Showing posts with label KR torture center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KR torture center. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2008

Tuol Sleng, From Prison to House of Memory

A monk pauses in a detention room at Tuol Sleng, a prison turned museum now under consideration for Unesco protection as a Memory of the World.

By Mean Veasna, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
11 September 2008



A small group of tourists on a recent Tuesday shuffled through the halls of Tuol Sleng, a dreaded prison under the Khmer Rouge that has become the most famous museum in Cambodia.

Through one old building to the next, the group moved, and in the eyes of some, tears built, as they scanned the mug shots of scores of Cambodians who had been photographed just before their executions. As the tourists passed the photographs of the dead, the beds where they had lain, and the shackles that had held them, a few had to flee the building, sobbing.

"Terribly shocked," one foreign woman said. "We all followed the events at that time, through media and television. And when you see the real place and you are a witness though the photographs and paintings and the torture instruments of the torture cell, it's difficult to imagine the horror and tragedy."

Still, she said, "I think it is important that this museum was made."

As many as 100 visitors pass through here a day, most of them foreigners.

"When you come here you feel like you just want to be silent and try to imagine," said Valerie de Robillard, a French visitor who come in Cambodia for the first time. "It is a dimension that is even more terrifying in this genocide."

A high school called Tuol Svay Prey until August 1976, Tuol Sleng became the Khmer Rouge's largest prison facility. In less than two and a half years, the prison held at least 12,000 Cambodians, and as many as 16,000, who were tortured and interrogated under suspicion of spying or disloyalty to the regime. Nearly all of them were later executed and dumped into mass graves on the outskirts of town, at a place called Choeung Ek, touted now by tour guides and taxi drivers as "the killing fields."

Kaing Kek Iev, the 65-year-old former chief of the prison better known by his revolutionary alias, Duch, is now set for trial under the Khmer Rouge tribunal. The prison he once ran stands now as an icon of his regime's cruelty. It has also serves as a storehouse of evidence in his impending trial, holding thousands of documents and photographs that testify to atrocities committed under the ultra-Maoist regime, under which as many as 2 million Cambodians died.

Only seven survivors of the prison have been positively identified, and only three of those survive. Records indicate as many as 177 were released, but these survivors have not been found.

Tuol Sleng is now under consideration as a Memory of the World site, its documents and photographs, the walls themselves, and even the Choeung Ek "killing fields" to be protected by Unesco.

"We need to serve justice for all victims, whether they died or survived," the director of the museum, Chhey Sopheara said.

Prisoners were routinely tortured here, their confessions against the regime extracted under the worst of circumstances: waterboarding, electric shock, burns, prolonged hanging.

The Vietnamese forces that ousted the Khmer Rouge, on Jan. 7, 1979, found the prison and recognized a need to preserve it. Tuol Sleng ceased being a prison and began its life as a museum on Aug. 19, 1979, following a trial in absentia of the regime's leaders, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary and Pol Pot. Pol Pot has died. Khieu Samphan and Ieng Sary have joined Duch in tribunal detention.

The Vietnamese left many of the rooms and cells as they found them. The museum is still inscribed by rusty coils of barbed wire, and visitors can walk past rows of cells just 1.2 meters wide. In a closet sit the old instruments of the Khmer Rogue: shovels, sticks, axes. Photographs of tortured children, handcuffed or chained, are on display on large wooden tables.

A requisite stop for most tourists in Phnom Penh, Tuol Sleng, known to the Khmer Rouge by its code name, S-21, is also visited by Cambodians who suffered from the regime.

"The prisoners were tied by their feet and hanged," said a man named Kreusnar, 26, whose father, older sister and uncle died under the Khmer Rouge and who came from Prey Veng province to visit the museum alone. "The Khmer Rouge prisoners were soaked in water jars or in basins. They had their nipples cut off. This torture to me seems fresh."

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Ex-Khmer Rouge prison to get UNESCO listing

Wednesday, September 03, 2008
By SOPHENG CHEANG Associated Press Writer

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia - The United Nations cultural agency said Wednesday that a former Khmer Rouge prison is on its way to becoming part of a global documentary archive for the role it has played in the country's tragic past.

The U.N. Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization said it is working on the Cambodian government's application to get the notorious S-21 prison - now known as Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum - and its torture archives listed in the agency's Memory of the World program.

"While crimes against humanity have happened elsewhere in the world, nowhere have they reached the extremes of systematic and nationwide suffering by their own regime that were seen in Cambodia," UNESCO said in a statement Wednesday on its Web site.

"The S-21 archive has achieved iconic status internationally, representing the tragedy of the crimes that took place in Cambodia and has become one of the main images of the country," UNESCO said.

Of the 16,000 men, women and children who passed through the S-21 prison gates, only 14 are thought to have survived. An estimated 1.7 million people died as a result of the Khmer Rouge's radical policies from 1975 to 1979.

The museum's archive includes 4,186 confessions _ often falsely given by prisoners through torture _ 6,226 biographies of prisoners, 6,147 photographic prints and negatives of prisoners, demolished buildings, research activities, mass graves and remains of victims, UNESCO said.

The museum, formerly a high school in Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh, was turned into a torture and interrogation center under the Khmer Rouge.

The prison was headed by Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, who is currently being detained as he awaits trial by Cambodia's U.N.-assisted genocide tribunal.

Tan Theany, secretary-general of the Cambodian National Commission for UNESCO, said the government submitted an application Friday requesting international status for the museum.

She said the museum and atrocities committed there are "very important for everybody to remember" and for preventing such crimes from occurring again.

UNESCO said it established the Memory of the World Program in 1992 to respond to the growing awareness of the problems of preservation of, and access to, documentary heritage in various parts of the world.

Its guidelines state that the world's documentary heritage should be preserved, protected and made permanently accessible to the public.

Saturday, February 23, 2008

Khmer Rouge torturer to revisit prison

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia, Feb. 22 (UPI) -- The accused war criminal who served as chief interrogator for the Khmer Rouge is to guide his judges around a torture center and execution site.

Kaing Guek Eav, who used the name Duch, will be accompanied by a few of the survivors of torture at Tuol Sleng, a school outside Phnom Penh that was converted to a prison, The Guardian reported. Only seven Tuol Sleng inmates are known to have survived the "Killing Fields" of the late 1970s.

On Tuesday Duch and the two judges, Marcel Lemonde of France and You Bun Leng of Cambodia are to visit Choeung Ek, where Tuol Sleng inmates were killed and buried. On Wednesday, they are to go to the prison, The Guardian said.

Duch, a former math teacher who converted to Christianity after his years as a Khmer Rouge torture chief, has said that he was following orders from Pol Pot when he presided over the torture and execution of thousands of people.

He and four other former Khmer Rouge leaders are to be tried for crimes against humanity.

Khmer Rouge prison chief to take judges on tour of Killing Fields

Saturday February 23 2008
Ian MacKinnon, South-east Asia correspondent
The Guardian (UK)


The Khmer Rouge's chief interrogator who headed the notorious prison where 14,000 Cambodian men, women and children met their deaths is to return to the scene of his alleged crime next week.

Kaing Guek Eav, known as Duch, 65, will guide judges from Cambodia's UN-backed genocide trial through the Tuol Sleng torture centre almost three decades after he fled advancing Vietnamese troops who ended the Khmer Rouge's four-year reign of terror.

Some of the seven people who survived their incarceration in the former school in Phnom Penh's suburbs will join the party next Wednesday and give taped evidence at the tribunal's headquarters.

A day earlier Duch, charged with crimes against humanity along with four other senior Khmer Rouge leaders, will be taken to the Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where most Tuol Sleng inmates were murdered and buried in shallow graves.

Duch, a former maths teacher before joining the revolution to establish a peasant utopia, will explain to the French co-investigating judge, Marcel Lemonde, and his Cambodian counterpart, You Bun Leng, what happened there after 1975, when up to 1.7 million people died.

The first war crimes trials are due to begin later this year, confounding fears of many of the Khmer Rouge's victims that the communist ideologues responsible for killing a quarter of the population might never be brought to justice.

The re-enactment is part of the judges' investigative process to gather evidence against Duch, who has already acknowledged his role in the Killing Fields after finding Christianity. However, he has always contended he was following Pol Pot's "verbal orders". Duch will be accompanied by his lawyers as he walks around the sites. Both serve as a memorial and museum but will be closed to visitors.