Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Landmark Khmer Rouge genocide trial: Do Cambodians care?

In this photo, Cambodian Buddhist monks gather during the second trial of the top leaders of Khmer Rouge in the court hall of the UN-backed war crimes tribunal, on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Wednesday, June 29. The UN-backed war crimes tribunal on Wednesday held its 3rd day trial on top four surviving members of the Khmer Rouge regime, blamed for the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million Cambodians in the 1970s. (Mark Peters/Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia/AP)

The Cambodian government is stepping up efforts to inform the country about the Khmer Rouge's bloody rule.

June 29, 2011
By Simon Montlake, Correspondent
The Christian Science Monitor

Phnom Penh, Cambodia - Inside a purpose-built courtroom, four elderly Khmer Rouge leaders went on trial here this week in a case that was hailed as a landmark for Cambodian justice under a UN-backed war-crimes tribunal.

But on the streets of the capital, many ordinary Cambodians seemed unsure about what exactly was unfolding and why they should take time out from their daily struggles to pay attention. Others expressed bafflement at the circuitous path of the hearings, the rights afforded to truculent suspects and the tribunal’s lavish budget in a war-ravaged country mired in poverty.

“They spent a lot of money. So where is the verdict?” asks Kosal Kong, a motorized-cart driver who lost relatives during the Khmer Rouge’s 1975-79 genocidal reign.

In fact, the tribunal last year convicted a prison-camp director who confessed to war crimes. But the leaders currently on trial are bigger names, particularly for Cambodians who lived through that dark period. But a survey taken in December found that most Cambodians can't name the four leaders, though overall awareness of the tribunal was on the increase. A quarter of respondents said they knew nothing about it. In 2008, the equivalent figure was 39 percent, according to the University of California, Berkley, which carried out the surveys.

Efforts to publicize trials stepped up

Officials at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), say they’re stepping up efforts to publicize the latest trials. “We need to work harder to bring more people to come here. The people are the victims of the Khmer Rouge. They want to know what happened,” says Neth Pheaktra, an ECCC spokesman.

During this week’s hearings, the ECCC bussed in hundreds of villagers from across the country to watch from the 482-seat public gallery. At least 100,000 Cambodians have visited the tribunal since 2005, said Mr. Neth. Many others have attended public screenings of official documentaries on the court’s proceedings.

The hearings are also broadcast live on radio and television, though Chea Sopha, the owner of a roadside café said her customers preferred to watch a movie channel. She said she was too busy to attend but was supportive of putting the leaders on trial so that Cambodians could know the truth. “It’s good to know what the Khmer Rouge regime did in the past,” she says.

At another cafe in a bus station, a middle-aged man said the government was using the tribunal to cover up its own actions. He said the Khmer Rouge had killed his mother, aunt, and grandmother, and a guilty verdict for the leaders would not bring them back.

Among court officials and human rights activists, it’s an article of faith that justice and accountability can bring healing to a traumatized nation like Cambodia, despite the lapsed time since the crimes. For some victims of the Khmer Rouge, a dwindling population, there is a measure of satisfaction in seeing notorious killers in the dock.

But the idea that a war-crimes tribunal can provide “therapy,” as well as justice, is debatable, says Peter Maguire, the author of "Facing Death in Cambodia," who has taught on the laws of war at Columbia University. He says international opinion shifted in the 1990s toward a broader notion of post-war justice than simply trying suspects for their crimes, without any evidence that it works.

A tribunal isn’t a forum for teaching lessons. It’s a forum for adjudication,” he says.

Lengthy trials that allow ideologues to expound their views can also stoke sympathy, as some scholars have found after the Nuremburg Trials of Nazi leaders, according to Mr. Maguire, though this doesn’t apply to Khmer Rouge leaders in Cambodia.

Sensitive topics

For many years, Cambodians knew little about the historical forces that shaped the Khmer Rouge. Teachers shied away from this and other sensitive topics, mindful of political tensions over who did what. Parents told their children of their pain and suffering, but were either unwilling or unable to explain the mass executions, or why some killers still lived freely among those they terrorized.

Gradually, high schools have begun to teach about the Khmer Rouge period at grade 12 using documentary materials from war-crimes researchers. While these initiatives haven’t come from the tribunal itself, it opened up political space for teachers and students, says Anne Heindel, a legal adviser to the Documentation Center of Cambodia in Phnom Penh.

Students are “interested in the trial because they learn about it in school, then they come in and see it,” she says.

At the Lycée Sisovath, an elite colonial-era school whose alumni include Khieu Samphan, one of the accused leaders, students in the outdoor cafeteria seem keen to know more about their country’s darkest chapter. Khon Sovansreyneth, a student in grade 11, says she’s heard stories of hardship from her parents and seen the tribunal on television. “It’s important. We’re Khmer. We have to know about the terrible history,” she says.

19 comments:

Anonymous said...

Not a single monk shaved their head.What's wrong with TEP VONG.Where is the discipline ?.

Anonymous said...

Why worry about the dead tiger and not the current killers-
the CPP leaders and their boss, the Viet.
Khmer are suffering currently and daily...

Anonymous said...

Monk shave every 14 day on the waning moon and every 15 day on the waxing moon. Usually one or two monks break the norm not shaving, but it is not significantly against the rule but just does not look good.

500riel toilet said...

These monks in this picture, look like they were born after 1979. I don't think deep down inside, they care about the past. Just like any youth who were born after 1979, all they care about is cell phone, motorcycle, cars and facebook, etc...

that's just my two cent.

Anonymous said...

As a khmers we've learned the past and the present time; why Cambodia downside now from the Empire Ankorian time. Mostly in the eye of internatinal arenas even blindly claimed and the indenial by Hun Sen that Cambodia is developing from year Zero..ashamed of it since 1979to now. Foer example the Universities grown in Cambodia have not been comparable usable knowledge against S.E Asia Countries like Thai, Malaisia, Singapore, Indonesia... if you rae applying jobs in Cambodia or in Asia they preferred those countries than Cambodia...
So we care about your past mistake and make a correction now.
The killing fields if you learned the most credentail history of Cambodia the big mistakes were our leadership failure since France colony granted Cambodia Independent.
Sihanouk is the main guy responsible for his gradually down for Cambodia until his adopted son Hun Sen carried over his policies to fulfill Indochinse Federation become obvious sooner.

Khmer love voices

Anonymous said...

if cambodia want to change for a better future, we must educate our people about the KR atrocity. sweeping the KR history under the carpet won't help anything or anyone, really! don't be ashamed, like sex and child birth, it is a normal part of life if we were to survive, etc, really! be brave cambodia!

Anonymous said...

again, education is very important in our khmer society. keep educating everyone, for the lack of education is what makes them not understanding about khmer way, khmer history, etc, etc... if we, the teachers, older generation, etc failed to education our younger generation, it is us too that failed, not just these younger generation, really! think about it. so, please make all effort to educate our younger generation of khmer people, etc, ok! god bless cambodia and all our beautiful khmer people and citizens.

it is easy to make critics, but if we don't do something to like being proactive in the community, etc, etc, then the guilt lies with us as well as the ignorance, you know! they say two wrong don't make it right, that's so true, if you think about it, you know!

Anonymous said...

Anonymous said...
As a khmers we've learned the past and the present time; why Cambodia downside now from the Empire Ankorian time. Mostly in the eye of internatinal arenas even blindly claimed and the indenial by Hun Sen that Cambodia is developing from year Zero..ashamed of it since 1979 to now. For example the Universities grown in Cambodia have been low standard performances in comparaison against S.E Asia Countries like Thai, Malaisia, Singapore, Indonesia... if you rae applying jobs in Cambodia or in Asia they preferred those countries than Cambodia...these are nothing Cambodia students itselve problems there is the system failure of Cambodia.
So we care about your past mistake and make a correction now.
The killing fields if you learned the most credentail history of Cambodia the big mistake has been our leadership failure since France colony granted Cambodia Independent.
Sihanouk is the main guy responsible for his gradually down for Cambodia until his adopted son Hun Sen carried over his policies to fulfill Indochinse Federation become obvious sooner.

Khmer love voices

Anonymous said...

មិនពិបាកយកខ្មែរក្រហមទៅកាត់ទោសនោះទេឲ្យតែ
ពិភពលោកគិតថាមានការកាប់សម្លាប់មកលើពលរដ្ធ
ខ្មែរស្លូតត្រង់ទៅបានហើយ។ពីព្រោះរាប់ទាំងអង្ការ
សហប្រជាជាតិមិនទរទួលស្គាល់ថាមានពលរដ្ធខ្មែរ
បានស្លាប់រាប់លាននាក់នោះទេតាំងតែពីដើមមក។
រាប់ទាំងបក្សប្រឆាំងថែមទៀតផងបបានដឹងហើយ
ធ្វើជាមិនដឹងចំពោះបក្សប្រឆាំងនៅស្រុកខ្មែរ។
បក្សប្រឆាំងទាំងនេះហ៊ានតឲ្យមួយរយឆ្នាំទៀត
បើចេះឈ្នះបក្សប្រជាជនបើប្រឆាំងរបៀបសព្វ
ថ្ងៃនេះ។ចំពោះបក្សប្រឆាំងនៅស្រុកខ្មែរសព្វថ្ងៃនេះ
មិនខុសអ្វីអំពីក្រុមពួកអាវលឿងសៀមនោះទេ
និយាយបាតដៃជាខ្នងដៃឬក៏ដួចកូនក្មេងបៀមដៃ
ឥញ្ជឹងឯង។

Anonymous said...

I do care, regardless if im khmer or not.

Human killing human, or once race killing another is still inhuman.

Before pol pot died, he said its youn. Maybe it not totally true, but im sure there is some truth to it. And, vietnam liberation, is part true. But they are still in cambodia after 30 years.


So, Its not liberation, ITS Invadsion! its that simple, if they have left. That will justfies the liberation.

They never left. Logic there is unjustifiable for liberation.

Anonymous said...

well, we know stupid KR kill their own people, blame who ever you want, that didn't deviate from the fact the the stupid KR killed their own people. if that's not stupid and ignorant, then what is it, a fantasy, a dream? again, don't be so stupid, again, ok! get good education, ok!

Anonymous said...

it's about competition, people, get the hang of it, ok!

Anonymous said...

2:22AM,
YOu cannot justify murder and nation cleansing as competition.

Vietcong has been committing a silence genocdie in Cambodia right now.

What the vietcong is doing is illegal!

Anonymous said...

4:01 AM There aren't even one dog is guarding our properties anymore.

Anonymous said...

Build a LANDMARK KHMER ROUGE
GENOCIDE TRIAL is a part of
Khmer and Khmer Rouge history.
If they build everywhere in
Cambodia,it is good for the next
generation to know what
happened in the past;so they can
get rid of it.

Anonymous said...

មានមាត់ចេះតែស្ដី មានដៃចេះតែសរសេរ
ប៉ុន្តែគំនិត យោបល់ មិនចេះជួយ។ទាំងនេះ
គ្រាន់តែមិនជួយចូកជួយចែវ ហើយ យកជើង
រាទឹក។
បើពូកែ យកបន្លាចេញពីផ្លូវ ទុកផ្លូវឲយគេដើរ។
ឬក៏ប្រាប់ផ្លូវ គេដើរ បើតាំងខ្លួនជាអ្នកជួយជាតិ
ស្រលាញ់ជាតិម្នាក់ដែរនោះ។

Anonymous said...

ប្រាប់ហើយតើ ថាដីត្រង់នេះជាដីស្រែរបស់ខ្មែរ ប៉ុន្តែពួកអ្ហែងមិនគ្រាន់តែមិនស្ដាប់ទេ បែរជាចាប់ម្ចាស់ស្រែដាក់គុក ហើយតាមរករឿងរកហេតុអ្នកដែលកាពារផល់ប្រយោជន៏ខ្មែរទៀត ចុះពួកអ្ហែងអ្វីក៏ធ្វើអញ្ចឹង ។

Anonymous said...

All of the four Khmer Rouge will face lives imprison, we do not need to wail till ECCC round up. Case 002 will face a lot of obstacles from CPP and ending up with majority of Khmer disappointment. Because thi s ECCC formed by CPP and CPP formed by yuon Hanoi officially in 1951 ( unofficially before 1951 ), so yuon Hanoi have strong influent over this ECCC political show trial. So yuon trial the four Khmer Rouge by borrowing Khmer hands known as CPP.]

Anonymous said...

be proactive, help to education cambodia!