Friday, December 18, 2020
Wednesday, December 16, 2020
Friday, December 11, 2020
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Friday, November 20, 2020
Tuesday, November 17, 2020
Sunday, November 15, 2020
Wednesday, August 19, 2020
Tuesday, August 18, 2020
6.9 magnitude earthquake shakes Pawican, Philippines
A magnitude 6.9 earthquake has shaken the northeastern city of Pawican, Philippines. This is according to a source from the US Earthquake Observatory (USGS) quoted by the Xinhua news agency a little earlier on Tuesday, August 18, 2020.

The epicenter was reported at 12,101 degrees north latitude and 124,087 degrees east longitude, according to the US Geological Survey. There were no immediate reports of injuries or severe damage.
Sunday, August 16, 2020
Friday, August 14, 2020
Thursday, August 13, 2020
India breaks new record in 6,000 cases of COVID-19
The situation of COVID-19 in India has worsened, with India reporting nearly 67,000 new cases reported on Thursday, including a religious leader who attended a groundbreaking ceremony for a temple. A big one with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. This is according to the release by CNA on Thursday, August 13, 2020.

Nretia Gopal Das, an 82-year-old Hindu priest, is the latest figure to test positive for COVID-19 after several high-ranking officials in Modi's cabinet became infected. Including Interior Minister Amit Shah.
Indian Prime Minister Modi and Das were among 170 people present at the groundbreaking ceremony for a temple in the northern city of Ayodhya recently. According to television footage at the time, Modi shook Das's hand and bowed to the religious leader.

India, which ranks third in the world with the highest number of people infected with COVID-19 in the world, now has a total of more than 2.4 million cases, with more than four deaths. .70,000 people and more than 1.7 million healed.
Math Grade 6 Lesson 16 Percentage
Hello, all students from afar!
Today, the teacher will present the 6th grade math lesson, lesson 16 about percentages. Please watch the video below:
What are the daily habits of Samma Samput?
As we all know, when it comes to empire, Buddhism is considered by many people around the world to be one of the influential fathers of philosophy. But if they talk in the Buddhist way, the theory of the Buddha creates a great religion, and even in Cambodia, we take his religion as the state religion.

The Buddhist scriptures claim that there are five kinds of Buddhism, including:
1: Pre-work: The work that the Buddha had to perform in the time before the Buddha was from dawn to noon, he was bent over.
2: Post-work: The work that the Buddha has to perform in the next post is from noon to evening, he performs dharma.
3. Guard duty: The duty that the Buddha has to perform in the early watch of the night is from dusk to midnight. He gives advice to the monks.
4: Central guard duty: The duty that the Buddha has to perform in the middle of the night is at midnight, he solves the parable of the devas who come to question.
5: Western watchdog: The work that the Buddha has to perform in the watch of the end of the night is from the time after midnight until dawn, he has to look at the creatures that will be able to achieve the dharma that he should go to heal the animals.

In short, the Samma Samputa is more important than the sages, clearing the five bodhisattvas, in the morning he goes to Ben Bhat, in the evening he gives a sermon, in the evening he gives advice to the monks, in the night he gives riddles. Of the angels, near dawn, He foresaw the beings who should be enlightened and those who should not be enlightened.
Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Death toll rises to 171 in Beirut blast
The death toll in last week's devastating blast at the Lebanese port of Beirut has risen to 171, according to Lebanese Health Minister Hassan Hamad. Xinhua News Tonight, August 11, 2020.

"The number of missing people varies from 30 to 40," Hamad told reporters after a meeting with World Health Organization emergency official Rick Brennan. As for the injured, he said about 1,500 people were being treated, 120 of whom were in the emergency room.

A powerful explosion occurred in Beirut on Tuesday last week after a negligent warehouse containing 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate. The blast caused extensive damage in the city, leaving hundreds homeless. It comes at a time when Lebanon is tackling a serious financial crisis and the COVID-19 epidemic.

Violent protests have continued in the country despite Prime Minister Hassan Diab announcing the dissolution of the government.
Solidarity Friendship Volleyball Tournament

A friendly, solidarity and volleyball match between three types of forces: the Provincial Military Operations Area, the Provincial Gendarmerie, the Provincial Police, and also with the public authority in honor, was held on the evening of August 9, 2020 at the command Construction site of the provincial military operation area called the Provincial Military, Sangkat O'Ambel, Serey Sophorn City.
Banteay Meanchey Provincial Department of Education, Youth and Sports is the technical coordinator.
It should be noted that in addition to presiding over the program, Brigadier General Born Ben, Provincial Gendarmerie Commander, Brigadier General Chim Bun Ang, Provincial Deputy Commander of the Provincial Military Operations Area and Deputy Commander Chhou Bun Roeung, Director of the Department of Education, Youth and Sports Mr. Hul Raya, Governor of Serey Sophorn City, Colonel CD, Serey Sophorn City Inspector is also a tough player.

Brigadier General Bon Bin, as well as Mr. Chhou Bunroeung, on behalf of the host, said: The purpose of this volleyball game is to promote all kinds of sports in Banteay Meanchey, as well as to encourage everyone to love and play sports.
And in the spirit of love, brotherhood, friendship, solidarity, cooperation between the forces as well as the competent authorities in the province to tackle and implement the core work, skills and intervention work in the province to have better results. And more efficient and responsible.

You continue: In addition, this volleyball game is also dedicated and committed to join the Royal Government with Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen as the head in maintaining peace, development. And achievements achieved with great hard work and sacrifice.
In addition, it promotes the spirit of the sport to call on young people, children and citizens to stay away from drugs, from evil, from danger or vandalism, and turn to a commitment to strengthen physical, mental, and physical fitness for the present. And a prosperous future.

Please also note that the volleyball match between the above armed forces, the first prize went to the Banteay Meanchey Provincial Gendarmerie, the second place went to the Provincial Military, the third place went to the municipal police and the honor went to the municipal authorities and the public.
Want to prevent "gallstones"?

The gallbladder is a small organ located just below the liver. The bile plays an important role in storing and releasing bile into the intestines to aid in the digestive process. Understanding the types of foods that should and should not be eaten is important for those who are experiencing gallbladder problems such as gallstones to Avoid or prevent serious complications from occurring. A proper diet is also essential for those who want to maintain good gallbladder health.
1. Avoid skipping meals
Bile in the gallbladder is released every time you eat. If you skip a meal, the bile will remain in the gallbladder until you put something in your mouth, and this increases the risk. Of gallstones to occur. In addition, the habit of skipping meals can also cause other problems related to the digestive system.
2. Eat enough
Try to drink about 2 liters of water a day regularly to maintain good health, avoid the risk of many problems, including Both gallstones.
3. Keep the body active
An active body can help get rid of as well as prevent gallstones significantly by maintaining the function of the digestive system. Include the gallbladder for better accuracy. On the other hand, exercise or physical activity can help you lose excess weight, while obesity increases the risk of gallstones. .
4. Reduce bad fat intake
Try to reduce or avoid including bad fats in your diet. This is because the more unhealthy the diet, the more saliva is produced, which can cause inflammation. To the gallbladder. You can choose to eat a low fat diet to prevent gallstones.
5. Include turmeric in your diet
Turmeric contains cur-cumin and anti-inflammatory properties that help prevent gallstones.
Do you know! Which country has the best climate in the world?

Of the nearly 200 countries in the world, Greece is considered by most to be the most beautiful country in the world.

Nearly 80 percent of people in Europe, located in the Balkans on the Mediterranean Sea, say the weather in Greece is extremely favorable and that even international tourists are welcome. Admire the weather of this country is not out of the mouth as well.

Due to its excellent geographical location, Greece is known as a country with bright sunshine and clear skies almost all year round, which is conducive to recreational activities as well as leisure activities of many genders. And very rarely see rain.

However, there are still some countries such as New Zealand, France, Spain, Cyprus, Malta, Panama and Peru, which have a good climate, not much less than Greece.
Monday, August 10, 2020
5.7 magnitude earthquake shakes Honduras
The US Geological Survey (USGS) on Monday said a magnitude 5.7 earthquake struck at a distance of 46 km from Honduras' Savannah Bight. This was released by the Chinese news agency Xinhua a little earlier on Monday night, August 10, 2020.
According to the USGS, the quake was 10 kilometers deep. There were no immediate reports of injuries or severe damage.

30 dead, 12 missing in South Korea floods
South Korean authorities on Sunday said the death toll from floods and landslides caused by heavy rains since Saturday had risen to 30, with 12 people still missing. He and eight others were injured. This was released by the Chinese news agency Xinhua on Sunday, August 9, 2020.
So far, heavy rains have continued to spread from central South Korea, including Seoul and surrounding cities, to the southern part of the country.
According to South Korean authorities, a total of 5,971 people from 3,489 families have been forced to flee their homes across South Korea, of whom 4,617 have yet to return home. They have not yet. 9,300 hectares of farmland were flooded, with 9,491 cases of property damage, including 4,234 cases of private property and 5,257 cases of public property.
Meanwhile, homes, animal shelters, warehouses and factories were flooded, while roads, railways, bridges and reservoirs were damaged. But 73 percent of the damaged property has already been restored in an emergency.
Sunday, August 9, 2020
Saturday, August 8, 2020
Friday, August 7, 2020
NASA Small Business Partnership Prepares Drone for 30-Day Science Flights

Aircraft play an essential role in how we study and understand Earth’s surface, climate, and atmosphere. Now, a new commercial unmanned aircraft system (UAS) aims to bring about a powerful way to observe our planet for days or weeks on end.
With the help of NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley, Swift Engineering of San Clemente, California, completed a two-hour flight test of their Swift High-Altitude Long-Endurance (HALE) UAS. The applications of the technology – for science, agriculture, and disaster response – could have a real impact on our everyday lives.
Swift's 72-foot solar-powered HALE weighs less than 180 pounds, flies 10- to 15-pound payloads at a time and is designed to operate at an altitude of 70,000 feet for 30 days or more. Despite its wide wingspan, Swift’s HALE is similar in size to a small general aviation (GA) aircraft but at a fraction of a GA’s weight. Compared to the NASA ER-2, which also operates at a maximum altitude of 70,000 feet and can carry a 2,600-pound payload for missions over 10 hours, the Swift HALE UAS is capable of flying lightweight payloads for days and weeks on end.
“Current NASA science aircraft can meet most – but not all – observing system requirements; HALE aircraft can provide unique data to complement and improve NASA measurements from orbit,” said Matt Fladeland, a researcher at Ames working with Swift on the aircraft. “Developing the HALE with Swift has opened up more possibilities than we initially imagined. The successful flight test is an important first step towards realizing a new capability to support NASA science.”
In 2016, Ames – whose expertise in unmanned systems included aircraft development, airspace integration, and airborne science – partnered with Swift through the agency's Small Business Innovation Research/Small Business Technology Transfer (SBIR/STTR) program on a proof of concept for a solar-powered UAS. With its expertise in UAS and solar-powered technology, Swift received NASA SBIR awards to develop a unique solution that could sustain flight for a month or more.
Before the aircraft was ready for its first flight test, the Swift team, in consultation with NASA researchers, had to research solar panel and battery technologies to develop a system that could provide enough power to stay aloft at night until it can charge its batteries the next day. The cells also need to retain high power capacity after several recharging cycles. Other design considerations included the need to withstand the harsh temperatures, radiation, and other conditions of the upper atmosphere, and past NASA Global Hawk flights helped to characterize the operational environment.
During the first of a series of flight tests completed successfully at Spaceport America in New Mexico on July 7, the Swift crew conducted operations at low altitude, passing all systems checks and validating aerodynamic, control, and power system models. By sustaining flight for two hours, the calculations from the flight test provided confidence in the UAS's ability to maintain missions longer than 30 days. This flight is the first of many that will collect data to further validate the vehicle's design requirements.
“This program signifies an important partnership with NASA Science and Aeronautics – together, we designed a UAS that fulfills the agency's use cases and aligns with the Federal Aviation Administration’s vision of how HALE vehicles should be deployed and maintained for extended periods," said Andrew Streett, vice president of technology at Swift Engineering. “Sustained, long-duration flights are only just becoming a reality with a new generation of batteries and power efficiencies.”
In addition, Swift's high-altitude, long-endurance UAS verified it could carry a 15-pound payload. For the test flight, the Swift HALE took NASA's FluidCam, a high-frame-rate video camera coupled with artificial intelligence processing capable of providing unprecedented observations of the coastal ocean seafloor. The flight test with FluidCam has implications for extensive scientific and environmental research of coral reefs.
Aircraft like Swift's HALE could also augment the observations of satellites orbiting Earth. While a geosynchronous satellite observes a fixed location on Earth on a continental scale, Swift's HALE can similarly observe Earth on a focused, regional level, faster and more cost-efficiently than a satellite. NASA teams are exploring how aircraft like Swift's could support air quality monitoring, coastal zone imaging, mapping for landslides and geologically active regions, and real-time data for forest and agricultural monitoring.
This partnership is an example of how NASA's SBIR/STTR phased funding and collaborative approach stimulates innovation and ingenuity among small businesses. Swift received Phase I and II funding in 2016 and 2017 to develop its idea toward a prototype, which resulted in a successful flight demonstration in July 2020.
The next step in the development will be a Phase III effort to demonstrate taking science measurements at high altitude for days to weeks. If successful, the aircraft could serve as a new operational capability for NASA and other government agencies.
Thursday, August 6, 2020
Knee pain


Google has already discontinued the Pixel 4 and 4 XL
Google has discontinued the Pixel 4 and Pixel 4 XL, its flagship phones that were released in October of last year. Both devices are out of stock in Google’s store in the US, though some variants are still available in other regions for the time being.“Google Store has sold through its inventory and completed sales of Pixel 4 [and] 4 XL,” a Google spokesperson confirms to The Verge. “For people who are still interested in buying Pixel 4 [and] 4 XL, the product is available from some partners while supplies last. Just like all Pixel devices, Pixel 4 will continue to get software and security updates for at least three years from when the device first became available on the Google Store in the US.”
It’s unusual for Google to discontinue a Pixel phone so quickly. The Pixels 2 and 3 were on sale for around 18 months each, with Google stopping sales roughly six months after the introduction of their successors. The move means Google technically no longer has a flagship phone for sale.

That is a technicality, though — Google introduced the new Pixel 4A earlier this week for an August 20th release, and also confirmed that the Pixel 5 and a 5G-equipped 4A would be coming later this fall. And while the 4A is a budget device, between its better battery life, less bezel-y design, and equally good main camera you might actually prefer it to the regular Pixel 4. That’s the conclusion Dieter came to in our review, saying “the Pixel 4A makes a much stronger case for itself than other Pixel phones.”
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
Apple postpones release of iPhone 12 due to Corona Virus
Tuesday, August 4, 2020
NASA astronauts make history by returning to Earth in SpaceX spacecraft
Learn to calculate expressions from simple arithmetic
Grace VanderWaal's Iconic Golden Buzzer Moment - America's Got Talent 2020
Restoration of historical sites in Angkor, Cambodia assisted by China amid pandemic
The restoration project started in November 2019 and is set to last for 11 years. It is the third Angkor restoration project assisted by China, one employee of the Chinese Academy of Cultural Heritage told the Global Times on Thursday. When it is completed, the ruins will be transferred to a tourist-friendly archeological park.
"A laboratory for protecting cultural relics and an exhibition hall will be built," the employee said. The further archeological research will aim at preserving stone carvings.
Before restoration, the research team eliminated dangerous factors around the northwest gate of the royal palaces and completed construction of scaffolds.
The wooden structures of some palaces have been eroded and just stone foundations are left, as the employee described. The upper part of a temple at the center of the ruins has also collapsed.
After the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the team carried out epidemic prevention work at the scene. Although on-site excavations were suspended, the research work continued. Chinese researchers have been working hard to study the unearthed cultural relics and ancient communication between the two countries.
The leader of the team, Wang Yuanlin, told Xinhua that a large number of living utensils were found in the excavation area, such as pottery pots, celadon bowls, black glazed porcelain and other unearthed objects, including Chinese porcelain pieces.
Wang said these unearthed porcelain pieces is evidence of close China-Cambodia cultural communication in ancient times.
The ruins of the royal palaces with unique historical, cultural and artistic value are located in the center of Angkor Thom, where many kings lived from the 5th to 19th centuries. The restoration project will cover a 142,000-square-meter area within the city wall.
In the next step, the research will continue to carry out excavation work on the outer courtyard of the northwest gate and the trench, and will clean up the stone items scattered in the courtyard.
The ruins of Angkor were included in the World Heritage List of the United Nations Educational, Science and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) in 1992. Cambodia and UNESCO launched an international action to preserve the ruins in 1993, Xinhua reported.
China was one of the initiators and earliest participants in the preservation work and has helped restore two historical sites at Angkor.
Monday, August 3, 2020
ardinals-Tigers series postponed after 13 St. Louis players and staff test positive for COVID-19
Seven St. Louis Cardinals players and six staff members tested positive for COVID-19, causing Major League Baseball to postpone the team’s four-game series at Detroit.
The series was to have been played at Comerica Park from Tuesday through Thursday.
St. Louis has been in quarantine since Thursday in Milwaukee, where the Cardinals’ series last weekend was also postponed, and the team is being tested daily. St. Louis last played July 29 at Minnesota and is tentatively set to resume its schedule on Friday at home against the Chicago Cubs.
The Cardinals are the second team sidelined by the Coronavirus since the season started July 23. The Miami Marlins are set to resume play Tuesday in Baltimore following an outbreak within their travelling party that sidelined half the players. Miami has not played since July 26.
Because the outbreak occurred in the visiting clubhouse at Citizens Bank Park, the Phillies were sidelined for a week while they were tested daily.
Taylor Swift’s ‘Folklore’ soars to No. 1 with biggest sales week of 2020
“Folklore” is a storybook smash.
Taylor Swift’s fantasy-streaked eighth studio album — recorded in secrecy in quarantine and released on July 24 with only a few hours’ notice — moved the sales-and-streams equivalent of 846,000 copies in the United States in its first week of availability, according to Nielsen Music. That’s the biggest opening for any record this year — and the biggest sales week for any album since Swift’s 2019 LP, “Lover,” which notched 867,000 copies in September.
“Folklore’s” strong commercial showing was more than enough to secure a No. 1 debut on the Billboard 200, 30-year-old Swift’s seventh visit to the chart’s top spot; among female artists, only Barbra Streisand and Madonna have scored more No. 1 albums, with 11 and nine, respectively. (The Beatles, as Billboard points out, are the all-time leaders, with 19 chart-toppers.)
Of “Folklore’s” first-week copies, 615,000 registered as full-album sales in either a digital or physical format, which makes the album 2020’s biggest seller after just a week. The previous leader, “Map of the Soul: 7” by K-pop’s BTS, has sold 574,000 copies in the U.S. since it came out in February.
Swift’s label, Republic Records, said global sales for “Folklore” have passed two million.
Those sales numbers aren’t unusual for one of the few superstar artists still capable of inspiring fans to pay for downloads and CDs. (“Lover” sold 679,000 copies in its first week of availability.)
Yet “Folklore’s” impressive streaming stats — the LP’s songs racked up 289.9 million streams, according to Nielsen — suggest that Swift, who’s famously bickered with streaming services over payments, has finally embraced (and been embraced by) the format that now dominates music consumption.
Billboard said “Folklore” had the biggest streaming week of any nonrap album released this year, with only Juice Wrld’s “Legends Never Die” and Lil Uzi Vert’s “Eternal Atake” having racked up more streams.
Swift made the rootsy “Folklore” remotely with new collaborators led by Aaron Dessner of the Brooklyn indie-rock band the National, who told Pitchfork that Swift texted him in April and asked if he wanted to write songs together; other musicians featured on the album include Bryce Dessner and Bryan Devendorf, both of the National, and Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon, who duets with Swift on “Exile.” (That song carries a writing credit for the mysterious William Bowery, suspected by many Swift fans to be an alias for the singer’s boyfriend, actor Joe Alwyn.)
Swift’s longtime studio partner Jack Antonoff also co-wrote and produced several cuts.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the live-music industry, Swift had been scheduled this summer to play a series of shows called Lover Fest at the new SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, Calif., and at Gillette Stadium near Boston. She’s said the concerts will be rescheduled for 2021.
Angkor Wat without tourists: Empty, strange and extraordinary
With travel restrictions in place around the world, and the coronavirus pandemic keeping would-be tourists at home, one of the world’s most famous wonders, the early 12th-century Angkor Wat and surrounding temples, has been left largely empty for months.But for those who live in Cambodia, the pandemic has offered visitors to the Angkor Archaeological Park a rare opportunity to explore the near vacant temples in peace, quiet and solitude.“This is really a once-in-a-multi-lifetime experience. There’s very few people in history who have ever been to Angkor alone, or very close to alone, ” says Jared Cahners, an expatriate living in Cambodia who gives food tours in Siem Reap, where the temples are located – when there are tourists to guide.Usually a top South-East Asian tourist destination, the park counted more than 1.1 million international visitors in the first five months of 2019. But by the end of May 2020, fewer than 400,000 have visited, according to the state-run ticketing agency Angkor Enterprise.As Covid-19 pummels Cambodia’s tourism industry, the temple’s managers are hoping long-term tickets will draw in more visitors to the world famous temples.
Angkor Enterprise has started issuing one-month, three-month, and six-month tickets (priced US$100/RM426, US$150/RM639 and US$200/RM852, respectively), according to a Khmer Times report on June 25.
As a measure to help tourism, the initiative may be too optimistic, however. Even before the pandemic, the average length-of-stay for tourists had only grown from 5.4 days in 2013 to 6.4 days in 2018.
Now, the sector, like many across the world, is facing a disaster. The number of passengers for May plunged 98% in all three international airports, compared to the year before.
With only 654 foreigners visiting the temples in April 2020, each day saw an average of 22 international visitors in a 400sq km complex that includes more than 150 significant monuments.
Angkor Archaeological Park today seems more empty than it was in the early 2000s, before many foreign tourists were visiting, according to Long Kosal, a spokesman for the Apsara Authority, which manages the temple complex where he has worked for more than 20 years.
“Back then there were few tourists, but now there are none, ” Kosal says. “To see Angkor empty, it’s strange and extraordinary.”
But on the plus side, the lack of visitors is allowing the Apsara Authority to get planned maintenance work, like tree planting and road restoration, done early, he says.
“We’re making preparations for when tourists come back, ” he adds.
While some travellers from neighbouring countries are expected to start visiting Cambodia again next year, followed by Chinese tourists, the temples may not see their normal, pre-pandemic number of visitors for up to four years, according to Chhay Sivlin, president of the Cambodia Association of Travel Agents.
Ou Virak, a public policy analyst who lives in the capital, Phnom Penh, says he visited the temples at the end of April because he wanted to see Angkor Wat without tourists while he could.
But as a researcher, he also wanted to witness the economic effect of the pandemic with his own eyes.
As much as he, other locals and expats were enjoying the “once in a lifetime experience, ” Virak says, it was important to keep in mind that the park’s emptiness means thousands of people who earn a living through tourism are suffering financially.
For Cambodians, he added, Angkor Wat is more than a tourist attraction. It’s a holy place and part of their cultural heritage.
“It’s a symbol of the country. Literally, it’s on the Cambodian flag, ” Virak says.
For Vincent Prosper, a nongovernmental organisation director who moved to Phnom Penh in February and visited the temples for the first time in mid-May, the solitude in the park was a unique experience.
“Being alone in the Bakan, at the highest level of Angkor Wat, made me feel like Henri Mouhot, the French naturalist re-discovering the site in 1861, ” Prosper says.
“I just want to keep this image in mind and will be certainly reluctant to visit Angkor Wat again once the Covid-19 situation will be over.”
Alexandra Kennett, a consultant for a nongovernmental organisation in Phnom Penh, visited the temples with four friends in early May and said seeing the near-empty walkway leading to Angkor Wat at sunrise was unbelievable and could not be replicated.
Kennett said she and her friends also had the multi-Buddha-faced Bayon temple entirely to themselves.
“We were able to get lost in the ground level of Bayon and that was just phenomenal.” – dpa
Cambodia's new entry rules
Last month, it was reported that foreign travellers entering Cambodia are now required to pay a cash deposit of US$3,000 (RM12,787) for “Covid-19 service charges”. This can be paid by credit card too.
Visitors are also required to have a travel insurance coverage of at least US$50,000 (RM213,125).
The service charges will include transportation to a testing centre, a Covid-19 test, an overnight stay at a designated hotel while waiting for test results, meals and laundry.
Visitors must self-isolate for 14 days after testing, and report to medical officers daily. On the 13th day, they must undergo a second Covid-19 test. If their test results are negative, then the visitors are free to start their holiday. The remainder of the deposit will be returned to them. If the tests are positive, then the traveller will be sent to a state hospital.
These charges apply to all foreign travellers, except for those on diplomatic or official government business.
Cambodia targets short skirts, see-through shirts with new modesty law
A proposed law that would let Cambodian police fine people deemed to be dressed inappropriately could be used to curtail women’s freedoms and reinforce a culture of impunity around sexual violence, rights campaigners say.The draft legislation, which will take effect next year if approved by several government ministries and the national assembly, would ban men from going out shirtless and stop women from wearing anything “too short” or “too see-through”.While billed by the government as a way to preserve national traditions, critics fear the law will be used as a tool to control and oppress women in the socially conservative country.
Cambodia confirms Chikungunya virus outbreak in 12 provinces, sickening over 1,000 people
Cambodia confirmed on Saturday an outbreak of Chikungunya virus (CHIKV) in 12 provinces, sickening more than 1,000 people, according to Health Ministry’s secretary of state and spokeswoman Or Vandine.CHIKV re-emerged in the Southeast Asian country last month and had left 1,020 people ill, including 562 females, the official said in a statement. “More than 80 percent of the cases had been detected in four provinces, namely Siem Reap, Banteay Meanchey, Preah Vihear and Kampong Cham,” Vandine said.




























