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Koh Kong province

Province of Cambodia

Koh Kong province

Summary

Province of Cambodia

FieldValue
nameKoh Kong
native_nameកោះកុង
native_name_langkm
official_nameKoh Kong Province
ខេត្តកោះកុង
settlement_typeProvince
image_skyline{{photo montageposition=center
photo2a2015 0319 174425 KohKongIsland Strandidylle.jpg
photo2bCambodia (24207512922).jpg
photo3aឈរពីលើប៉មមើលទៅព្រៃកោងកាង - panoramio.jpg
size280
color_bordertransparent
spacing2}}
image_captionTop: Beaches of Koh Kong
Bottom: Aerial view of Kong Kang Forest
image_sealKoh Kong seal.png
image_mapCambodia Koh Kong locator map.svg
map_captionMap of Cambodia highlighting Koh Kong
established_titleProvincial status
established_date13 January 1958
pushpin_map_captionLocation of Koh Kong in Cambodia
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
seat_typeCapital
seatKhemarak Phoumin
leader_partyCPP
leader_titleGovernor
leader_nameMithona Phouthorng
leader_title2National Assembly
leader_name2
area_total_km210090
area_rank6th
population_footnotes
population_total140,962
population_rank22nd
population_density_rank24th
population_as_of2024
population_density_km212
demographics_type1Demographics
demographics1_title1Languages
demographics1_info1
blank_name_sec1Districts
blank_info_sec18
blank1_name_sec1Communes
blank1_info_sec133
blank2_name_sec1Villages
blank2_info_sec1133
timezoneICT
utc_offset+07:00
area_code_typeDialing code
area_code+855
iso_codeKH-9
blank_name_sec2HDI (2019)
blank_info_sec20.622
· 3rd
website

ខេត្តកោះកុង Bottom: Aerial view of Kong Kang Forest · 3rd

Koh Kong (, Kaôh Kŏng , ) is a province (khaet) of Cambodia. Its capital is Khemarak Phoumin (Koh Kong).

Geography

The most southwestern province of Cambodia, Koh Kong has a long undeveloped coastline and a mountainous, forested, and largely inaccessible interior which includes part of the Cardamom Mountains, Cambodia's largest national park (Botum Sakor National Park), and a section of Kirirom National Park. By the early 2010s, Conservation International’s Central Cardamom Mountains programme in Cambodia was operating primarily in the Cardamom Mountains portions of Koh Kong and Pursat provinces, combining forest and biodiversity protection with land-use planning and rural livelihood activities. Parts of the province were designated as Central Cardamom Mountains National Park in 2016.

History

From 1795 to 1904 the area was under Siamese administration with the local name of "Koh Kong". During the reign of King Mongkut the name Patchan Khiri Khet was given to the city as a counterpart to Prachuap Khiri Khan, a city on the same latitude which also had its name changed during the same year. In 1904, the region and the city of Trat was ceded to French Indochina in exchange of French troop evacuation from Chanthaburi. In 1907 Trat was returned to Siam in exchange for the Siamese province of Inner Cambodia while Koh Kong remained part of French Cambodia.

After Cambodia's liberation from the Khmer Rouge in 1979, Koh Kong province was quite under-populated. After the national government encouraged people to live in Koh Kong, there has been a net influx of people. It is estimated that the average annual growth rate in Koh Kong is 16%, which has put pressure on the mangrove resources in the province. Koh Kong's towns have developed rapidly partially in response to market pressures from Thailand and because of immigration from other parts of Cambodia.

Economy

The province has been the site of a Sino-Cambodian port development project in Dara Sakor. The project is planned to spread over 45,000 hectares, to include casinos, golf courses, and resorts. A 20 kilometre stretch of coastline will be turned into a deep-water port to accommodate cruise ships as well as freight. Near the port, an airfield with a runway 3,400 metres is longer than needed for commercial flights, while its turning bays are too small for civilian aircraft. Therefore, analysts suspect that the port project is a Cambodian-Chinese civil-military collaboration that will permit the Chinese navy to use the facilities as a forward operating base. Responding to US concerns, Prime Minister Hun Sen has denied the charge, pointing out that the Cambodian constitution "...has no provision for accommodating foreign military bases on its soil."

Districts

The province is divided into six districts and one municipality:

ISO codeDistrictKhmer
09-01Botum Sakorស្រុកបទុមសាគរ
09-02Kiri Sakorស្រុកគិរីសាគរ
09-03Koh Kongស្រុកកោះកុង
09-04Khemarak Phoumin Municipality (formerly Smach Mean Chey)ក្រុងខេមរភូមិន្ទ (អតីត ស្រុកស្មាច់មានជ័យ)
09-05Mondol Seimaស្រុកមណ្ឌលសីមា
09-06Srae Ambelស្រុកស្រែអំបិល
09-07Thma Bangស្រុកថ្មបាំង

Border crossing

Koh Kong Bridge is the second longest bridge in Cambodia, and was the longest until the completion of [[Neak Loeung Bridge]] in April 2015.

The province is an increasingly popular gateway to Cambodia from Hat Lek in eastern Thailand (Trat), in part due to the reasonably direct access to the port and beach resort town of Sihanoukville. The border is at Cham Yeam, about 14 km from Koh Kong.

Traveling to Koh Kong has been made easier, as bridges have been built, the first in 2002. The landmark Koh Kong Bridge was built by L.Y.P. Group. It is the second longest bridge in Cambodia (Neak Loeung Bridge took the number one spot in 2015). The 1,900-meter crossing can be seen connecting provincial town of Koh Kong to Koh Kong Resort and the Thai border. In 2007 a new sealed road (National Route 48) was completed from the town to Sre Ambel on the Phnom Penh to Sihanoukville highway, including four new bridges donated by the Thai government. They opened in May 2008.

Notable people

Eh Phouthong - Kun Khmer kickboxer.

References

References

  1. (26 January 2021). "General Population Census of the Kingdom of Cambodia 2019 – Final Results". [[Ministry of Planning (Cambodia).
  2. "Sub-national HDI - Area Database - Global Data Lab".
  3. (1 August 2019). "Not What It Seems". Bangkok Post.
  4. (September 2014). "Mid-Term Review Final Report: Sustainable Forest Management Project Cambodia". United Nations Development Programme.
  5. (9 May 2016). "Sub-decree No. 81 on the establishment of Central Cardamom Mountains National Park". Council of Ministers (Cambodia).
  6. [http://www.emecs.or.jp/2000thai-sympo/pdf/re-kim.pdf Peam Krasop Wildlife Sanctuary: Insights into Life in the Mangroves] {{Webarchive. link. (2011-10-02 , International Symposium on Protection and Management of Coastal Marine Ecosystem.)
  7. (7 February 2020). "Scary reality hidden in this picture".
  8. (13 June 2019). "There is more to Koh Kong". Khmer Times.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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