About

Sebastian Strangio is a journalist and author focusing on Southeast Asia. Since 2008, his reporting from across the region has appeared in more than 30 leading publications in the United States, Europe, and Asia.

read more >>

Articles
The Dhaka solution

The Dhaka solution

While the rest of the world debates climate change, Bangladesh has started living the reality of a warmer, more volatile world.

$1.1 billion pledged in donor aid

INTERNATIONAL donors have pledged a record US$1.1 billion in development assistance for the upcoming 18-month period, following a two-day government-donor forum that wrapped up in the capital Thursday. At the close of the third Cambodia Development Cooperation Forum (CDCF), Minister of Economy and Finance Keat Chhon hailed the outcome of the talks.
Bangladesh -- Eco Symbol?

Bangladesh — Eco Symbol?

Often derided as a basket case, Bangladesh might just have a thing or two to show the world about tackling climate change.

PM slams critics over revenues

PRIME Minister Hun Sen lashed out at critics of the government’s handling of extractive-resource revenues on Wednesday, branding them “thieves” and saying that tensions between Cambodia and international watchdog Global Witness stem from a “sexual scandal” involving the group’s staff. Speaking at the opening of a two-day mining conference in the capital Wednesday, Hun Sen...
Sand exports go on unabated

Sand exports go on unabated

A RECENT boom in sand exports from Cambodia to Singapore, fuelled by a “complete lack” of transparency and government regulation, could severely damage the country’s riverine and coastal ecosystems, according to a report released on Monday by international anticorruption watchdog Global Witness. The 40-page report, titled Shifting Sands, argues that exports to Singapore, where the...

Father searches for truth

OFF a dusty track in Trapeang Chranieng village lies a half-finished Buddhist pagoda, its unpainted walls still exposed to the mid-afternoon sun. Like many across Cambodia, the new building – as well as a nearby shrine, built in 2007 – is dedicated to the spirits of those killed in the village while it was under...

Crunch time in corruption fight

ONE month after passing its long-awaited Anticorruption Law, Cambodia is entering a make-or-break period in its fight against corruption, a veteran Hong Kong corruption fighter said this week, and the first year after the law comes into effect will be significant in determining the legislation’s ultimate success. Under the law, set to come into effect...
An icon fades in Cambodia

An icon fades in Cambodia

PHNOM PENH – BY uprooting six wooden border markers last October along the Vietnamese border, Cambodia’s opposition leader Sam Rainsy again cast himself in the familiar role of a thorn in the flesh of authority. Earlier this year, a court sentenced Rainsy to two years in prison in absentia for uprooting the posts. He now...
Kingdom Kim's culinary outposts

Kingdom Kim’s culinary outposts

Inside the bizarre world of Asia’s North Korean restaurant chain.
A city in the Burmese junta's image

A city in the Burmese junta’s image

BURMA’S new capital city lies about 10 hours’ drive – or a short, white-knuckled flight on an ageing Fokker-27 – from Rangoon, the country’s largest city and former capital.
Revisiting Lon Nol's Cambodia

Revisiting Lon Nol’s Cambodia

Forty years on, former participants reflect on the country’s star-crossed republican experiment

An unsafe house

Did Beijing’s economic assistance to Cambodia influence Phnom Penh’s deportation of 20 political refugees?