-
Thailand releases 18 Cambodian soldiers held since July
-
Tiny tech, big AI power: what are 2-nanometre chips?
-
Libyans savour shared heritage at reopened national museum
-
Asia markets mixed in final day of 2025 trading
-
Global 'fragmentation' fuelling world's crises: UN refugee chief
-
Difficult dance: Cambodian tradition under threat
-
Regional temperature records broken across the world in 2025
-
'Sincaraz' set to dominate as 2026 tennis season kicks off
-
Bulgaria readies to adopt the euro, nearly 20 years after joining EU
-
Trump v 'Obamacare': US health costs set to soar for millions in 2026
-
Isiah Whitlock Jr., 'The Wire' actor, dies at 71
-
SoftBank lifts OpenAI stake to 11% with $41bln investment
-
Bangladesh mourns ex-PM Khaleda Zia with state funeral
-
TSMC says started mass production of 'most advanced' 2nm chips
-
Australian cricket great Damien Martyn 'in induced coma'
-
Guinea junta chief Doumboya elected president: election commission
-
Caballero defends Maresca after Palmer substitution sparks jeers
-
Depleted Man Utd 'lack quality', says Amorim
-
'We know what we want': Arteta eyes title after Arsenal thrash Villa
-
Arsenal crush Villa to make statement in title race
-
Senegal top AFCON group ahead of DR Congo as Tanzania make history
-
Maresca in the firing line as Chelsea stumble against Bournemouth
-
Senegal top AFCON group, DR Congo to face Algeria in last 16
-
Norway's Magnus Carlsen wins 20th world chess title
-
Patriots star Diggs facing assault charges: reports
-
Journalist Tatiana Schlossberg, granddaughter of JFK, dies at 35
-
Rio receives Guinness record for biggest New Year's bash
-
Jokic out for four weeks after knee injury: Nuggets
-
World bids farewell to 2025, a year of Trump, truces and turmoil
-
Far-right leader Le Pen to attend Brigitte Bardot's funeral
-
Drones dive into aviation's deepest enigma as MH370 hunt restarts
-
German dog owners sit out New Year's Eve chaos in airport hotels
-
Tanzania hold Tunisia to end 45-year wait for AFCON knockout spot
-
10 countries warn of 'catastrophic' Gaza situation
-
Performers cancel concerts at Kennedy center after Trump renaming
-
Burst tyre and speed contributed to Joshua crash say investigators
-
Students join Iran demonstrations after shopkeepers protest
-
Johnson still a Spurs player despite Palace interest, says Frank
-
UAE to pull forces out of Yemen as 24-hour deadline set
-
Chinese leasing firm CALC orders 30 Airbus A320neo planes
-
Germany bank heist nets about 30mn euros in cash, valuables: police
-
AU observers praise 'peaceful' Central African Republic polls
-
Ivory Coast coach Fae backs switching AFCON to every four years
-
'Make our country happy': Sudan dream of AFCON glory as conflict rages at home
-
Students join demonstrations after Iran shopkeepers protest
-
French ban on 'forever chemicals' in cosmetics, clothing to enter force
-
Fury offers condolences to victims of Joshua car crash
-
A war within a war: Yemen's latest conflict
-
Spanish woman known for failed fresco restoration dies
-
I.Coast ruling party's dominance leaves opposition on brink
Difficult dance: Cambodian tradition under threat
Cambodian master classical dancer Penh Yom walks between her teenage students, painstakingly adjusting a bent-back finger here and the tilt of a head there, as she passes on a centuries-old art form.
Khmer classical dance, performed to traditional music, is renowned for its graceful hand gestures and stunning costumes, and has a 1,000-year history.
But after barely surviving Cambodia's genocidal Khmer Rouge regime in the 1970s, it is now under threat from a changing media and entertainment landscape, limited funding and economic challenges.
Enrolment in the Secondary School of Fine Arts in Phnom Penh is falling, and many entrants do not complete the gruelling nine-year curriculum.
The art form was nearly destroyed when the Khmer Rouge killed almost all the master dancers and musicians, among nearly two million who were murdered or died of starvation, illness or overwork during the regime's less than four years in power.
Then-leader Pol Pot's ultra-Maoist fanatics considered dancers among the enemies of the people, both educated and representative of a feudal past they wanted to eradicate entirely.
As artists, they were specifically targeted for identification and elimination.
Penh Yom, 78, survived by hiding her profession, and after the Khmer Rouge-run Democratic Kampuchea fell in 1979, she regrouped with a small troupe of dancers to revive the form.
Her own training began in the Royal Palace when she was eight.
"Now I am worried that it will disappear," she said. "We keep urging them to train hard and to help us preserve this art."
"Like 'you the grandchildren and me the grandmother try hard together'."
Dancer Yang Sopheaktra, 21, graduated from the Phnom Penh school three years ago and recalled that the training was "really difficult".
"We need patience, for example, when we bend our fingers, we have to count up to 100," she said.
"We have to remember many styles of the dance. So students with less talent would drop out easily. Sometimes, I was so tired and wanted to drop it."
Her father is also a dancer, but was against her following in his footsteps. "He wanted me to learn whatever is not related to the arts."
But she persevered: "I want to help preserve this art form with new ideas."
- 'From hair to toe' -
Also known as Cambodia's royal ballet, classical dance performances were originally mounted for court occasions such as coronations or marriages.
It was first introduced to an international audience in colonial power France in 1906.
UNESCO proclaimed it an intangible cultural heritage in 2003 and says it takes dancers "years of intensive training" to master its gestures and poses, which "evoke the gamut of human emotions, from fear and rage to love and joy".
But it risks "becoming a mere tourist attraction", it adds.
The Secondary School of Fine Arts has more than 90 classical dance teachers and is the primary training centre for the next generation.
Pupils attend dance classes in the mornings and follow the standard school curriculum in the afternoons.
Tuition is free, but it has slashed the accommodation available to students, and trainers expect many to drop out in the face of educational demands and financial pressures on their families.
This year, 39 eight-year-olds registered, little more than half the usual number.
A few weeks into the course, the new entrants bent their hands, legs and bodies as trainer Hang Sophea sought to instil the basics.
"I have to watch them from hair to toe so that in the future they could be our heirs," she said.
Some would soon start dropping out and at most 15 would become dancers, she predicted.
"As teachers, we are worried... Now it is the modern era and everything is in a smartphone," Hang Sophea added.
"We always remind them not to forget our identity."
But some use social media to promote their art.
Tola Thina, 18, is in her final year at the school and often posts her performances on Facebook, where she has more than 20,000 followers.
"This culture is really beautiful and I love it," she said. "I want to be a traditional dancer and preserve it."
L.Miller--AMWN