Monday February 16, 2009
Sky News
A child survivor of the Khmer Rouge's largest torture centre has emerged from obscurity to tell his story on the eve of a crimes against humanity trial in Cambodia.
Norng Chan Phal, now a 39-year-old father of two, said he was eight when the Vietnamese stormed into Phnom Penh to end the Khmer Rouge reign of terror.
He was held at the notorious S-21 prison where some 16,000 men, women and children were brutally tortured and executed.
Phal came forward last week after a film from Vietnam was screened showing Vietnamese troops entering the prison, also known as Tuol Sleng.
The man who ran the prison, Kaing Guek Eav, is due to go before a UN-backed tribunal on Tuesday.
Better known as Duch, he will be the first of five former Khmer Rouge leaders to stand trial for crimes against humanity.
He faces charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture and homicide while he ran the centre.
It comes 30 years after the fall of Cambodia's "Killing Fields" regime.
Nearly every Cambodian family lost loved ones during the 1975-79 period of Khmer Rouge rule that claimed an estimated 1.7 million lives.
Phal has said he will present himself at the trial, according to The Phnom Penh Post.
"I haven't presented myself before because I felt hesitant," he told the newspaper.
"The Khmer Rouge tribunal has been delayed and left victims to feel hopeless about justice.
"It has meant that the regime's top leaders died one by one."
Norng Chan Phal, now a 39-year-old father of two, said he was eight when the Vietnamese stormed into Phnom Penh to end the Khmer Rouge reign of terror.
He was held at the notorious S-21 prison where some 16,000 men, women and children were brutally tortured and executed.
Phal came forward last week after a film from Vietnam was screened showing Vietnamese troops entering the prison, also known as Tuol Sleng.
The man who ran the prison, Kaing Guek Eav, is due to go before a UN-backed tribunal on Tuesday.
Better known as Duch, he will be the first of five former Khmer Rouge leaders to stand trial for crimes against humanity.
He faces charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture and homicide while he ran the centre.
It comes 30 years after the fall of Cambodia's "Killing Fields" regime.
Nearly every Cambodian family lost loved ones during the 1975-79 period of Khmer Rouge rule that claimed an estimated 1.7 million lives.
Phal has said he will present himself at the trial, according to The Phnom Penh Post.
"I haven't presented myself before because I felt hesitant," he told the newspaper.
"The Khmer Rouge tribunal has been delayed and left victims to feel hopeless about justice.
"It has meant that the regime's top leaders died one by one."
4 comments:
it is very painful for any khmer people who lived through and survived the most atrocious, hardship they ever experienced in cambodia. thus, nobody can really hold their tears when they talk or being asked about what they think of the KR period. may god bless all khmer people. god will help all khmer people to overcome this.
I found it hard to believe that the Khmer Rouge abused children. Pouk Ah George Washington's potato diggers is on drug.
haaaa...I can't believe that you are constantly on drug yourself.
Thanks for the joke.
Yeah, that shows how much you know about Khmer Rouge. Children is their future, dude. They will never abused their own future. All they did is brainwashed them to support their ideology, and there is nothing wrong with that because everyone is brainwashed to support some sort of ideology anyway.
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