Locals relish the lucrative prospect of welcoming more tourists to the once isolated area, Anlong Veng (AFP/File, Tang Chhin Sothy) |
A Map of Cambodia locating the town of Anlong Veng, a former Khmer Rouge stronghold (AFP Graphic) |
Khmer Rouge insider until he defected in the mid-1990s, Nhem En, pictured, has built up a huge archive of photos (AFP/File, Tang Chhin Sothy) |
One of the best-preserved visitor sites in town is the lakeside home of late military commander Ta Mok, "The Butcher" (AFP/File, Tang Chhin Sothy) |
27 July 2012
By Michelle Fitzpatrick
ANLONG VENG, Cambodia (AFP)— Want to see
Pol Pot's grave or his broken toilet seat? How about a visit to the
house of a feared Khmer Rouge commander known as "The Butcher"?
Welcome to the town of Anlong Veng
a former Khmer Rouge stronghold which hopes to become the next must-see
destination on Cambodia's dark tourism trail, but which faces calls not
to glorify its role in the country's bloody past.
A rectangular mound of earth
lined with half-buried glass bottles and protected by a corrugated iron
roof marks the spot where Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot was hastily
cremated in 1998.
Aside from a sign asking
visitors to "please help to preserve this historical site" there is no
information on offer, leaving Cambodian tourist Pov Dara, 27, to ponder
the significance of the low-key grave.
"I feel sad for the people but not for him," she decides, after snapping a photo of her relatives flashing the peace sign.
Up to two million people died
from overwork, starvation or execution when the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol
Pot, attempted to create a communist utopia in the late 1970s.
His cremation site, which
attracts some 10 visitors a day, is one of 14 tourist spots the
government intends to "preserve and develop" in northern Cambodia's
Anlong Veng.
Other places of interest include leaders' old homes and a rusty radio truck used to broadcast Khmer Rouge propaganda.
Impoverished Cambodia is no
stranger to genocide tourism, with the Tuol Sleng torture centre in
Phnom Penh and the nearby Killing Fields of Choeung Ek, where thousands
died, among the nation's most popular attractions.
But while the focus at those
sites is on victims of the 1975-1979 regime, Anlong Veng is populated by
one-time loyal Khmer Rouge followers, giving it the feel of a town that
has found itself on the wrong side of history.
As locals relish the lucrative
prospect of welcoming more tourists to the once isolated area, observers
stress the need to educate guests about Cambodia's history -- and avoid
turning the destination into a Khmer Rouge nostalgia tour.
To that end, the tourism
ministry has teamed up with the esteemed Documentation Centre of
Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities.
The centre is preparing to
publish a guidebook based on the stories of long-time residents and it
is training tour guides to provide meaningful information about "what
happened and why during the Khmer Rouge regime's final days", said the
group's director Youk Chhang. A museum is also planned.
But it is important not to exploit the country's tragic past, he told AFP.
Cambodia's memories are "not for sale", he said.
"We have the responsibility to ensure that Anlong Veng is a historical and responsible site to educate the public."
The Khmer Rouge was ousted by
Vietnamese forces in 1979, though regime leaders and supporters
continued to wage a low-level guerrilla war against the government.
Anlong Veng, near the Thai border, was the Khmer Rouge's last rebel centre before the movement disintegrated in the late 1990s.
One of the best-preserved
visitor sites in town is the lakeside home of late military commander Ta
Mok, known as "The Butcher" for allegedly orchestrating brutal
massacres that killed thousands, although locals remember him as a
generous leader who gave the town a road, a bridge, a hospital and a
school.
Ta Mok, who briefly led the
Khmer Rouge in its final days, was the only rebel who refused to
surrender or strike a deal with the government after Pol Pot's death. He
was arrested a year later and died in prison in 2006 awaiting trial.
His airy house is little more
than a shell today, its furniture looted long ago. But several walls are
still adorned with colourful yet amateurish murals of temples and a map
of Cambodia -- symbols of Ta Mok's patriotism, according to the site's
caretaker San Roeung, himself an ex-Khmer Rouge soldier.
"A lot of people here liked Ta
Mok. When the enemy came, he took people to safety," said the
60-year-old, who helped build the house as well as the two cages outside
used to hold Ta Mok's enemies.
He added that he hoped an influx
of visitors would improve living standards for locals, who could "grow
mangoes or jackfruit to sell to tourists".
Few are more excited about the
town's tourism potential than Anlong Veng district deputy governor Nhem
En -- who was the chief photographer at Tuol Sleng, where he endlessly
captured images of inmates awaiting certain death.
A Khmer Rouge insider until he
defected in the mid-1990s, Nhem En has built up a huge archive of
photos, as well as a bizarre collection of keepsakes such as Pol Pot's
sandals, his uniform and his shattered toilet seat.
Now he is looking for a partner
to help set up a private museum to display his treasures, he said,
having apparently given up on the idea of selling key items in the hope
of earning hundreds of thousands of dollars.
"These items might not be worth
much financially but, in historical terms, they're invaluable," he told
AFP at his home, after showing some of his favourite possessions.
"This camera, if I put it in a
museum, I would call it the killing camera," he said, as he held up a
vintage Rolleicord, "because all of the people in Tuol Sleng who came
before it died."
Nhem En insists he was not in a position to help any prisoners, all he could do was "follow orders" and "mind his own business".
Tuol Sleng prison chief Duch was
in February sentenced to life in jail by Cambodia's UN-backed war
crimes court, the first person to face justice for horrors committed
under the regime.
The court is now trying the
three most senior surviving Khmer Rouge members, but Nhem En has little
interest in the proceedings, preferring to muse about Anlong Veng's
nascent tourism industry.
The ancient temples of Angkor,
which attract more than a million visitors a year, are a mere two-hour
drive away, and Nhem En believes that if a fraction of those visitors
added Anlong Veng to their itinerary, his town, with its plentiful
guesthouses and restaurants, would benefit considerably.
"Anlong Veng will not go
backwards," he said, though he emphasised that his own collection of
memorabilia is about more than just profiting from his time with the
Khmer Rouge.
"I'm doing this to make the world understand more about the Khmer Rouge regime," he said.
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