
2014
In 1972, during Cambodia's civil war, a sandstone statue was torn from the age-old Koh Ker temple. Measuring 1.58m high and weighing 110 kilos, it depicts a prince and belongs to a collection that retraces the epic of the Mahabharata. The sculpture was first sold at auction in London in 1975, via a strange British art dealer based in Bangkok, and reappeared in 2011 at Sotheby's in New York with a bid of $2.5 million. A sale that was ultimately prohibited. In the meantime, experts from the École française d'Extrême-Orient, an American lawyer commissioned by Phnom Penh and UNESCO mobilized the Heritage Police across the Atlantic to denounce the theft of a cultural asset. In 2013, the work was returned to Cambodia. A captivating investigation into the international mafia of antiquities trafficking.

John Baumhackl: Chemical Memories

Narratives of Modern Genocide

An Ongoing Dispute

Les tombeaux engloutis du Nil

Raise the Bamboo Curtain: Vietnam, Cambodia, and Burma

The Bamboo Bridge

Deacon of Death

Rain Falls from Earth: Surviving Cambodia's Darkest Hour

S21: The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine

Journey Into Buddhism: Prajna Earth

Defending Brother No.2

In the Frozen Tomb of Mongolia

The Donut King

The Killing Fields of Dr. Haing S. Ngor

Ghuza da Sher

Norodom Sihanouk, King and Film-maker

Huaquero

High Point Summer

Side by Side

National Geographic: Pyramids of Death