About

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

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Author Archive
Kahn's masterpiece

Kahn’s masterpiece

One of Dhaka’s most arresting attractions is its magisterially bleak (or bleakly magisterial) national parliament, the Jatiyo Sangshad Bhaban. Constructed from massive blocks of unfinished reinforced concrete bisected by simple triangles and circles, the building is perhaps the crowning work in the career of American architect Louis Khan. Although commissioned as the national parliament of...

Father searches for truth

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

Crunch time in corruption fight

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

An icon fades in Cambodia

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

Armed Forces Day

Occasionally, a copy of the New Light of Myanmar — the Burmese government’s official mouthpiece — winds up in our office and gets passed around for laughs. The paper on March 25, commemorating Armed Forces Day, which marks the start of the Burmese army’s resistance to the Japanese occupation in 1945, was particularly amusing. In...
Kingdom Kim's culinary outposts

Kingdom Kim’s culinary outposts

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

A city in the Burmese junta’s image

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

Revisiting Lon Nol’s Cambodia

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

Ashkenazy in Cambodia

This was a bit of a change from the normal routine. Last week, I had the opportunity to interview pianist and conductor Vladimir Ashkenazy, in Phnom Penh as part of an initiative of the Vienna-based International Peace Foundation. Currently, Ashkenazy is the chief conductor and artistic director of the Sydney Symphony Orchestra and he had...

An unsafe house

Did Beijing’s economic assistance to Cambodia influence Phnom Penh’s deportation of 20 political refugees?
In the shadow of Vine Mountain

In the shadow of Vine Mountain

  With an Australian inquest set to revisit the killing of three Western tourists by Khmer Rouge in 1994, former cadres in Kampot reflect on the events that led to the men’s capture and killing

Blog relaunch

After nearly two inactive years, I’ve decided to relaunch my old blog. The previous name, ‘Like Pulling Teeth’ — an apt evocation of the bored summer that gave rise to it — has been exchanged for something simpler. I’m also hoping this site will strike a more professional pose. Expect it to focus more squarely...