekong, and the Tonle Sap rivers, is the only river port capable of receiving 8,000 ton ships during the wet season and 5,000 ton ships during the dry season.

With increasing economic activity has come an increase in automobile and motorcycle use, though bicycles still predominate; as often in developing countries, an associated rise in traffic deaths and injuries is occurring.[37] Cycle rickshaws ("pʰʊt-pʰʊts") are an additional option often used by visitors.

Airports

The country has four commercial airports. Phnom Penh International Airport in Phnom Penh, the main airport in Cambodia, is the largest. Siem Reap-Angkor International Airport is the second largest and serves the most international flights in and out of Cambodia. The other airports are in Sihanoukville and Battambang.

International rankings

Organization
Heritage Foundation Index of Economic Freedom 102 out of 157
Reporters Without Borders Worldwide Press Freedom Index 108 out of 167
Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index 151 out of 163
United Nations Development Programme Human Development Index 129 out of 177
World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Report 103 out of 125

See also

Template:Topics related to Cambodia

References

  1. ^ Country-Studies.com. Country Studies Handbook; information taken from US Dept of the Army. Accessed July 25, 2006.
  2. ^ Britannica.com. History of Cambodia. Accessed July 25, 2006.
  3. ^ Chandler, D.P. (1993). A history of Cambodia (2nd ed.). Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
  4. ^ Sihanouk, Norodom (1973). My War with the CIA, The Memoirs of Prince Norodom Sihanouk as related to Wilfred Burchett. Pantheon Books.
  5. ^ Shawcross, William (1987). Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the destruction of Cambodia. United States: Touchstone.
  6. ^ Ibid., p. 298.
  7. ^ Pacific Affairs, vol. 56, no. 2, Summer 1983, p. 295.
  8. ^ Etcheson, Craig, The Rise and Demise of Democratic Kampuchea, Westview Press, 1984, p. 97
  9. ^ Shawcross, William, Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia, Touchstone, 1987, pp374-375
  10. ^ Ibid.
  11. ^ http://www.nybooks.com/articles/8215
  12. ^ Shawcross, William, The Quality of Mercy: Cambodia, Holocaust and Modern Conscience, Touchstone, 1985, pp. 115-116.
  13. ^ Kiljunen, Kimmo, ed., Kampuchea: Decade of the Genocide: Report of a Finnish Inquiry Commission, Zed Books, 1984.
  14. ^ Vickery, Michael, Correspondence, Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, vol. 20, no. 1, January-March 1988, p. 73.
  15. ^ Craig Etcheson, Documentation Centre of Cambodia, Phnom Penh, Cambodia http://www.mekong.net/cambodia/toll.htm
  16. ^ CambodianGenocide.org.A Brief History of the Cambodian Genocide. Accessed July 25, 2006.
  17. ^ a b c US Department of State. Country Profile of Cambodia. Accessed July 26, 2006.
  18. ^ UN OHCHR Cambodia Template:PDFlink
  19. ^ BBC Asia-Pacific News (September 19, 2005). Corruption dents Cambodia democracy. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  20. ^ Reuters AlertNet (May 29, 2006). World Bank threatens $64 mln Cambodia aid freeze. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  21. ^ BBC News (29 May 2006). 'Corruption' curbs Cambodia cash. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  22. ^ "Mondulkiri". Phnom Penh Tours. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |accessmonthday= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |accessyear= ignored (|access-date= suggested) (help)
  23. ^ Royal Government of Cambodia.Foreign Embassies.
  24. ^ Catharin E. Dalpino and David G. Timberman. "Cambodia's Political Future: Issues for U.S. Policy," Asia Society, March 26, 1998.
  25. ^ Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs of the US Department of State.Report to the Congress on the Anti-Thai Riots in Cambodia on January 29, 2003.
  26. ^ http://www.planetark.org/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/20049/story.htm
  27. ^ CIA Factbook. GDP per Capita rankings. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  28. ^ a b CIA FactBook. Accessed September 9, 2006.
  29. ^ A Fact Sheet: Cambodia and ADB, Asian Development Bank. Accessed September 9, 2006.
  30. ^ Royal Government of Cambodia.Tourist statistics. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  31. ^ Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labour of the US Department of State. International Religious Freedom Report 2005. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  32. ^ a b UNICEF. "The Legacy of Landmines". Accessed July 25, 2006.
  33. ^ a b PBS.org (July 25, 2003). Cambodia Land Mines. Accessed July 24, 2006.
  34. ^ Government of Cambodia Webpage, Bonn Om Touk, the Water and Moon Festivals; accessed July 24, 2006
  35. ^ Template:PDFlink
  36. ^ a b CountryData.com
  37. ^ "Picking Up Speed: As Cambodia's Traffic Levels Increase, So Too Does the Road Death Toll," The Cambodia Daily, Saturday, March 9–10, 2002."

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