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Sihanoukville (city)

Sihanoukville (Khmer: ក្រុងព្រះសីហនុ, Krŏng Preăh Seihănŭ [kroŋ prĕəh səjhanuʔ]), also known as Kampong Saom (Khmer: កំពង់សោម, Kâmpóng Saôm [kɑmpɔŋ saom]), is a coastal city in Cambodia and the capital of Preah Sihanouk Province, at the tip of an elevated peninsula in the country's south-west on the Gulf of Thailand. The city has a string of beaches along its entire coastline and coastal marshlands bordering Ream National Park in the east. The city has one navigable river, the mangrove-lined Ou Trojak Jet, running from Otres Pagoda to the sea at Otres. A number of thinly inhabited islands, under Sihanoukville's administration,[4] are near the city.

Sihanoukville
ក្រុងព្រះសីហនុ
Clockwise from top: Sihanoukville Skyline; Waiting for Love Tree; Ochheuteal Beach; Aerial View of Beaches in Sihanoukville; Otrest Beach; Bird's Eye View of Golden Lions Roundabout; and Statue of Preah Thong Neang Neak
Sihanoukville city's urban area (yellow)
in Sihanoukville Municipality (red)
and Sihanoukville Province (purple)
Sihanoukville
Location of Sihanoukville City in Cambodia
Coordinates: 10°38′N 103°30′E / 10.633°N 103.500°E / 10.633; 103.500
Country Cambodia
ProvincePreah Sihanouk
MunicipalityPreah Sihanouk
Established22 November 1957[1]
Named forNorodom Sihanouk
Government
 • MayorSar Kackada (CPP)
Area
 • Total195.9 km2 (75.6 sq mi)
Elevation
15 m (45 ft)
Population
 (2019)[3]
 • Total 73,036
 • Rank7th
 • Urban
66,723
 • Urban density834/km2 (2,160/sq mi)
 • Municipality
89,846
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)
Postal code
18000
Area code034

The city, which was named in honour of former king Norodom Sihanouk, had a population of around 89,800 people and approximately 66,700 in its urban center in 2008.[5] Sihanoukville city encompasses the greater part of six communes (Sangkats) in Sihanoukville Province. It has evolved in parallel with the construction of the Sihanoukville Autonomous Port, which commenced in June 1955, as the country's gateway to direct and unrestricted international sea trade. The only deep-water port in Cambodia includes an oil terminal and a transport logistics facility.[6] As a consequence, the city grew to become a center of trade, commerce, transport, and process manufacturing.[7][8][9] Sihanoukville's many beaches and nearby islands make it Cambodia's premier seaside resort.[10] Its infrastructure problems persist, in particular those related to water and power supply, while international standards for health facilities remain limited.[11]

Sihanoukville also faces challenges related to crime, security, and safety, with the city frequently being the focus of scandals linked to organized crimes, petty crimes, and corruption.[12][13]

Etymology edit

The official name of the city in Khmer is: krong ('city'), preah ('holy') Sihanouk (name of the former king), which adds up to: "City of the Holy Sihanouk" or "Honorable Sihanouk City".[14] King Norodom Sihanouk (reigned 1941–1955, 1993–2004) is revered as the father of the (modern) nation.[15] The name Sihanouk is derived from Sanskrit through two Pali words: siha ('lion'), and hanu ('jaws').

The alternative name, Kompong Saom (also romanized as Kompong Som and Kampong Som), (Khmer: កំពង់សោម) means 'Port of the Moon' or 'Shiva's Port'.[16] Saom is derived from the Sanskrit word saumya, the original (Rig Vedic) meaning of which was Soma, the 'juice or sacrifice of the moon-god', but evolved into Pali 'moon', 'moonlike' 'name of Shiva'.[17] The word kampong or kompong is of Malay origin[18] and means 'village' or 'hamlet'. Its meaning underwent extension towards 'pier' or river 'landing bridge'.[19]

History edit

Classical period (before 1700) edit

Prior to the ports' and city's foundation works of 1955, the port of Kompong Som must have been only of regional significance due to the absence of navigable waterways that connect the port with the kingdom's settlement centers. During the many centuries of pre-Angkorian and Angkorian history – from Funan to Chenla and during the Khmer Empire, regional trade was centered at O Keo (Vietnamese: Óc Eo) in the Mekong Delta, now the province of Rạch Giá in Vietnam. The township of Prei Nokor (Saigon) was a commercial center of the Khmer Empire.[20][21][22]

The Chronicle of Samtec Cauva Vamn Juon, one of the 18th and 19th century Cambodian Royal Chronicles, briefly mentions the region as the country was split into three parts during a nine-year civil war from 1476 to 1485: "In 1479, Dhammaraja took on the throne at Chatomuk (Phnom Penh) and controlled the provinces of Samraong Tong, Thbong, Kompong Saom, Kampot up to the Bassak, Preah Trapeang, Kramuon Sah, Koh Slaket and Peam" (mouth of the Mekong).[23]

Early modern period (c. 1700–1863) edit

From the end of the 17th century, Cambodia lost control of the Mekong River route as Vietnamese power expanded into the lower Mekong. During the Nguyen-Siamese War (1717–1718) a Siamese fleet burned the port of Kompong Som in 1717 but was defeated by the Vietnamese at Banteay Meas/Ha Tien.[24] A Cambodian king of the late-18th century, Outey-Reachea III allied with a Chinese pirate,[25] Mac-Thien-Tu, who had established an autonomous polity based in Ha Tien and controlled the maritime network in the eastern part of the Gulf of Thailand.[26] Ha Tien was at a point where a river linking to the Bassac River flows into the Gulf of Thailand. Landlocked Cambodia tried to keep its access to maritime trade through Ha Tien. In 1757, Ha Tien acquired the ports of Kampot and Kompong Som as a reward for Mac's military support to the King of Cambodia. Until its destruction in 1771 the port developed into an independent duty-free entrepôt linked with several Chinese trading networks.[27]

Alexander Hamilton, who traveled to the Gulf of Thailand in 1720, wrote that "Kompong Som and Banteay Meas (later Ha Tien) belonged to Cambodia, as Cochin-China was divided from Cambodia by a river (Bassac River) of three leagues broad." and "King Ang Duong constructed a road from his capital of Oudong to Kampot". Kampot remained the only international seaport of Cambodia. "The traveling time between Udong and Kampot was eight days by oxcart and four days by elephants." French Résident Adhemard Leclère wrote: "...Until 1840s, the Vietnamese governed Kampot and Péam [Mekong Delta], but Kompong Som belonged to Cambodia. The Vietnamese constructed a road from Ha Tien to Svai village, on the border with Kompong-Som, via Kampot."[28]

The British Empire followed a distinct policy by the 1850s, seeking to consolidate its influence. Eyewitness reports give rare insights, as Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston's agent John Crawfurd reports: "Cambodia was...the Keystone of our policy in these countries, - the King of that ancient Kingdom is ready to throw himself under the protection of any European nation...The Vietnamese were interfering with the trade at Kampot, and this would be the basis of an approach..." Palmerston concluded: "The trade at Kampot - one of the few remaining ports, could never be considerable, in consequence of the main entrance to the country, the Mekong, with all its feeders flowing into the Sea through the territory of Cochin China The country, too, had been devastated by recent Siam - Vietnam wars. Thus, without the aid of Great Britain, Kampot or any other port in Cambodia, can never become a commercial Emporium." Crawfurd later wrote: "The Cambodians...sought to use intervals of peace in the Siam - Vietnam wars to develop intercourse with outside nations. The trade at Kampot which they sought to foster was imperiled by pirates. Here is a point where the wedge might be inserted, that would open the interior of the Indo-Chinese Peninsula to British Commerce, as the great River of the Cambodians traverses its entire length and even affords communication into the heart of Siam".[29]

French rule (1863–1954) edit

 
French civil servant Auguste Pavie (centre) and Pierre Lefèvre-Pontalis in 1893 with Cambodian interpreters

Under French rule, Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia became a single administrative and economic unit. The coastal region Circonscription Résidentielle with Kampot as its capital contained the arrondissements of Kampot, Kompong Som, Trang, and Kong-Pisey. The establishment of another international trading center near the existing city of Saigon was not considered necessary. Focus remained the Mekong and the idea to establish an alternative route to Chinese and Thai markets along an uninterrupted navigable waterway to the Mekong Delta.[30]

Insurrection edit

An insurrection that took place from 1885 to 1887 further discouraged French ambition. It started in Kampot and quickly spread to Veal Rinh, Kampong Seila, and Kompong Som, where the insurgents were led by a Chinese pirate named Quan-Khiem. He managed to control the northern part of Preah Sihanouk for some time until he—an old man—was arrested by the local governor.[28]

One example of infrastructural improvements of this period was the construction of Route Coloniale No. 17, later renamed National Road No.3 and the national railway system, although work on the "Southern Line", from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville, only began in 1960.

After independence (since 1954) edit

The city's and province's alternative name, Kampong som (Kampong Som), was adopted from the local indigenous community. After the dissolution of French Indochina in 1954, the steadily tightening control of the Mekong Delta by Vietnam required a solution to gain unrestricted access to the seas. Plans were made to construct an entirely new deep-water port. Kompong Saom (Kampong Som) was selected for water depth and ease of access. In August 1955, a French/Cambodian construction team cut a base camp into the unoccupied jungle in the area that is now known as Hawaii Beach. Funds for construction of the port came from France and the road was financed by the United States.[31]

During the Vietnam War the port became a military facility for both sides: in the service of National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam and after 1970, under the government of Lon Nol, in the service of the United States.[32]

The port was the last place to be evacuated by the US Army, only days before Khmer Rouge guerrillas took control of the government in April 1975. The events surrounding the taking of the US container ship SS Mayaguez and its crew on 12 May by the Khmer Rouge and the subsequent rescue operation by US Marines played out on the waters of Koh Tang off the coast of Sihanoukville. During the two days of action, the US commenced air strikes on targets on the mainland of Sihanoukville, including the port, the Ream Naval Base, an airfield, the railroad yard and the petroleum refinery in addition to strikes and naval gun fire on several islands.[33] After the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979, and the subsequent opening of the economy, the port of Sihanoukville resumed its importance in the development and recovery of the country. With the further opening of new markets in 1999, the city regained its role in the economic growth of Cambodia.[34]

In 1993, Ream National Park was established per royal decree of former King Sihanouk.[35]

The Sihanoukville Municipality was elevated to a regular province on 22 December 2008 after King Norodom Sihamoni signed a royal decree converting the municipalities of Kep, Pailin, and Sihanoukville into provinces.[36]

In 2006, the Koh Puos (Cambodia) Investment Group submitted an application, planning to invest US$276 million in converting the 116 hectare Koh Puos, Snake Island, into a luxury residential and resort complex. After the completion of certain elements of the infrastructure, the investor announced alterations of the original blueprints, as "Reapplying for permission will happen in 2014..." according to the Council of the Development of Cambodia.[37][38]

On 26 May 2011, Preah Sihanouk area joined the Paris-based club, Les Plus Belles Baies Du Monde ('the most beautiful bays in the world'). The organisation officially accepted the Bay of Cambodia as one of its members at its 7th General Assembly.[39]

Geography edit

Topography edit

Sihanoukville town is at the tip of the rolling hills of a peninsula on the Gulf of Thailand. To its northwest and at its center it rises up to 15 metres (49 ft) above sea level, whereas the land gently and steadily flattens towards extended coastal plains, marshlands and beaches in the south and southeast. The Gulf of Thailand's shallow depths and the local climate are moderate in contrast to the South China Sea to the east and the Indian Ocean to the west.[40]

Architecture and cityscape edit

 
National Bank of Cambodia, example of New Khmer Architecture designed by Vann Molyvann

Established after the period of the French Protectorate, bourgeois colonial style quarters such as ones seen in Kampot, Siem Reap, or Phnom Penh do not exist. Cambodian architect Vann Molyvann designed objects, public buildings with a distinct function, some still operational. This brief era of New Khmer Architecture ended in 1970.[41][42]

In 1959, the first urban plan for the city was completed for a population of 55,000 residents; it included cycle paths and green spaces. The plan also marked out zoning for the port, the railway network, the town center with municipal offices, business and residential housing, and finally a tourist zone to the south along the beaches. A feasibility study by the United States Operations Mission (USOM) looked at drawing on a new water supply from the Prek Tuk Sap and existing lagoons; these were subsequently were cut off from the sea and used as the initial source for town supply. The reservoirs are still operational, although insufficient for today's demands.[43] The area connects with the city center along a single highway via typical irregular successions of residential buildings.[44][45]

 
Ekreach Road, Sihanoukville's main thoroughfare

Rivers edit

The mangrove-lined Ou Trojak Jet river, which runs from Otres Pagoda to Otres Beach, is Sihanoukville's longest river. In the tidal mangrove area Barramundi, mangrove jacks and barracuda are the prize targets for sport anglers; the lower section harbours a marina. Restaurants along the south bank of the river serve fresh seafood supplied by the local inshore fishing boats.[46] Due to their proximity to the sea, mangroves line large parts of the rivers.

Islands edit

 
Top: remote beach on Koh Rong
center top left: Koh Bong Po'on
center top right: Koh Rong Resort
center bottom: Koh Rong Sanloem
bottom left: Koh Tuich
bottom right: Koh Dek Koul

All the islands listed below fall under administration of Sihanoukville's Mittakpheap District. The majority is either in the process of or has been assigned for extensive tourism. Koh Rong and Koh Rong Sanloem in particular have so far undergone years of uncoordinated development. Koh Rong has been declared a stop on the Banana Pancake Trail.[47]

  • Koh Rong, កោះរ៉ុង: Koh Rong, 26 km (16 mi) west of Sihanoukville, is the biggest of the islands of Sihanoukville Province. It encompasses an area of 78 km2 (30 sq mi). The terrain is predominantly hilly with a 316 metres (1,037 ft) mountain at the island's north-west. The island's interior is almost completely forested. As of 2016, there is a ferry network between Sihanoukville and Koh Rong.
  • Koh Rong Sanloem: South of Koh Rong and smaller beaches are on the west and east coast. It is covered in dense forest, generally more flat (still, though there are sizable hills) and has noticeably less landmass in relation to its coastline. As of 2016, there is a ferry network between Sihanoukville and Koh Rong Sanloem.
  • Koh Kaong Kang/Thass: Mangrove Island, Ile des Paletuviers (old French name), Koh Kaong Kang/Thass – one of the inner islands.
  • Koh Koun: 'Child Island', 'Ile de Cone' (old French name), a small island between Koh Rong and Koh Rong Sanloem, has no beach and is uninhabited.
  • Koh Tuich: 'Small Island', a tiny island off Koh Rong's Koh Tuich village. There is a little pagoda on it in service since around 2010.
  • Koh Puos: also known as 'Snake Island' or 'Morakot Island'. This island lies 800 metres (2,625 ft) off Sihanoukville's Victory Beach. It is under development by Russian investors and converted into a luxury holiday destination.[48] Snake Island is linked to the mainland via a regular road bridge since around July 2011. The bridge is currently not open for public traffic.
  • Koh Dek Koul: This small island lies 7 kilometres (4 mi) off Victory Beach and only a further few hundred metres off Snake Island.
  • Koh Bong Po-oun/Song Saa: – 'Siblings/Lovers Islands' – Les Frères (old French name), renamed to Koh Song Saa. Two tiny islets off Koh Rong's north-east.[49]
 
Koh Rong Sanloem's Saracen Bay

Environment edit

The urban area suffers from polluted water supplies. Waste management policies and practices are deficient or lacking altogether.[50]

Climate edit

 
Worldwide zones of tropical monsoon climate (Am)
 
Map of rainfall regimes in Cambodia, source: DANIDA

Sihanoukville lies in the Tropical monsoon (Am) climate zone. The city has two seasons: a wet season and a dry season.

The maximum mean is about 30 °C (86 °F) ; the minimum mean, about 24 °C (75 °F). Maximum temperatures of higher than 32 °C (90 °F), however, are common and, just before the start of the rainy season, they may rise to more than 38 °C (100 °F). Minimum night temperatures sporadically fall below 20 °C (68 °F).[51] in January, the coldest month. May is the warmest month – although strongly influenced by the beginning of the wet season, as the area constitutes the easternmost fringe of the south-west monsoon. Tropical cyclones only rarely cause damage in Cambodia.

The total annual rainfall averages around 2,200 millimeters (86.6 inches). The maximal amounts fall in July, August and September. Relative humidity is high throughout the entire year; usually exceeding 90 percent. During the dry season daytime humidity rates average around 50 percent or slightly lower, climbing to about 90 percent during the rainy season. The wet season runs from April to November, and the dry season from December to March. However, as is common in places with this climate type, the dry season still sees some rainfall.

Climate data for Sihanoukville, Cambodia
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 31.3
(88.3)
31.2
(88.2)
32.1
(89.8)
33.7
(92.7)
32.3
(90.1)
31.2
(88.2)
30.0
(86.0)
30.8
(87.4)
30.8
(87.4)
30.8
(87.4)
31.2
(88.2)
31.7
(89.1)
31.4
(88.6)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 23.9
(75.0)
24.6
(76.3)
25.4
(77.7)
25.0
(77.0)
26.8
(80.2)
26.3
(79.3)
25.9
(78.6)
25.1
(77.2)
25.2
(77.4)
24.7
(76.5)
24.4
(75.9)
23.5
(74.3)
25.1
(77.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 28.3
(1.11)
25.2
(0.99)
50.3
(1.98)
124.8
(4.91)
207.3
(8.16)
252.7
(9.95)
341.4
(13.44)
377.2
(14.85)
320.6
(12.62)
290.4
(11.43)
138.2
(5.44)
54.4
(2.14)
2,210.8
(87.02)
Source: world weather online[52]

Economy edit

Sihanoukville was established as an international marine gateway and as a result the local economy is largely defined by its deep water port and the nearby oil terminal. Attached is a regularly modernized cargo storage and logistics facility which serves numerous shipping companies, freight forwarders, suppliers, and maintenance contractors.[53] All of these are based in the port's vicinity.[54] The Phnom Penh–Sihanoukville transport corridor is the premier national trade route, accounting for about 75 percent of Cambodia's trade traffic.[55]

Other sizable economic sectors of the city are fisheries, aqua-culture, and frozen shrimp processing, the garment industry, food production, and processing, the constantly growing tourism industry with a noticeably developed service branch and the associated real estate market.[56][57] In 2023, it was reported that Sihanoukville had become a major centre for thousands of human trafficking victims forced to work as "pig butchering" scammers after COVID-19 led to the closure of many of the city's casinos.[58]

 
Panorama View of Sihanoukville from Otres Beach

Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone edit

 
Sihanoukville's Special Economic Zone (SSEZ) as seen from National Highway No. 4 near Ream commune

The Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone (SSEZ) is an overseas economic and trade cooperation zone which was designed to promote favorable market conditions.[59] It began with a focus on manufacturing consumer goods with the goal of transitioning to producing machinery, photovoltaic materials, and chemicals.[60]: 132–133  The SSEZ received support from China's Ministry of Commerce and the Export-Import Bank of China.[60]: 132  A sizable industrial center, exclusively composed of Chinese companies, has been developed since 2010.[61][62] As of March 2020, the SSEZ had 174 factories employing more than 30,000 people.[60]: 133 

Trade edit

Today,[when?] the city's main export is garments, but it also produces and exports timber, logs, and rubber.[63][64]

Cambodia is one of the few least developed countries (LDCs) to export over US$2 billion. Since Cambodia became the first LDC to join the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2004, trade has steadily increased, and the US has been Cambodia's largest trading partner. Comparing to US$2.3 billion of exports to the US and US$153 million of exports to Cambodia in 2010, from January to October 2011, Cambodia's exports to the U.S. were US$2.29 billion and US exports to Cambodia were US$152.6 million.[65][66]

Economic prospects edit

An industrial zone has been established that includes petrochemical production and food processing based on local fisheries and other elements.[67]

Foreign investment in Cambodia has increased significantly since 2004 led by Asian investors from countries such as Malaysia, China, Korea, Thailand, and Vietnam. Approved investment proposals by the Council for the Development of Cambodia totaled around US$500 million in 2011.[65] Chinese investments has since modified the city's character, partly destroying its Cambodian aesthetics and culture. The Diplomat reported that "unchecked development by Chinese investors has come at a cost, freezing out locals and changing the city’s character."[68] Evictions of native Cambodians due to economic investments by the Chinese has led to ethnic conflicts, with the government supporting the Chinese investors.[69][70]

Sihanoukville Port Special Economic Zone edit

The Sihanoukville Autonomous Port has an independent administration. In combination with the related logistics and transport sector it is the city's economic backbone.

At present, the total operational land area of the Sihanoukville Autonomous Port is around 124.76 ha. The Old Jetty was constructed in 1956 and became operational in 1960. The jetty is 290 metres (950 feet) long by 28 metres (92 feet) wide and can accommodate four vessels with medium gross register tonnage (GRT) at both sides. The exterior berth is −8.50 to −13 metres (−27.9 to −42.7 feet) depth, while the interior berth is −7.50 to −8.50 metres (−24.6 to −27.9 feet) depth.

The Government of Cambodia had constructed a 350 m (1,148 ft) long new quay with −10.5 m (−34 ft) maximum draft in 1966. At present, this new quay can accommodate three vessels with −7 m (−23 ft) draft medium GRT.[71] The construction of the container terminal, 400 m (1,312 ft) long by −10.5 m (−34 ft) depth and a 6.5 ha (16 acres) container yard was completed in March 2007.[72]

Sihanoukville Autonomous Port Traffic Rates[73]
Item 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 9M2009
Gross Throughput (Tons) 1,772,361 1,503,050 1,380,847 1,586,791 1,818,877 2,057,967 1,405,338
Not Included Fuel 1,454,856 1,242,011 1,131,699 1,320,102 1,428,992 1,605,672 958,279
Not Include Fuel &Cont. 650,329 308,153 107,929 197,573 193,573 291,114 162,520
Cargo containerized 804,527 933,858 1,023,770 1,122,529 1,235,419 1,314,559 795,759
Container throughput (TEUs) 181,286 213,916 211,141 231,036 253,271 258,775 157,639
Vessel calling (units) 878 730 686 912 876 954 642

The primary destinations of Sihanoukville Autonomous Port are: Singapore, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Shanghai, Laem Chabang, Yantian and Kaohsiung. It has a frequency of scheduled services of 38 per week.[74][75]

Transport edit

Roads and streets edit

 
Snake island Bridge, as seen from Treasure Island Beach, October 2014
  • In 2023, a major new expressway linking Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh became operational.[76]: 29  The expressway was built by China, which has a significant role in infrastructure development in Cambodia through the Belt and Road Initiative.[76]: 29 
  • National Highway 4 (NH4): Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville are connected via National Road 4. The road was built and financed by the United States to accommodate heavy freight containers and gasoline tank trucks connecting the deep-water port with Phnom Penh. There were three toll stations along its length of around 250 km (155 mi). However, it is considered the most dangerous road of Cambodia. Residential areas and the attached local traffic merges with the speeding traffic.[77]
  • National Highway 3: Connects Sihanoukville with Kampot Province. The road joins NR4 at Prey Nob District at the junction town of Veal Rinh. It is sealed, but lacks traffic signs. Free roaming cattle and other livestock regularly block road traffic. The road underwent significant refurbishment in 2008 and forms part of an international "north-south economic corridor" from Kunming in China to Bangkok in Thailand.[78]
  • National Highway 48: Connects Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh with Koh Kong Province to the southwest. The road ends at the Thai-Cambodian border.
 
Mile stone of National Highway 4 near Ream commune

Urban traffic edit

Cambodia's official driving side is the right side of the road. There is no formally adopted road and road transport policy in Cambodia.[79] Although Cambodia's traffic laws[80] are the same as those of any other country, with respect to the country's membership of the ASEAN, that requires recognition of ratified agreements,[81] regular traffic only functions on a basic level and in times of low density. Conduct is still traditional as smaller and slower vehicles are expected to yield to big vehicles.[82][83] The city's law enforcement has been accused of failing to enforce international norms. A habit of running predictable checkpoints has developed over the last few years. Tourists on rental bikes and common people are often stopped and forced to pay, often based on mere assumptions and unsupported claims. Drivers of vehicles with perceived social status remain generally unmolested. Consequently, the deterrent effect of these activities is very low.[84]

In urban and residential areas, an overabundance of motorbikes exists due to the absence of any form of public transportation and taxi-cars. Drivers of motorbikes often do not wear helmets, drive indiscriminately on any side of the street and it is common to see motorbikes with more than two passengers or vehicles driven by children. Traffic lights are often ignored.[85][86] In 2008, the government ordered the countrywide enforcement of the use of helmets, but the order was not thoroughly enforced.[87][88][89]

The central long-distance bus station for all transport business operators[90] is on National Highway 4 in the city's north-east near the Autonomous Port. Transport business operators maintain booking offices in the urban centers. Many companies compete with its buses' daily scheduled services.[91] Buses operate from the early morning until the afternoon plus a daily night-bus/sleeper.[92] Privately operated taxi stands for long-distance transportation are found at the central bus station, in the commercial urban center and the tourist center in the South.

The city does not have any form of public transportation. Local administration does issue transport licences for any individual of the informal urban transportation system of motor-taxis (moto-dups) and tuk-tuks. The system is not administered by authorities, as anybody can become a motor-taxi, or tuk-tuk driver. The overwhelming majority of drivers do not have knowledge of street names and/or numbers.[93]

Airport edit

 
Sihanoukville airport

Sihanouk International Airport (International Air Transport Association code KOS) was formerly called Kang Keng Airport (ព្រលានយន្តហោះ កង កេង), named after the Minister of Health of the Khmer Republican regime during the 1970s. The airport is in Ream Commune in central Sihanoukville Province. It lies close to National Highway 4, only around 500 metres (1,600 feet) from Ream beach atop a former mangrove lagoon, just about 18 kilometres (11 miles) from Sihanoukville City.

As of July 2019, there were close to 200 flights from China to Sihanoukville every week.[94]

Marine transport edit

The last daily national official Sihanoukville city–Krong Koh Kong marine ferry ceased its operation with the completion of National Highway 48 in 2007.

Koh Rong island and Koh Rong Sanloem island have daily ferry service.[95]

Marina Oceania, the first marina in Cambodia operational and fully equipped since 2013 for yachts and boats up to 25 metres (82 feet) with 4-to-5-metre-deep (13-to-16-foot) berths for 20 boats. It is at the local port's pier, near Koh Preab Island. (coordinates: 10°39'59"N / 103°30'41"E).[96]

Rail transport edit

The railway network of Cambodia was re-constructed for freight transport during the last years by Toll Holdings, which has obtained a building and maintenance concession from the Royal Cambodian Railway.[97] The "Southern line", constructed from 1960 to 1969 with a length of 264 km (164 mi), connects Sihanoukville Port Special Economic Zone with the capital Phnom Penh.

Currently a weekend passenger train service runs from the station near the Autonomous Port used to manage passenger train transportation to Phnom Penh via Kampot

Demographics edit

 
Tenement building with edible-nest swiftlet farming on top floor

The population of the city is apart from descendants of the indigenous inhabitants not older than three generations as the product of recent history, such as the Cambodian diaspora and Cambodian humanitarian crisis of and after the Pol Pot era. With the arrival of displaced refugees, in subsequent decades and centuries, a non-Khmer, mixed Asian population grew to a high percentage[quantify] of the total population in the core population in urban areas. The 2008 census of Cambodia counted 89,846 inhabitants of Sihanoukville and approximately 66,700 in its urban center.[98]

Population Projections for Sihanoukville Province, 2008–2016[99]
Year 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016
Total 229,205 235,095 241,154 247,355 253,654 260,034 266,470 272,933 279,419
Male 114,680 117,735 120,872 124,076 127,324 130,607 133,913 137,227 140,545
Female 114,525 117,360 120,282 123,279 126,330 129,427 132,557 135,706 138,874
Annual Growth 2.57 2.58 2.57 2.55 2.52 2.47 2.43 2.38
Sex Ratio 100.1 100.3 100.5 100.6 100.9 101.0 101.1 101.2 101.3
Median Age 21.8 22.3 22.8 23.3 23.7 24.2 24.7 25.1 25.6


In addition to Khmer, ethnic groups like Vietnamese, Chinese, Cham, Thai, Korean, French, British, Europeans, Australians and Americans live in the urban area. Krong Preah Sihanouk has a relative high Human Development Index (HDI) of 0.750, compared to the national average HDI of 0.523.[100]

In late 2018, Channel News Asia estimated that the Chinese resident population of the province had risen to 78,000.[101]

The city's ethnic make up has changed with nearly 80,000 mainland Chinese workers, developers and investors accounting for 90% of the city's expat population as of 2019.[102][103][94] Mandarin signage is increasingly replacing Khmer and English signage in the city.[102][103] Sihanoukville is one of the major cities on China's One Belt One Road Initiative.[102]

Health edit

Some government hospitals and other health units have been rehabilitated so that they are autonomous entities, staffed with qualified personnel. At the same time, modern standard private clinics, including local and foreign service providers, are increasing in number[quantify] and are competing with state-owned hospitals.[104]

Sanitation practices in rural Cambodia are often primitive. Water sources are often the same ones used for bathing, washing clothes, and disposing of waste products. Sewage disposal is nonexistent in most rural and suburban areas.[105]

Security edit

Sihanoukville faces challenges related to crime, security and safety with the city frequently being the focus of scandals linked to serious organized crime, petty crime and corruption.[12][13] The police force, especially the traffic police, have often been shown to be corrupt and ineffective in the city[106] and newspaper investigations have uncovered connections to organized crime and drug trafficking.[107]

Embassies and consular officials have issued cautionary statements about travel to Sihanoukville following gang disputes and a number of high-profile murders, rapes and robberies as well as a number of unexplained deaths of foreigners.[108][109][110]

Russian tycoon Sergei Polonsky was deported from Cambodia in May 2015[111][112] to face embezzlement charges in Russia after years spent clashing with other Russians on the streets of Sihanoukville.[113] Doroshenko says that Oligarch Polonsky is trying to kill his family.[114]

Culture edit

 
Cambodian-Vietnamese Friendship Monument near Victory Beach Sihanoukville

The majority of municipal inhabitants are of East Asian descent, which characterizes the pan-East Asian beliefs and ideas. Cambodian culture is of distinct ancient Khmer origin, accompanied by century-old moderate Chinese and Vietnamese cultural influences.[115] The citizens of Sihanoukville city celebrate Cambodian New Year (April), Chinese New Year (between January and February), Water Festival (November), Pchum Ben (honor to the ancestors in October), Kathen Ceremony (offerings to the monks), and 8 January (Day of Cambodian – Vietnamese Friendship), among others under the ruling Cambodian People's Party (CPP).

Many urban families of Chinese or Sino-Khmer descent in Sihanoukville city have for most of Cambodia's history constituted the commercial elite and urban upper classes.[116][117] There is a dedication to Confucian work ethics.[118][119]

Tourism edit

The city has around 150 regular hotels in all price-categories among an undisclosed number of guest-houses.[120]

As a tropical sea-side resort, Sihanoukville's night life is heavily influenced and characterized by the city's large number of beaches. All along the central tourist area between the Golden Lion Plaza and the Ochheuteal/Serendipity Beaches.[121][122]

Administration edit

Sihanoukville is the capital city of Sihanoukville province and is governed by its deputy governor. Sihanoukville occupies the greater part of four of the five communes or Sangkat (Sangkat Muoy Commune, Sangkat Pi Commune, Sangkat Bei Commune, Sangkat Buon Commune) of Sihanoukville provinces' Mittakpheap District. The port has its own autonomous administration.[123] The Sangkats are divided into 19 villages.

 
Sangkats of Sihanoukville's Mittakpheap district
 
360° Panorama of Sihanoukville City
(view as a 360° interactive panorama)
The communes of Mittakpheap District[124]
ISO Code Commune Romanization Population Sections Urban
1801-1 សង្កាត់ មួយ Sangkat 1 37,440 3 Yes
1801-2 សង្កាត់ ពីរ Sangkat 2 25,142 3 Yes
1801-3 ស្ទឹងហាវ បី Sangkat 3 13,108 3 Majority
1801-4 សង្កាត់ បួន Sangkat 4 13,108 6 Majority
1801-5 សង្កាត់ កោះរ៉ុង Sangkat Koh Rong 1,108 4 No

Autonomous Port edit

Sihanoukville Autonomous Port lies within Sangkat 1 with an area of around 124.76 hectares (308.3 acres). The port is 18 kilometres (11 mi) from the Kaong Kang Airport and 4 kilometres (2.5 miles) from Sihanoukville town centre. Ships' passengers are allowed to visit Sihanoukville town. The terminal itself offers apart from toilets, no further services, such as shopping centers, banking facilities or tourist offices.[125]

Kampong Seila edit

Kampong Seila district, which belonged to Koh Kong Province, was transferred to Sihanoukville Province in January 2009: "The administrative boundaries of Preah Sihanouk municipality and Koh Kong Province shall be adjusted by sub-dividing land from Kampong Seila District in whole and partial land of Sre Ambil District in Koh Kong Province to Preah Sihanouk municipality." Officials were assigned to create a national workshop—also in relation to other provinces—and perform administrative tasks.[126] The National Institute of Statistics of Cambodia refers in its most recent and preliminary studies to a successful integration of the district, including maps,[127][128] although official statistics and numbers are expected to come with the next full report.[needs update] Preah Sihanouk Province's new official domain has incorporated Kompong Seila District.[129]

Religion edit

Theravada Buddhism is the state religion in Cambodia, with the pagoda.[130] The most prominent pagodas in the city:

  • Upper Pagoda, "Wat Chotynieng", or "Wat Leu"; on a hill, overlooking Sihanoukville bay and dedicated to Samdech Preah Sangareach Chhoun Nath, a Cambodian Buddhist leader, who lived before the Khmer Rouge rule (1975).
  • Lower Pagoda, "Wat Krom", in Sihanoukville town. It is dedicated to Yeay Mao, a popular southern Cambodian ancestral spirit surrounded by an illustrious legend. Both - Wat Leu and Wat Krom - are named according to their local geographic location, on top of the hill and down at the bottom of the hill.
  • O'tres Pagoda, "Wat Otres", in Otres village. It is by the Ou Tro Jet River, it features a river water garden and sculptures of ancestral spirits in the form of animals both real and legendary.

Sihanoukville city is also home to minor communities of other religions such as: Catholics, Muslims, Protestants and Taoists. Places of worship include:

  • St. Michael's Church: It is the center of the Catholic communities. The church was built in 1960 by sailors, it is on the same hill as the Upper Pagoda, facing the sea.
  • Iber Bikhalifah Mosque: It is the religious center of the local Muslim community. It is in Sihanoukville town, just in the populous, central Psah Leu (upper market) area.
Religion in Cambodia
Religion percent
Theravada Buddhism
92%
Mahayana Buddhism
3%
Islam
1.6%
Christianity
0.2%
Others
3.2%

Education edit

Public spending on education in Cambodia totaled 2.6% (of GDP) as of 2010.[131] Cambodian general education is based on the national school curriculum that consists of:

Basic education

The basic education curriculum is divided into three cycles of three years each. The first cycle (grades 1–3) consists of 27–30 lessons per week lasting 40 minutes, which are allocated to five main subjects. The second cycle (grades 4–6) consists of the same number of lessons but is slightly different. The third cycle (grades 7–9) consists of 32–35 lessons, which are allocated to seven major subjects.[132]

Upper secondary education

The upper secondary education curriculum consists of two different phases. The curriculum for the first phase (grade 10) is identical to the curriculum for the third cycle of primary education. The second phase (grades 11–12) has two main components: compulsory and electives.[132]

The adult literacy rate in Sihanoukville is 95.37%.[133]

The city has experienced shortages of teachers[134] but the situation has improved during the last decade. The 2004 statistics show the following centers of education: 33 pre-schools with 1,670 children, 52 primary schools with 34,863 students, five colleges with 4,794 students; two high schools with 1,449 students; 10 vocational training schools with 961 students; and 13,728 students in private schools.

Sihanoukville Educational Statistics 2004
Institution Schools Classes Classrooms Students Teachers
Preschool 33 1670
Primary school 52 34863
College 5 4794
Lycee 2 1449
Vocational training 10 961
Private schools 27 13,728
Sihanoukville Educational Statistics 2014[135]
Institution Schools Classes Classrooms Students Teachers
Preschool 44 64 60 1715 72
Primary school 73 800 532 26212 778
Secondary school 27 260 269 11889 725
College 20 114 107 4577 318
Lycee 7 155 153 7312 407
Lycees with grade 10–12 only 1 31 31 1366 87

International relations edit

Sihanoukville is twinned with:

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Further reading edit

  • Vann, Hokchrea (2003). Modern Khmer Cities. Cambodia: Reyum Press. ISBN 9789995055349.
  • Chandler, David (1993). A History of Cambodia. Cambodia: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 9781863734653.
  • Cœdès, George (1966). The making of South East Asia. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-05061-4.
  • Kitagawa, T. 2005, "'Kampot' of the belle époque: from the outlet of Cambodia to a colonial rule", in Southeast Asian Studies = Tonan Ajia kenkyu, vol. 42, no. 4,
  • Kampot of the Belle Epoque: From the Outlet of Cambodia to a Colonial Resort - Bus To Cambodia - Thai Duong Airbus Limousine
  • Henri Mouhot: Travels in Siam, Cambodia, Laos, and Annam, White Lotus Co, Ltd., ISBN 974-8434-03-6
  • Cœdès, George (1968). The Indianized States of Southeast Asia. University of Hawaii Press. ISBN 978-0824803681.

External links edit

  •   Sihanoukville travel guide from Wikivoyage
  • Preah Sihanouk Province official homepage 2014-11-03 at the Wayback Machine

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For other uses see Sihanoukville disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article contains content that is written like an advertisement Please help improve it by removing promotional content and inappropriate external links and by adding encyclopedic content written from a neutral point of view December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message This article is written like a travel guide Please help improve the article by introducing an encyclopedic style or move the content to Wikivoyage April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Sihanoukville Khmer ក រ ងព រ ស ហន Krŏng Preăh Seihănŭ kroŋ prĕeh sejhanuʔ also known as Kampong Saom Khmer ក ពង ស ម Kampong Saom kɑmpɔŋ saom is a coastal city in Cambodia and the capital of Preah Sihanouk Province at the tip of an elevated peninsula in the country s south west on the Gulf of Thailand The city has a string of beaches along its entire coastline and coastal marshlands bordering Ream National Park in the east The city has one navigable river the mangrove lined Ou Trojak Jet running from Otres Pagoda to the sea at Otres A number of thinly inhabited islands under Sihanoukville s administration 4 are near the city Sihanoukville ក រ ងព រ ស ហន CityClockwise from top Sihanoukville Skyline Waiting for Love Tree Ochheuteal Beach Aerial View of Beaches in Sihanoukville Otrest Beach Bird s Eye View of Golden Lions Roundabout and Statue of Preah Thong Neang NeakSihanoukville city s urban area yellow in Sihanoukville Municipality red and Sihanoukville Province purple SihanoukvilleLocation of Sihanoukville City in CambodiaCoordinates 10 38 N 103 30 E 10 633 N 103 500 E 10 633 103 500Country CambodiaProvincePreah SihanoukMunicipalityPreah SihanoukEstablished22 November 1957 1 Named forNorodom SihanoukGovernment MayorSar Kackada CPP Area 2 Total195 9 km2 75 6 sq mi Elevation15 m 45 ft Population 2019 3 Total73 036 Rank7th Urban66 723 Urban density834 km2 2 160 sq mi Municipality89 846Time zoneUTC 7 ICT Postal code18000Area code034 This article contains Khmer text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Khmer script The city which was named in honour of former king Norodom Sihanouk had a population of around 89 800 people and approximately 66 700 in its urban center in 2008 5 Sihanoukville city encompasses the greater part of six communes Sangkats in Sihanoukville Province It has evolved in parallel with the construction of the Sihanoukville Autonomous Port which commenced in June 1955 as the country s gateway to direct and unrestricted international sea trade The only deep water port in Cambodia includes an oil terminal and a transport logistics facility 6 As a consequence the city grew to become a center of trade commerce transport and process manufacturing 7 8 9 Sihanoukville s many beaches and nearby islands make it Cambodia s premier seaside resort 10 Its infrastructure problems persist in particular those related to water and power supply while international standards for health facilities remain limited 11 Sihanoukville also faces challenges related to crime security and safety with the city frequently being the focus of scandals linked to organized crimes petty crimes and corruption 12 13 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Classical period before 1700 2 2 Early modern period c 1700 1863 2 3 French rule 1863 1954 2 3 1 Insurrection 2 4 After independence since 1954 3 Geography 3 1 Topography 3 2 Architecture and cityscape 3 3 Rivers 3 4 Islands 4 Environment 5 Climate 6 Economy 6 1 Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone 6 2 Trade 6 3 Economic prospects 6 4 Sihanoukville Port Special Economic Zone 7 Transport 7 1 Roads and streets 7 2 Urban traffic 7 3 Airport 7 4 Marine transport 7 5 Rail transport 8 Demographics 9 Health 10 Security 11 Culture 11 1 Tourism 12 Administration 12 1 Autonomous Port 12 2 Kampong Seila 13 Religion 14 Education 15 International relations 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksEtymology editThe official name of the city in Khmer is krong city preah holy Sihanouk name of the former king which adds up to City of the Holy Sihanouk or Honorable Sihanouk City 14 King Norodom Sihanouk reigned 1941 1955 1993 2004 is revered as the father of the modern nation 15 The name Sihanouk is derived from Sanskrit through two Pali words siha lion and hanu jaws The alternative name Kompong Saom also romanized as Kompong Som and Kampong Som Khmer ក ពង ស ម means Port of the Moon or Shiva s Port 16 Saom is derived from the Sanskrit word saumya the original Rig Vedic meaning of which was Soma the juice or sacrifice of the moon god but evolved into Pali moon moonlike name of Shiva 17 The word kampong or kompong is of Malay origin 18 and means village or hamlet Its meaning underwent extension towards pier or river landing bridge 19 History editMain article History of Cambodia Classical period before 1700 edit Prior to the ports and city s foundation works of 1955 the port of Kompong Som must have been only of regional significance due to the absence of navigable waterways that connect the port with the kingdom s settlement centers During the many centuries of pre Angkorian and Angkorian history from Funan to Chenla and during the Khmer Empire regional trade was centered at O Keo Vietnamese oc Eo in the Mekong Delta now the province of Rạch Gia in Vietnam The township of Prei Nokor Saigon was a commercial center of the Khmer Empire 20 21 22 The Chronicle of Samtec Cauva Vamn Juon one of the 18th and 19th century Cambodian Royal Chronicles briefly mentions the region as the country was split into three parts during a nine year civil war from 1476 to 1485 In 1479 Dhammaraja took on the throne at Chatomuk Phnom Penh and controlled the provinces of Samraong Tong Thbong Kompong Saom Kampot up to the Bassak Preah Trapeang Kramuon Sah Koh Slaket and Peam mouth of the Mekong 23 Early modern period c 1700 1863 edit From the end of the 17th century Cambodia lost control of the Mekong River route as Vietnamese power expanded into the lower Mekong During the Nguyen Siamese War 1717 1718 a Siamese fleet burned the port of Kompong Som in 1717 but was defeated by the Vietnamese at Banteay Meas Ha Tien 24 A Cambodian king of the late 18th century Outey Reachea III allied with a Chinese pirate 25 Mac Thien Tu who had established an autonomous polity based in Ha Tien and controlled the maritime network in the eastern part of the Gulf of Thailand 26 Ha Tien was at a point where a river linking to the Bassac River flows into the Gulf of Thailand Landlocked Cambodia tried to keep its access to maritime trade through Ha Tien In 1757 Ha Tien acquired the ports of Kampot and Kompong Som as a reward for Mac s military support to the King of Cambodia Until its destruction in 1771 the port developed into an independent duty free entrepot linked with several Chinese trading networks 27 Alexander Hamilton who traveled to the Gulf of Thailand in 1720 wrote that Kompong Som and Banteay Meas later Ha Tien belonged to Cambodia as Cochin China was divided from Cambodia by a river Bassac River of three leagues broad and King Ang Duong constructed a road from his capital of Oudong to Kampot Kampot remained the only international seaport of Cambodia The traveling time between Udong and Kampot was eight days by oxcart and four days by elephants French Resident Adhemard Leclere wrote Until 1840s the Vietnamese governed Kampot and Peam Mekong Delta but Kompong Som belonged to Cambodia The Vietnamese constructed a road from Ha Tien to Svai village on the border with Kompong Som via Kampot 28 The British Empire followed a distinct policy by the 1850s seeking to consolidate its influence Eyewitness reports give rare insights as Foreign Secretary Lord Palmerston s agent John Crawfurd reports Cambodia was the Keystone of our policy in these countries the King of that ancient Kingdom is ready to throw himself under the protection of any European nation The Vietnamese were interfering with the trade at Kampot and this would be the basis of an approach Palmerston concluded The trade at Kampot one of the few remaining ports could never be considerable in consequence of the main entrance to the country the Mekong with all its feeders flowing into the Sea through the territory of Cochin China The country too had been devastated by recent Siam Vietnam wars Thus without the aid of Great Britain Kampot or any other port in Cambodia can never become a commercial Emporium Crawfurd later wrote The Cambodians sought to use intervals of peace in the Siam Vietnam wars to develop intercourse with outside nations The trade at Kampot which they sought to foster was imperiled by pirates Here is a point where the wedge might be inserted that would open the interior of the Indo Chinese Peninsula to British Commerce as the great River of the Cambodians traverses its entire length and even affords communication into the heart of Siam 29 French rule 1863 1954 edit Main article French Protectorate of Cambodia nbsp French civil servant Auguste Pavie centre and Pierre Lefevre Pontalis in 1893 with Cambodian interpreters Under French rule Vietnam Laos and Cambodia became a single administrative and economic unit The coastal region Circonscription Residentielle with Kampot as its capital contained the arrondissements of Kampot Kompong Som Trang and Kong Pisey The establishment of another international trading center near the existing city of Saigon was not considered necessary Focus remained the Mekong and the idea to establish an alternative route to Chinese and Thai markets along an uninterrupted navigable waterway to the Mekong Delta 30 Insurrection edit An insurrection that took place from 1885 to 1887 further discouraged French ambition It started in Kampot and quickly spread to Veal Rinh Kampong Seila and Kompong Som where the insurgents were led by a Chinese pirate named Quan Khiem He managed to control the northern part of Preah Sihanouk for some time until he an old man was arrested by the local governor 28 One example of infrastructural improvements of this period was the construction of Route Coloniale No 17 later renamed National Road No 3 and the national railway system although work on the Southern Line from Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville only began in 1960 After independence since 1954 edit The city s and province s alternative name Kampong som Kampong Som was adopted from the local indigenous community After the dissolution of French Indochina in 1954 the steadily tightening control of the Mekong Delta by Vietnam required a solution to gain unrestricted access to the seas Plans were made to construct an entirely new deep water port Kompong Saom Kampong Som was selected for water depth and ease of access In August 1955 a French Cambodian construction team cut a base camp into the unoccupied jungle in the area that is now known as Hawaii Beach Funds for construction of the port came from France and the road was financed by the United States 31 During the Vietnam War the port became a military facility for both sides in the service of National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam and after 1970 under the government of Lon Nol in the service of the United States 32 The port was the last place to be evacuated by the US Army only days before Khmer Rouge guerrillas took control of the government in April 1975 The events surrounding the taking of the US container ship SS Mayaguez and its crew on 12 May by the Khmer Rouge and the subsequent rescue operation by US Marines played out on the waters of Koh Tang off the coast of Sihanoukville During the two days of action the US commenced air strikes on targets on the mainland of Sihanoukville including the port the Ream Naval Base an airfield the railroad yard and the petroleum refinery in addition to strikes and naval gun fire on several islands 33 After the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979 and the subsequent opening of the economy the port of Sihanoukville resumed its importance in the development and recovery of the country With the further opening of new markets in 1999 the city regained its role in the economic growth of Cambodia 34 In 1993 Ream National Park was established per royal decree of former King Sihanouk 35 The Sihanoukville Municipality was elevated to a regular province on 22 December 2008 after King Norodom Sihamoni signed a royal decree converting the municipalities of Kep Pailin and Sihanoukville into provinces 36 In 2006 the Koh Puos Cambodia Investment Group submitted an application planning to invest US 276 million in converting the 116 hectare Koh Puos Snake Island into a luxury residential and resort complex After the completion of certain elements of the infrastructure the investor announced alterations of the original blueprints as Reapplying for permission will happen in 2014 according to the Council of the Development of Cambodia 37 38 On 26 May 2011 Preah Sihanouk area joined the Paris based club Les Plus Belles Baies Du Monde the most beautiful bays in the world The organisation officially accepted the Bay of Cambodia as one of its members at its 7th General Assembly 39 Geography editMain article Geography of Cambodia Topography edit Sihanoukville town is at the tip of the rolling hills of a peninsula on the Gulf of Thailand To its northwest and at its center it rises up to 15 metres 49 ft above sea level whereas the land gently and steadily flattens towards extended coastal plains marshlands and beaches in the south and southeast The Gulf of Thailand s shallow depths and the local climate are moderate in contrast to the South China Sea to the east and the Indian Ocean to the west 40 Architecture and cityscape edit nbsp National Bank of Cambodia example of New Khmer Architecture designed by Vann Molyvann Established after the period of the French Protectorate bourgeois colonial style quarters such as ones seen in Kampot Siem Reap or Phnom Penh do not exist Cambodian architect Vann Molyvann designed objects public buildings with a distinct function some still operational This brief era of New Khmer Architecture ended in 1970 41 42 In 1959 the first urban plan for the city was completed for a population of 55 000 residents it included cycle paths and green spaces The plan also marked out zoning for the port the railway network the town center with municipal offices business and residential housing and finally a tourist zone to the south along the beaches A feasibility study by the United States Operations Mission USOM looked at drawing on a new water supply from the Prek Tuk Sap and existing lagoons these were subsequently were cut off from the sea and used as the initial source for town supply The reservoirs are still operational although insufficient for today s demands 43 The area connects with the city center along a single highway via typical irregular successions of residential buildings 44 45 nbsp Ekreach Road Sihanoukville s main thoroughfare Rivers edit The mangrove lined Ou Trojak Jet river which runs from Otres Pagoda to Otres Beach is Sihanoukville s longest river In the tidal mangrove area Barramundi mangrove jacks and barracuda are the prize targets for sport anglers the lower section harbours a marina Restaurants along the south bank of the river serve fresh seafood supplied by the local inshore fishing boats 46 Due to their proximity to the sea mangroves line large parts of the rivers Islands edit Main article List of islands of Cambodia nbsp Top remote beach on Koh Rong center top left Koh Bong Po on center top right Koh Rong Resort center bottom Koh Rong Sanloem bottom left Koh Tuich bottom right Koh Dek Koul All the islands listed below fall under administration of Sihanoukville s Mittakpheap District The majority is either in the process of or has been assigned for extensive tourism Koh Rong and Koh Rong Sanloem in particular have so far undergone years of uncoordinated development Koh Rong has been declared a stop on the Banana Pancake Trail 47 Koh Rong ក រ ង Koh Rong 26 km 16 mi west of Sihanoukville is the biggest of the islands of Sihanoukville Province It encompasses an area of 78 km2 30 sq mi The terrain is predominantly hilly with a 316 metres 1 037 ft mountain at the island s north west The island s interior is almost completely forested As of 2016 update there is a ferry network between Sihanoukville and Koh Rong Koh Rong Sanloem South of Koh Rong and smaller beaches are on the west and east coast It is covered in dense forest generally more flat still though there are sizable hills and has noticeably less landmass in relation to its coastline As of 2016 update there is a ferry network between Sihanoukville and Koh Rong Sanloem Koh Kaong Kang Thass Mangrove Island Ile des Paletuviers old French name Koh Kaong Kang Thass one of the inner islands Koh Koun Child Island Ile de Cone old French name a small island between Koh Rong and Koh Rong Sanloem has no beach and is uninhabited Koh Tuich Small Island a tiny island off Koh Rong s Koh Tuich village There is a little pagoda on it in service since around 2010 Koh Puos also known as Snake Island or Morakot Island This island lies 800 metres 2 625 ft off Sihanoukville s Victory Beach It is under development by Russian investors and converted into a luxury holiday destination 48 Snake Island is linked to the mainland via a regular road bridge since around July 2011 The bridge is currently not open for public traffic Koh Dek Koul This small island lies 7 kilometres 4 mi off Victory Beach and only a further few hundred metres off Snake Island Koh Bong Po oun Song Saa Siblings Lovers Islands Les Freres old French name renamed to Koh Song Saa Two tiny islets off Koh Rong s north east 49 nbsp Koh Rong Sanloem s Saracen BayEnvironment editThe urban area suffers from polluted water supplies Waste management policies and practices are deficient or lacking altogether 50 Climate editSee also Climate of Cambodia nbsp Worldwide zones of tropical monsoon climate Am nbsp Map of rainfall regimes in Cambodia source DANIDA Sihanoukville lies in the Tropical monsoon Am climate zone The city has two seasons a wet season and a dry season The maximum mean is about 30 C 86 F the minimum mean about 24 C 75 F Maximum temperatures of higher than 32 C 90 F however are common and just before the start of the rainy season they may rise to more than 38 C 100 F Minimum night temperatures sporadically fall below 20 C 68 F 51 in January the coldest month May is the warmest month although strongly influenced by the beginning of the wet season as the area constitutes the easternmost fringe of the south west monsoon Tropical cyclones only rarely cause damage in Cambodia The total annual rainfall averages around 2 200 millimeters 86 6 inches The maximal amounts fall in July August and September Relative humidity is high throughout the entire year usually exceeding 90 percent During the dry season daytime humidity rates average around 50 percent or slightly lower climbing to about 90 percent during the rainy season The wet season runs from April to November and the dry season from December to March However as is common in places with this climate type the dry season still sees some rainfall Climate data for Sihanoukville Cambodia Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Mean daily maximum C F 31 3 88 3 31 2 88 2 32 1 89 8 33 7 92 7 32 3 90 1 31 2 88 2 30 0 86 0 30 8 87 4 30 8 87 4 30 8 87 4 31 2 88 2 31 7 89 1 31 4 88 6 Mean daily minimum C F 23 9 75 0 24 6 76 3 25 4 77 7 25 0 77 0 26 8 80 2 26 3 79 3 25 9 78 6 25 1 77 2 25 2 77 4 24 7 76 5 24 4 75 9 23 5 74 3 25 1 77 1 Average precipitation mm inches 28 3 1 11 25 2 0 99 50 3 1 98 124 8 4 91 207 3 8 16 252 7 9 95 341 4 13 44 377 2 14 85 320 6 12 62 290 4 11 43 138 2 5 44 54 4 2 14 2 210 8 87 02 Source world weather online 52 Economy editMain article Economy of Cambodia Sihanoukville was established as an international marine gateway and as a result the local economy is largely defined by its deep water port and the nearby oil terminal Attached is a regularly modernized cargo storage and logistics facility which serves numerous shipping companies freight forwarders suppliers and maintenance contractors 53 All of these are based in the port s vicinity 54 The Phnom Penh Sihanoukville transport corridor is the premier national trade route accounting for about 75 percent of Cambodia s trade traffic 55 Other sizable economic sectors of the city are fisheries aqua culture and frozen shrimp processing the garment industry food production and processing the constantly growing tourism industry with a noticeably developed service branch and the associated real estate market 56 57 In 2023 it was reported that Sihanoukville had become a major centre for thousands of human trafficking victims forced to work as pig butchering scammers after COVID 19 led to the closure of many of the city s casinos 58 nbsp Panorama View of Sihanoukville from Otres Beach Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone edit nbsp Sihanoukville s Special Economic Zone SSEZ as seen from National Highway No 4 near Ream commune The Sihanoukville Special Economic Zone SSEZ is an overseas economic and trade cooperation zone which was designed to promote favorable market conditions 59 It began with a focus on manufacturing consumer goods with the goal of transitioning to producing machinery photovoltaic materials and chemicals 60 132 133 The SSEZ received support from China s Ministry of Commerce and the Export Import Bank of China 60 132 A sizable industrial center exclusively composed of Chinese companies has been developed since 2010 61 62 As of March 2020 the SSEZ had 174 factories employing more than 30 000 people 60 133 Trade edit Today when the city s main export is garments but it also produces and exports timber logs and rubber 63 64 Cambodia is one of the few least developed countries LDCs to export over US 2 billion Since Cambodia became the first LDC to join the World Trade Organization WTO in 2004 trade has steadily increased and the US has been Cambodia s largest trading partner Comparing to US 2 3 billion of exports to the US and US 153 million of exports to Cambodia in 2010 from January to October 2011 Cambodia s exports to the U S were US 2 29 billion and US exports to Cambodia were US 152 6 million 65 66 Economic prospects edit An industrial zone has been established that includes petrochemical production and food processing based on local fisheries and other elements 67 Foreign investment in Cambodia has increased significantly since 2004 led by Asian investors from countries such as Malaysia China Korea Thailand and Vietnam Approved investment proposals by the Council for the Development of Cambodia totaled around US 500 million in 2011 65 Chinese investments has since modified the city s character partly destroying its Cambodian aesthetics and culture The Diplomat reported that unchecked development by Chinese investors has come at a cost freezing out locals and changing the city s character 68 Evictions of native Cambodians due to economic investments by the Chinese has led to ethnic conflicts with the government supporting the Chinese investors 69 70 nbsp Sihanoukville Autonomous Port October 2014 Sihanoukville Port Special Economic Zone edit See also Sihanoukville Autonomous Port The Sihanoukville Autonomous Port has an independent administration In combination with the related logistics and transport sector it is the city s economic backbone At present the total operational land area of the Sihanoukville Autonomous Port is around 124 76 ha The Old Jetty was constructed in 1956 and became operational in 1960 The jetty is 290 metres 950 feet long by 28 metres 92 feet wide and can accommodate four vessels with medium gross register tonnage GRT at both sides The exterior berth is 8 50 to 13 metres 27 9 to 42 7 feet depth while the interior berth is 7 50 to 8 50 metres 24 6 to 27 9 feet depth The Government of Cambodia had constructed a 350 m 1 148 ft long new quay with 10 5 m 34 ft maximum draft in 1966 At present this new quay can accommodate three vessels with 7 m 23 ft draft medium GRT 71 The construction of the container terminal 400 m 1 312 ft long by 10 5 m 34 ft depth and a 6 5 ha 16 acres container yard was completed in March 2007 72 Sihanoukville Autonomous Port Traffic Rates 73 Item 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 9M2009 Gross Throughput Tons 1 772 361 1 503 050 1 380 847 1 586 791 1 818 877 2 057 967 1 405 338 Not Included Fuel 1 454 856 1 242 011 1 131 699 1 320 102 1 428 992 1 605 672 958 279 Not Include Fuel amp Cont 650 329 308 153 107 929 197 573 193 573 291 114 162 520 Cargo containerized 804 527 933 858 1 023 770 1 122 529 1 235 419 1 314 559 795 759 Container throughput TEUs 181 286 213 916 211 141 231 036 253 271 258 775 157 639 Vessel calling units 878 730 686 912 876 954 642 The primary destinations of Sihanoukville Autonomous Port are Singapore Hong Kong Bangkok Ho Chi Minh City Shanghai Laem Chabang Yantian and Kaohsiung It has a frequency of scheduled services of 38 per week 74 75 Transport editSee also Transport in Cambodia Roads and streets edit nbsp Snake island Bridge as seen from Treasure Island Beach October 2014 In 2023 a major new expressway linking Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh became operational 76 29 The expressway was built by China which has a significant role in infrastructure development in Cambodia through the Belt and Road Initiative 76 29 National Highway 4 NH4 Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville are connected via National Road 4 The road was built and financed by the United States to accommodate heavy freight containers and gasoline tank trucks connecting the deep water port with Phnom Penh There were three toll stations along its length of around 250 km 155 mi However it is considered the most dangerous road of Cambodia Residential areas and the attached local traffic merges with the speeding traffic 77 National Highway 3 Connects Sihanoukville with Kampot Province The road joins NR4 at Prey Nob District at the junction town of Veal Rinh It is sealed but lacks traffic signs Free roaming cattle and other livestock regularly block road traffic The road underwent significant refurbishment in 2008 and forms part of an international north south economic corridor from Kunming in China to Bangkok in Thailand 78 National Highway 48 Connects Sihanoukville and Phnom Penh with Koh Kong Province to the southwest The road ends at the Thai Cambodian border nbsp Mile stone of National Highway 4 near Ream commune Urban traffic edit Cambodia s official driving side is the right side of the road There is no formally adopted road and road transport policy in Cambodia 79 Although Cambodia s traffic laws 80 are the same as those of any other country with respect to the country s membership of the ASEAN that requires recognition of ratified agreements 81 regular traffic only functions on a basic level and in times of low density Conduct is still traditional as smaller and slower vehicles are expected to yield to big vehicles 82 83 The city s law enforcement has been accused of failing to enforce international norms A habit of running predictable checkpoints has developed over the last few years Tourists on rental bikes and common people are often stopped and forced to pay often based on mere assumptions and unsupported claims Drivers of vehicles with perceived social status remain generally unmolested Consequently the deterrent effect of these activities is very low 84 In urban and residential areas an overabundance of motorbikes exists due to the absence of any form of public transportation and taxi cars Drivers of motorbikes often do not wear helmets drive indiscriminately on any side of the street and it is common to see motorbikes with more than two passengers or vehicles driven by children Traffic lights are often ignored 85 86 In 2008 the government ordered the countrywide enforcement of the use of helmets but the order was not thoroughly enforced 87 88 89 The central long distance bus station for all transport business operators 90 is on National Highway 4 in the city s north east near the Autonomous Port Transport business operators maintain booking offices in the urban centers Many companies compete with its buses daily scheduled services 91 Buses operate from the early morning until the afternoon plus a daily night bus sleeper 92 Privately operated taxi stands for long distance transportation are found at the central bus station in the commercial urban center and the tourist center in the South The city does not have any form of public transportation Local administration does issue transport licences for any individual of the informal urban transportation system of motor taxis moto dups and tuk tuks The system is not administered by authorities as anybody can become a motor taxi or tuk tuk driver The overwhelming majority of drivers do not have knowledge of street names and or numbers 93 Airport edit nbsp Sihanoukville airport Sihanouk International Airport International Air Transport Association code KOS was formerly called Kang Keng Airport ព រល នយន តហ កង ក ង named after the Minister of Health of the Khmer Republican regime during the 1970s The airport is in Ream Commune in central Sihanoukville Province It lies close to National Highway 4 only around 500 metres 1 600 feet from Ream beach atop a former mangrove lagoon just about 18 kilometres 11 miles from Sihanoukville City As of July 2019 update there were close to 200 flights from China to Sihanoukville every week 94 Marine transport edit The last daily national official Sihanoukville city Krong Koh Kong marine ferry ceased its operation with the completion of National Highway 48 in 2007 Koh Rong island and Koh Rong Sanloem island have daily ferry service 95 Marina Oceania the first marina in Cambodia operational and fully equipped since 2013 for yachts and boats up to 25 metres 82 feet with 4 to 5 metre deep 13 to 16 foot berths for 20 boats It is at the local port s pier near Koh Preab Island coordinates 10 39 59 N 103 30 41 E 96 Rail transport edit See also Rail transport in Cambodia The railway network of Cambodia was re constructed for freight transport during the last years by Toll Holdings which has obtained a building and maintenance concession from the Royal Cambodian Railway 97 The Southern line constructed from 1960 to 1969 with a length of 264 km 164 mi connects Sihanoukville Port Special Economic Zone with the capital Phnom Penh Currently a weekend passenger train service runs from the station near the Autonomous Port used to manage passenger train transportation to Phnom Penh via KampotDemographics editSee also Demographics of Cambodia nbsp Tenement building with edible nest swiftlet farming on top floor The population of the city is apart from descendants of the indigenous inhabitants not older than three generations as the product of recent history such as the Cambodian diaspora and Cambodian humanitarian crisis of and after the Pol Pot era With the arrival of displaced refugees in subsequent decades and centuries a non Khmer mixed Asian population grew to a high percentage quantify of the total population in the core population in urban areas The 2008 census of Cambodia counted 89 846 inhabitants of Sihanoukville and approximately 66 700 in its urban center 98 Population Projections for Sihanoukville Province 2008 2016 99 Year 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 Total 229 205 235 095 241 154 247 355 253 654 260 034 266 470 272 933 279 419 Male 114 680 117 735 120 872 124 076 127 324 130 607 133 913 137 227 140 545 Female 114 525 117 360 120 282 123 279 126 330 129 427 132 557 135 706 138 874 Annual Growth 2 57 2 58 2 57 2 55 2 52 2 47 2 43 2 38 Sex Ratio 100 1 100 3 100 5 100 6 100 9 101 0 101 1 101 2 101 3 Median Age 21 8 22 3 22 8 23 3 23 7 24 2 24 7 25 1 25 6 In addition to Khmer ethnic groups like Vietnamese Chinese Cham Thai Korean French British Europeans Australians and Americans live in the urban area Krong Preah Sihanouk has a relative high Human Development Index HDI of 0 750 compared to the national average HDI of 0 523 100 In late 2018 Channel News Asia estimated that the Chinese resident population of the province had risen to 78 000 101 The city s ethnic make up has changed with nearly 80 000 mainland Chinese workers developers and investors accounting for 90 of the city s expat population as of 2019 102 103 94 Mandarin signage is increasingly replacing Khmer and English signage in the city 102 103 Sihanoukville is one of the major cities on China s One Belt One Road Initiative 102 Health editSome government hospitals and other health units have been rehabilitated so that they are autonomous entities staffed with qualified personnel At the same time modern standard private clinics including local and foreign service providers are increasing in number quantify and are competing with state owned hospitals 104 Sanitation practices in rural Cambodia are often primitive Water sources are often the same ones used for bathing washing clothes and disposing of waste products Sewage disposal is nonexistent in most rural and suburban areas 105 Security editSihanoukville faces challenges related to crime security and safety with the city frequently being the focus of scandals linked to serious organized crime petty crime and corruption 12 13 The police force especially the traffic police have often been shown to be corrupt and ineffective in the city 106 and newspaper investigations have uncovered connections to organized crime and drug trafficking 107 Embassies and consular officials have issued cautionary statements about travel to Sihanoukville following gang disputes and a number of high profile murders rapes and robberies as well as a number of unexplained deaths of foreigners 108 109 110 Russian tycoon Sergei Polonsky was deported from Cambodia in May 2015 111 112 to face embezzlement charges in Russia after years spent clashing with other Russians on the streets of Sihanoukville 113 Doroshenko says that Oligarch Polonsky is trying to kill his family 114 Culture edit nbsp Cambodian Vietnamese Friendship Monument near Victory Beach Sihanoukville Main article Culture of Cambodia The majority of municipal inhabitants are of East Asian descent which characterizes the pan East Asian beliefs and ideas Cambodian culture is of distinct ancient Khmer origin accompanied by century old moderate Chinese and Vietnamese cultural influences 115 The citizens of Sihanoukville city celebrate Cambodian New Year April Chinese New Year between January and February Water Festival November Pchum Ben honor to the ancestors in October Kathen Ceremony offerings to the monks and 8 January Day of Cambodian Vietnamese Friendship among others under the ruling Cambodian People s Party CPP Many urban families of Chinese or Sino Khmer descent in Sihanoukville city have for most of Cambodia s history constituted the commercial elite and urban upper classes 116 117 There is a dedication to Confucian work ethics 118 119 Tourism edit The city has around 150 regular hotels in all price categories among an undisclosed number of guest houses 120 As a tropical sea side resort Sihanoukville s night life is heavily influenced and characterized by the city s large number of beaches All along the central tourist area between the Golden Lion Plaza and the Ochheuteal Serendipity Beaches 121 122 Administration editSee also Administrative divisions of Cambodia Sihanoukville is the capital city of Sihanoukville province and is governed by its deputy governor Sihanoukville occupies the greater part of four of the five communes or Sangkat Sangkat Muoy Commune Sangkat Pi Commune Sangkat Bei Commune Sangkat Buon Commune of Sihanoukville provinces Mittakpheap District The port has its own autonomous administration 123 The Sangkats are divided into 19 villages nbsp Sangkats of Sihanoukville s Mittakpheap district nbsp 360 Panorama of Sihanoukville City view as a 360 interactive panorama The communes of Mittakpheap District 124 ISO Code Commune Romanization Population Sections Urban 1801 1 សង ក ត ម យ Sangkat 1 37 440 3 Yes 1801 2 សង ក ត ព រ Sangkat 2 25 142 3 Yes 1801 3 ស ទ ងហ វ ប Sangkat 3 13 108 3 Majority 1801 4 សង ក ត ប ន Sangkat 4 13 108 6 Majority 1801 5 សង ក ត ក រ ង Sangkat Koh Rong 1 108 4 No Autonomous Port edit Main article Sihanoukville Autonomous Port Sihanoukville Autonomous Port lies within Sangkat 1 with an area of around 124 76 hectares 308 3 acres The port is 18 kilometres 11 mi from the Kaong Kang Airport and 4 kilometres 2 5 miles from Sihanoukville town centre Ships passengers are allowed to visit Sihanoukville town The terminal itself offers apart from toilets no further services such as shopping centers banking facilities or tourist offices 125 Kampong Seila edit See also Sihanoukville Province Kampong Seila district which belonged to Koh Kong Province was transferred to Sihanoukville Province in January 2009 The administrative boundaries of Preah Sihanouk municipality and Koh Kong Province shall be adjusted by sub dividing land from Kampong Seila District in whole and partial land of Sre Ambil District in Koh Kong Province to Preah Sihanouk municipality Officials were assigned to create a national workshop also in relation to other provinces and perform administrative tasks 126 The National Institute of Statistics of Cambodia refers in its most recent and preliminary studies to a successful integration of the district including maps 127 128 although official statistics and numbers are expected to come with the next full report needs update Preah Sihanouk Province s new official domain has incorporated Kompong Seila District 129 Religion editSee also Buddhism in Cambodia and Religion in Cambodia Theravada Buddhism is the state religion in Cambodia with the pagoda 130 The most prominent pagodas in the city Upper Pagoda Wat Chotynieng or Wat Leu on a hill overlooking Sihanoukville bay and dedicated to Samdech Preah Sangareach Chhoun Nath a Cambodian Buddhist leader who lived before the Khmer Rouge rule 1975 Lower Pagoda Wat Krom in Sihanoukville town It is dedicated to Yeay Mao a popular southern Cambodian ancestral spirit surrounded by an illustrious legend Both Wat Leu and Wat Krom are named according to their local geographic location on top of the hill and down at the bottom of the hill O tres Pagoda Wat Otres in Otres village It is by the Ou Tro Jet River it features a river water garden and sculptures of ancestral spirits in the form of animals both real and legendary Sihanoukville city is also home to minor communities of other religions such as Catholics Muslims Protestants and Taoists Places of worship include St Michael s Church It is the center of the Catholic communities The church was built in 1960 by sailors it is on the same hill as the Upper Pagoda facing the sea Iber Bikhalifah Mosque It is the religious center of the local Muslim community It is in Sihanoukville town just in the populous central Psah Leu upper market area Religion in Cambodia Religion percent Theravada Buddhism 92 Mahayana Buddhism 3 Islam 1 6 Christianity 0 2 Others 3 2 nbsp A shrine for the ancestor s spirits nbsp Statue of Mary at Saint Francis de Sales Chapel nbsp Big Buddha on Victory Hill October 2014 nbsp Shrine to Yeay Mao at Independence Beach October 2014 nbsp St Michael Catholic ChurchEducation editSee also Education in Cambodia Public spending on education in Cambodia totaled 2 6 of GDP as of 2010 update 131 Cambodian general education is based on the national school curriculum that consists of Basic education The basic education curriculum is divided into three cycles of three years each The first cycle grades 1 3 consists of 27 30 lessons per week lasting 40 minutes which are allocated to five main subjects The second cycle grades 4 6 consists of the same number of lessons but is slightly different The third cycle grades 7 9 consists of 32 35 lessons which are allocated to seven major subjects 132 Upper secondary education The upper secondary education curriculum consists of two different phases The curriculum for the first phase grade 10 is identical to the curriculum for the third cycle of primary education The second phase grades 11 12 has two main components compulsory and electives 132 The adult literacy rate in Sihanoukville is 95 37 133 The city has experienced shortages of teachers 134 but the situation has improved during the last decade The 2004 statistics show the following centers of education 33 pre schools with 1 670 children 52 primary schools with 34 863 students five colleges with 4 794 students two high schools with 1 449 students 10 vocational training schools with 961 students and 13 728 students in private schools Sihanoukville Educational Statistics 2004 Institution Schools Classes Classrooms Students Teachers Preschool 33 1670 Primary school 52 34863 College 5 4794 Lycee 2 1449 Vocational training 10 961 Private schools 27 13 728 Sihanoukville Educational Statistics 2014 135 Institution Schools Classes Classrooms Students Teachers Preschool 44 64 60 1715 72 Primary school 73 800 532 26212 778 Secondary school 27 260 269 11889 725 College 20 114 107 4577 318 Lycee 7 155 153 7312 407 Lycees with grade 10 12 only 1 31 31 1366 87International relations editSee also List of twin towns and sister cities in Cambodia Sihanoukville is twinned with nbsp Miami Florida United States nbsp Seattle Washington United States nbsp Tampa Florida United StatesReferences edit Sihanoukville History Book Retrieved 18 August 2019 Sihanoukville Administration sihanoukville gov kh in Khmer Retrieved 17 February 2021 General Population Census of the Kingdom of Cambodia 2019 Final Results PDF National 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Reyum Press ISBN 9789995055349 Chandler David 1993 A History of Cambodia Cambodia Allen amp Unwin ISBN 9781863734653 Cœdes George 1966 The making of South East Asia University of California Press ISBN 0 520 05061 4 Kitagawa T 2005 Kampot of the belle epoque from the outlet of Cambodia to a colonial rule in Southeast Asian Studies Tonan Ajia kenkyu vol 42 no 4 Kampot of the Belle Epoque From the Outlet of Cambodia to a Colonial Resort Bus To Cambodia Thai Duong Airbus Limousine Henri Mouhot Travels in Siam Cambodia Laos and Annam White Lotus Co Ltd ISBN 974 8434 03 6 Cœdes George 1968 The Indianized States of Southeast Asia University of Hawaii Press ISBN 978 0824803681 External links editSihanoukville city at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Definitions from Wiktionary nbsp Media from Commons nbsp News from Wikinews nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Textbooks from Wikibooks nbsp Resources from Wikiversity nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage nbsp Sihanoukville travel guide from Wikivoyage Preah Sihanouk Province official homepage Archived 2014 11 03 at the Wayback Machine Portal nbsp Cambodia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sihanoukville city amp oldid 1223228880, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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