Friday, March 25, 2011

Heartache of Khmer Rouge forced marriage victims

Heartache of Khmer Rouge forced marriage victims
3/24/2011
By Agence France-Presse

When the Khmer Rouge ordered Phalla to marry a man she had never met in 1976, the young woman knew she had to obey if she wanted to survive Cambodia's infamous "Killing Fields" era.

Having already angered the superiors in her labour camp by refusing to wed her cousin, she was warned that such defiance would not be tolerated twice.

"I was told I was to marry another man and if I still refused, I would be re-educated," she said, a term she knew meant certain death.

"Then I agreed because I was very afraid," Phalla, 54, told AFP, not wanting to use her real name.

Experts say the Khmer Rouge forced tens of thousands of men and women to wed, often in mass ceremonies, as part of leader Pol Pot's plan to boost the population.


Authorities wanted to control every aspect of an individual's life and sought to destroy family bonds, claiming the state was all the family a person needed.

The hardline communist regime strove to create an agrarian utopia but was ultimately responsible for the deaths of up two million people from overwork, starvation and execution between 1975 and 1979.

Four of the movement's most senior surviving leaders -- "Brother Number Two" Nuon Chea, former head of state Khieu Samphan, ex-foreign minister Ieng Sary and ex-social affairs minister Ieng Thirith -- are set to face a UN-backed court for atrocity crimes in the middle of this year.

With forced marriage included as a crime against humanity in the indictments, the trial will provide the first forum for these husbands and wives to seek justice.

More than 600 forced marriage victims have been included as civil parties in the upcoming case, international civil party co-lawyer Silke Studzinsky told AFP, and many are hoping to give testimony.

According to the indictments, the unions "were part of the attack against the civilian population, in particular the imposition of sexual relations aimed at enforced procreation".

In stark contrast to a traditional Cambodian wedding, Pol Pot's mass ceremonies were sombre affairs without any sense of celebration and usually without any family members present, witnesses say.

"The organisation called out one male name and one female name," Phalla recalled. "They asked us to make a commitment to stay together forever. That was the first time I met my husband."

Many couples say there was pressure to consummate the marriage on the wedding night.

A wooden dwelling on stilts provided a semblance of privacy for the reluctant couples, but they were hardly alone.

"Soldiers stood underneath our building, listening to hear whether we were getting along or having disputes," said Phalla.

"But we just lay there, like brother and sister." The next day they were sent back to their own bases and saw each other "only very rarely" at pre-arranged times.

It is not known how many unions led to pregnancies or how many couples split up after the regime was ousted from power in 1979.

"After the Khmer Rouge, many people tried to get back to their families and their homes, so it was easy to separate," said Studzinsky. "But others stayed together, often because they had children as a result of the forced marriage."

Phalla remained married. "Under the Pol Pot regime, my husband listened to me. He respected my rights, did not abuse me or rape me," she said. "In the end, I fell in love with him."

Still Phalla insists a crime was committed. "We had no opportunity to choose our own spouse. I want justice for that situation," she said.

Unlike forced marriages in Rwanda, Sierra Leone or Uganda -- where husbands were often the perpetrators -- Cambodian men were themselves victims, according to Natalae Anderson, a researcher at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

"Forced marriage in the Cambodian context is unique when compared to incidences of forced marriage in other countries," she wrote last year in a paper for the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which collects evidence of Khmer Rouge atrocities.

Observers have warned the case will be lengthy and complex, with all four defendants denying the charges.

It follows the landmark conviction last July of Khmer Rouge prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch, who was sentenced to 30 years in jail for overseeing the deaths of some 15,000 people. Both Duch and the prosecution have contested the verdict. Their appeals will be heard next week.

There will be no individual reparations for the forced marriage victims and the tribunal has instead invited suggestions for alternative forms of "collective and moral" redress. Education programmes and remembrance days are among the ideas mooted.

Sin Ban is stepping forward as a civil party "because our rights were abused".

Now a 57-year-old farmer, he said the officials in his commune ordered him to marry a woman who had difficulty walking just weeks before Vietnamese forces liberated the country.

His eyes downcast, he admits that he considered leaving her when freedom beckoned.

"But then I thought about how she had lost her parents and that she was disabled. I felt pity for her so I tried to take care of her," said the father-of-six, who has stuck by his wife to this day.

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

And now! ah kwack want to force the job he creat in Cambodia! TO work in low pay for the fucking Youn Vietnamese motherfucker!

Anonymous said...

Phalla, you are lucky that you are survive, and so the rest other people. Why people like to bring up about the notirious Khmer? It' over, it's past. You should care about your homeland. You guy nothing to do, so bring up Khmer Rouge story. Can you see YOUN in your country, and problem with Thai. A whole country had problem during the Khmer rouge, Phalla, you are NOT the only one. Thus, you mut take of yourself and families is better.

Anonymous said...

One again, YOUN/Vietnamese almost every the country, why can you see it? Hey! I was a KHmer rouge soldier and I never bring it up. I am against YOUN/Viet and Thai. Do you undertand Hah...Mee Phalla?

Anonymous said...

It's almost laughable about some of these "human rights abused" during Pol Pot regime.

Yeah, keep festering the wounds. I can almost hate these "experts" in human rights groups. i feel its all a sham on the UN to make themselves look good at the tune of millions of dollars added to their coffer.

The very people that aid & bet on the sufferings of others run the UN all in the name of peace. The world truly been duped.

Anonymous said...

After coming from working in the field one evening, a group of people were called to the meeting.

There, their name were paired and pronounced husband and wife.

It was dark after the ceremony, they headed to the kitchen, some newly-wed were separated and and there were some confusion because some couple did not know each other.

One girl asked a guy;

" Pou, are you the guy who I just married with?"

No, i am not, it was "mith" Soum.


One guy asked another girl;

"Mith Neary, are you the one that I just got married with?"

he girl, No, your wife were Mith Neary Roeun.,


Baay Kdaing

Anonymous said...

What is the point of ah stupid former Khmer rouge 4:24AM trying to make?

Anonymous said...

The 4:24AM said,"hate Viet and Thai".
That's so great!Could you take over
Yuon and Thai?How Khmer Rouge treated
his own people?
Hun Sen was a Khmer Rouge leader;how
he is treating Cambodians?The Pol Pot
and Hun Sen regime treat Khmer people
like animals.
Palla,yes you are correct;the one who
treat you nice,you praise them,but the one who treat you bad,you curse and blame them.
Can anyone escape from cursing and
praising?

Anonymous said...

Baay kdaing avait rappelé le beau language des KR !
" Mith" ," Mith neary " , mais le mot " Sneur " ! Le language agréable cachant de venin envers la population khmer à l'époque , on n'est pas prêt à oublier !
Le mariage forcé (sneur) , existait partout , comme à Pursat , damban 7 , où j'étais à l'époque .
Angkar ,donc les chefs des KR , fous et malades , pensaient même aux mariages forcées.
Ils sont vraiment inhumains et champions de méchancetés de toutes catégories .
On doit graver leurs conneries dans l'histoire de notre pays.

Anonymous said...

Fuck KR. only good at killing it own and innocent people. we need to find this coward Khmer rough guy and kill them!

Anonymous said...

To all Khmer Rough..... One ? why kill your own Khmer people. Why the fuck did you run when Youn come and fight you. piece of shit. IF you are a KR soldier you should died in that war or kill yourself now. Look what happen to ours country

Anonymous said...

Dont' be fooled...youn and KR is the same animal.

Youn=KR ...just open your eyes

Ted

Anonymous said...

All of you are very lucky,
you talked and heard about wedding,
at that time, me, I never heard and thought about the word wedding,
but
when I would be killed,
this year I could eat BAAY for 3 or 4 months..

Anonymous said...

11:41PM! no body is lucky shit head!

Find justice so the stupid even will look down by next generation and will never happen again!

Thing of 100 yeas or more, educated the people!

Anonymous said...

Dont' be fooled...youn and KR is the same animal.

Youn=KR ...just open your eyes

Ted

9:40 PM

Anonymous said...

In Pol Pot era, Khmer rouges forced you to marry and you did not happy.
Me, they did not give me enough food, forced me to work hard and looked for every excuse to kill me.
You must be an idiot, if you don't feel lucky.