Persecution of Vietnamese recounted at KRT
Wed, 9 December 2015 ppp
Zoe Holman
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| Prum Sarun gives his testimony before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia yesterday in Phnom Penh during Case 002/02. ECCC |
Parties
continued to explore the alleged existence of a Khmer Rouge policy to
target the ethnic Vietnamese as testimony continued in the Khmer Rouge
tribunal’s Case 002/02 yesterday.
Witness
testimonies at the Khmer Rouge tribunal yesterday shed further light on
the roll-out of an alleged policy of purging ethnic Vietnamese in Case
002/02 against Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan.
Civil
party Choeng Yang Chat testified under questioning by Nuon Chea
defender Victor Koppe that Khmer Rouge cadres had checked his family’s
record book – which stated their Vietnamese heritage – before they were
evacuated from their home village to another in Kampong Chhnang where
the rest of his family was later executed.
However,
when invited to give a concluding statement, Chat didn’t elaborate on
any injuries resulting from these events. Instead he directed a question
– ultimately unanswered – to the defendants: “I suffered from the loss
of my parents and family members, and I am alone with head injuries. If
they were in my position, how would they feel?”
Earlier
efforts by parties to confirm from Chat’s testimony that his
persecution was part of a deliberate anti-Vietnamese policy were
unsuccessful. However, when Koppe directly confronted him with the
suggestion that “there is zero evidence to suggest your family was
killed because they were Vietnamese”, the question was struck down by
Trial Chamber president Nil Nonn.
The
subsequent witness, Prum Sarun, a former soldier under the Lon Nol
regime, further detailed the execution of ethnic Vietnamese in his
Battambang village in 1975. Examined by the prosecution, he recounted
seeing one of the village’s handful of Vietnamese families being tied
and marched away by Khmer Rouge youths, and later coming upon their
decomposing bodies at an alleged killing site nearby in Kampong Kor
commune.
“I
did not witness the killing, but saw many dead bodies in the area,” the
74-year-old told the court. “I saw bloodstains on the ground and then
fled.”
After
that time, he explained, all the Vietnamese disappeared from his
village. However, like Chat, Sarun was unable to corroborate whether
they were purged as a result of their ethnicity, despite saying that the
command came from the regiment leader.
“I
only saw Vietnamese people arrested, but nobody told me any reasons,
and of course I did not dare ask,” he explained. “They killed people
without mercy, so how could I possibly ask for reasons?”
The
court also began to hear evidence from Sarun of the alleged “smashing”
of former high-ranking Lon Nol officers in the village – a campaign in
which he explained that he feared for his own safety.

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