The print edition of
The Cambodia Daily was published in
Phnom Penh in an
A4-size format and was delivered six days a week, Monday to Saturday, until 2017, when it reduced its print run to five days per week. The paper featured four to ten pages of local news daily written by its Cambodian and foreign reporters. Its regional and international news sections consisted of copy donated and purchased from major news outlets and
wire services (e.g.
Reuters,
The Washington Post, New York Times,
Asahi,
Kyodo News). The weekend edition of the paper was accompanied by a full-color
Weekend magazine insert that included local and international feature pieces. A daily section in
Khmer language carried articles translated from the main English-language section, and the Monday issue of the paper included "English Weekly", a special insert with news quizzes for English learners.
Notable stories The Cambodia Daily covered local news and included investigative reporting on
illegal logging and its coverage of corruption and human rights abuses, including land grabs and forced evictions.
Award-winning reporting In 2017, the paper's journalists Aun Pheap and Zsombor Peter won an Excellence in Investigative Reporting from the Society of Publishers in Asia (SOPA) for their article "Still Taking a Cut," which exposed the involvement of the Cambodian military in the country's illegal logging trade. In 2016, journalists won a SOPA Excellence in Feature Writing award for their article, "Moving Dirt: A lucrative dirt trade is leaving holes in communities".
Somaly Mam investigation The Cambodia Daily led a years-long investigation into famed anti-trafficking activist
Somaly Mam, former president of the
Somaly Mam Foundation, over discrepancies in her autobiography,
The Road of Lost Innocence, which detailed her backstory as a sex slave in Cambodia, becoming an international bestseller. The newspaper first began reporting on inconsistencies in her public comments and claims made in her book in early-2012, and in October 2013 published results of its investigation into claims of trafficking made in Mam's book that reporters found to have been fabricated. A May 2014
Newsweek exposé by Simon Marks, a former editor of
The Cambodia Daily, focused international attention on the alleged falsifications, and Mam stepped down from her foundation just days after the article's publication.
The New York Times credited
The Cambodia Daily with first pointing out that
Somaly Mam's stories of her childhood were false in 2012 and 2013. == Print closure ==