From: AAP
The Courier Mail
February 06, 2013
CAMBODIA has unveiled a memorial to dozens of foreign and local
journalists who died while covering the 1970-75 war that was won by the
communist Khmer Rouge regime.
At least 37 journalists were killed or disappeared during the
conflict between the US-backed Lon Nol government and Khmer Rouge
guerrillas.
Their names are engraved on the memorial built in a
public park in front of Phnom Penh's Le Royal Hotel, which was a meeting
place for foreign correspondents in the 1970s.
They included
reporters, photographers and television cameramen from Australia,
Cambodia, Japan, France, the US, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, India
and Laos.
"Their words, their images will remain with us forever,"
Chhang Song, a former information minister in the Lon Nol government,
said at the ceremony on Wednesday.
Buddhist monks performed religious rites and veteran war reporters and other participants held a minute's silence.
Up to two million people were executed or died of starvation or
overwork under the Khmer Rouge, after the hardline movement swept to
power on April 17 1975 and emptied cities in an attempt to create a
communist utopia.
The slain journalists included Agence
France-Presse reporter Marc Filloux, who was killed in April 1974 along
with his interpreter Manivanh after travelling to Cambodia to interview
Khmer Rouge leaders.
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