February 6, 2012
By MARK MCDONALD
International Herald Tribune
Now, consider for a moment the language the man is using, if only because he is the chief judge at an international court, a man chosen for his calm, his restraint, his judicial temperament: He called the defendant in the dock before him “a shocking and heinous character’’ who as a prison warden had overseen “a factory of death,’’ perpetrating crimes that were “undoubtedly among the worst in human history.’’
The judge, Kong Srim, a Cambodian, was speaking at the recent sentencing of Kaing Guek Eav, a prison warden during the Khmer Rouge regime who orchestrated the torture and killing of some 14,000 Cambodians, some for the “crimes’’ of wearing eyeglasses, speaking French, owning books or playing the piano.
The warden, better known as Duch (pronounced doik), was the first person to be judged by a United Nations-backed tribunal in the Cambodian capital of Phnom Penh. Duch had appealed his previous sentence of 19 years, saying it was much too harsh. His prosecutors also appealed, saying the sentence was far too lenient, and they asked for a term of 45 years.
In the end, Duch got life. Which was more than his victims got.
Duch’s prison, known as Tuol Sleng or S-21, is today a spare and horrifying museum. It’s not for the squeamish. And to think that it had once been a school where kids learned grammar, French, music. The phrase “crimes against humanity” was never more applicable than at S-21. Such crimes.
Duch’s sentencing served as “a statement to those victims and all of history,’’ said Stephen J. Rapp, the U.S. ambassador-at-large for war crimes issues, speaking to Al Jazeera English. He also called the verdict “a great day for Cambodia.”
Duch, 69, although he has taken responsibility for his crimes, argued all along that he was merely a bit player in the Khmer Rouge tragedy that killed an estimated 1.7 million people between 1975 and 1979. Three senior members of the regime are currently on trial, including Nuon Chea, the regime’s chief ideologist, known as Brother No. 2 behind the leader Pol Pot.
But the tribunal process remains chaotic, even glacial, and the Cambodian government often seems to be in no great hurry to move the process along.
One Cambodian human rights activist, Theary Seng, told Al Jazeera that she thought the life sentence for Duch was part of a government ruse to protect the remaining members of the Khmer Rouge hierarchy: “They want him to be the scapegoat,’’ she said, “for the whole Khmer Rouge regime.’’
It was a nasty oil slick of a regime, and every Cambodian seems to have a tale (or many tales) of lost relatives, missing friends, long-ago happiness.
My late Cambodian friend, Sok Sin, told me stories about how he lived in a forest for three years, hiding from the red-scarved Stalinist maniacs during what is known as “Pol Pot time.’’
Sok Sin eventually became a fixer for journalists, and one day in 1999, while preparing a story about the U.N. tribunal, we drove into northern Cambodia. I had heard about a woman in a remote town whose toddler had been killed when a Khmer Rouge soldier cut off the little girl’s hands. Several years later, after the Khmer Rouge were driven from power, the woman gave birth to another daughter — and the baby was born without hands.
But on that same trip, Sok Sin ran into an old friend in a rural market, and he used a Khmer greeting that, alas, had become customary: “So nice to see you alive.’’
That kind of language is both compelling and instructive, and it’s a language that judge Kong Srim knows, too.
4 comments:
And when will Henry Kissinger get life in prison for his war crimes affecting many millions of innocent people in various countries, including Cambodia?
And when will George W Bush, Blair & Howard get life in prion for slaughtering over a million innocent Iraqis in their illegal war against Iraq.
And when will Obama the Bomber get life in prison for his illegal war crimes in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Libya, etc.
Etc., etc.
And when will pigs fly???!!!
Typically, this article tells only one part of the story, and is, as always, significant for what it leaves out.
There is macabre irony in the US government even having such a person as "ambassador-at-large for war crimes issues", considering that the US has been one of the worst perpetrators of war crimes around the world, and it still is!
Anything the US government might have to say about war crimes committed by others is pure hypocrisy, until they face up to their own innumerable war crimes, including against Cambodia, and stop their current and future war crimes.
Many powerful interests have been "in no great hurry to move the process (of the Cambodian war crimes trial) along", because they have Cambodian blood on their hands, but they are conveniently omitted from the official story.
The terms of reference for the trials were very specifically limited to 1975-1979, by the UN, although Hun Sen and the Cambodian government wanted a wider time-span.
The UN wanted to protect the other guilty parties who supported Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge crimes, either while they were in power or for decades afterwards - including the US, China, ASEAN countries, Britain, Australia and even the UN itself, all of whom have Cambodian blood on their hands!!!
The article refers to "after the Khmer Rouge were driven from power". It then conveniently 'forgets' to mention HOW they were "driven from power".
Obviously, it does not fit the official narrative to give credit, where it is due, to the Vietnamese who drove the genocidal KR from power, responding to a request for help from Cambodians.
Instead, the 'official narrative' only falsely refers to the Vietnamese "invasion", instead of "liberation".
That is the truth.
But to understand the truth you must dig a little deeper.
MAO ZEDONG KILLED Over THIRTY MILLIONS CHINESE FOR HIS POLICY OF GIANT LEAP FORWARD IN 1958 ; NO UN COURT FOR THAT AND HE IS STILL
A CHINESE HERO . DUCH WILL GET FREE MEDICAL CARE, FREE MEALS
FREE SERVICES ETC.. FOR THE REST OF HIS LIFE WHEREAS HIS VICTIMS HAVE TO WORK VERY HARD FOR THOSE . HE WILL THANK UN FOR SAVING
HIS LIFE BECAUSE HE CANNOT BE SET FREE TO BE KILLED IN COMMUNITY BY VICTIMS RELATIVES .
Dear Theary, I have read and I heard you repeat the name (Duch) instead the real name (Kaing Kek-ev) that the Khmer Rouge organization (Angkar-leu) has invented this name (Duch) as a scapegoat to hide the truth and whitewash their crime. You don't think you are about to make propaganda for the organization Khmer Rouge (Angkar-leu) who killed your parents and 3 million Khmer. You don't think that you are manipulated by politicians descendant of Ankar-leu. You're like as parrot to repeat the name (Duch) instead (Kaing kek-ev) for disgrace your grandfather (Duch Som) and the famous people like (Duch Sidim,Duch Kimhak, and the master of traditional Khmer music (Sok Duch) etc.. Remember when you were a kid, Angka-leu took you indoctrinate and manipulate the same method is to hide truth (leakkar) to assassinate our innocent people. Dear Theary think again and change quickly to avoid losing the title heroine that you sacrifice your strength for victims of the Khmer Rouge. Don't walking in night without light it is very dangerous.
ParisV.Januery 6, 2012
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