Thursday, 26 July 2012
Phnom Penh Post
Prominent
Cambodia historian David Chandler wrapped up his testimony yesterday at
the Khmer Rouge tribunal, bringing to a close five and a half days in
which the professor brought his decades of research on the subject of
Democratic Kampuchea to bear on the proceedings of Case 002.
It was a sometimes testy, sometimes enlightening appearance.
“Although
it may not have seemed like it, I have enjoyed it,” Chandler said at
the end of his testimony. “Or seemed like it at times,” he clarified.
But his last morning was far tamer. Chandler, prompted by questions from the defence for Khieu Samphan (pictured), dug deeper into the late 1960s fallout between the former Khmer Rouge head of state and then-King Norodom Sihanouk.
“Sihanouk
had actually accused Khieu Samphan to his face of fomenting the Samlaut
rebellion,” he said, referring to the violently suppressed peasant
uprising in 1967 that was credited with giving the Khmer Rouge momentum.
Soon
after this encounter, Khieu Samphan fled into the jungle, and later
became a member of the Communist Party of Kampuchea’s central committee.
“That accusation compelled Khieu Samphan unwillingly … into the jungle.”
The
former Khmer Rouge state presidium president’s flight may have been
taken “unwillingly” but it wasn’t necessarily unwitting, Chandler
elaborated. Upon fleeing into the countryside, “Oh! just by coincidence,
he meets Ta Mok,” Chandler pointed out.
“He didn’t flee into a part of the forest that he had no connections with.”
Chandler said a French official he spoke with recounted meeting with Khieu Samphan just before he left.
“He
told the person I interviewed, ‘I have to get out of town, I’m sorry,
this is au revoir,’ he was speaking French,” Chandler said, adding that
Sihanouk also resented that people admired Khieu Samphan.
“Sihanouk did not like this popularity one bit,” Chandler said.
After
the morning session ended, a new witness who lived through much of the
history that Chandler wrote about in his books gave testimony.
Rochoem
Tun aligned himself with the movement that became known as the Khmer
Rouge in 1963. A member of the ethnic Jarai group, Tun said his brothers
told him that as minorities, they should take the opportunity join the
revolution.
He became a member of the youth league in 1968.
Around that time, he was in the jungles of Rattanakiri, where the
movement had holed up. He said he served as a messenger between Brother
No 1 Pol Pot and Ieng Sary, who became the Khmer Rouge Deputy Prime Minister of Foreign Affairs.
Pol Pot, he said, taught him in “study sessions”.
To contact the reporter on this story: Joseph Freeman at joseph.freeman@phnompenhpost.com
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