Becker with the other two men on the day of Malcolm Caldwell's killing. A Khmer Rouge cadre standing in between Becker and the leftist historian - [Becker collection].
Thursday, 02 August 2012
Joseph Freeman
Phnom Penh Post
The
night had blanketed Phnom Penh in December of 1978 when Rochoem Tun,
head of administration at Ieng Sary’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
arrived with a group of guards at a guesthouse on Monivong Boulevard
where two foreign journalists and a professor were staying as part of a
rarely granted tour of Democratic Kampuchea.
Tun, who was also responsible for booking and managing guests, soon discovered a grisly scene that defied explanation.
Khmer
Rouge soldiers had inexplicably opened fire inside the guesthouse,
killing British scholar Malcolm Caldwell, though the journalists,
Richard Dudman and Elizabeth Becker, were not harmed.
To get in and find out what happened, Tun said he had to use force.
“Since
there was no one to help, it was I who had to take action,” explained
the 65-year-old ethnic Jarai man to Ieng Sary’s international defence
attorney, Michael Karnavas. “The door was difficult to break down.”
He busted in and looked around the first floor. Seeing nothing, he went upstairs and saw “the professor.”
He was “lying dead, fallen off the bed, he was lying next to the bed,” he described.
“And a soldier … was also seen dead,” he added. “And a shotgun was seen placed right under his chin.”
Caldwell
had spoken favourably of Pol Pot and his agrarian revolution, so his
murder brought up more questions than answers. But there were always
more questions than answers in Democratic Kampuchea.
Elizabeth
Becker, who recounted the trip and incident in her book When the War Was
Over, cautioned in a 2010 article published in the British newspaper
the Guardian against trying to find a reasonable explanation for his
death:
“Don’t apply rational thinking to the situation,” she said in the article.
“It was crazy. Crazy. Malcolm’s murder was no less rational than the tens of thousands of other murders.”
Though
she did believe he was targeted for death, possibly to embarrass Ieng
Sary, the belief was based on confessions that were likely tortured out
of Khmer Rouge cadre in the last days of the Tuol Sleng prison.
On her short time spent with him, she described Caldwell as “a lovely man, very funny, very charming.”
After the shooting, Tun said he was called before Ieng Sary, who demanded he root out the responsible individuals.
“And
he asked us to find out the black and white side of the story. And he
also confirmed that we were responsible before the party. Before the
organisation, we, the ministry, were fully accountable for all of this.”
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