Kith Meng
Kith Meng is a Chinese-Cambodian businessman who serves as the founder, chairman, and chief executive officer of the Royal Group of Companies, Cambodia's largest private conglomerate with dominant positions in telecommunications, banking, media, energy, and logistics.[1][2] Orphaned during the Khmer Rouge regime after his parents' deaths, Meng fled as a child refugee, grew up in Australia, and returned to Cambodia in the early 1990s to establish the group as a trading firm that expanded amid the country's post-conflict reconstruction.[2][3] Under his leadership, the Royal Group has developed market-leading subsidiaries such as CamGSM (operating as Cellcard, Cambodia's primary mobile network), Canadia Bank, and entities in power generation and special economic zones, contributing significantly to national infrastructure and economic growth while amassing an estimated personal fortune exceeding $1 billion.[1][4][5] A dual Cambodian-Australian citizen and recipient of the Neak Oknha honorific for substantial contributions to the kingdom, Meng maintains close advisory ties to Cambodian leadership and promotes foreign investment, though his ventures have drawn scrutiny over alleged involvement in disputed land acquisitions and environmental practices like logging.[1][6][2]