Monday, 30 April 2012
By Kong Sothanarith,
VOA Khmer | Phnom Penh
As leader of the Khmer Rouge, Pol Pot showed no favoritism toward any
of his family and no one was safe from the regime’s terror, his nephew
told the UN-backed tribunal Monday.
Saloth Ban [alias So Hong], 67 (pictured), told the court in testimony that he had lived in fear of the “terrifying” regime as secretary general of its foreign ministry, and so had the minister, Ieng Sary, a man now on trial for atrocity crimes.
“I was worried about danger to me and to my family, my parents,” he said. “I had such fear, and I think others had bigger fear than me.”
Saloth Ban is testifying in the atrocity trial of Ieng Sary, Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan, who all three stand accused of crimes that include genocide, for their leadership of the Khmer Rouge.
Pol Pot was an absolutist, Saloth Ban said, and no one was safe in his regime. Pol Pot’s oldest sister-in-law, Khieu Thirath, was killed in a Khmer Rouge security center, he added.
Saloth Ban [alias So Hong], 67 (pictured), told the court in testimony that he had lived in fear of the “terrifying” regime as secretary general of its foreign ministry, and so had the minister, Ieng Sary, a man now on trial for atrocity crimes.
“I was worried about danger to me and to my family, my parents,” he said. “I had such fear, and I think others had bigger fear than me.”
Saloth Ban is testifying in the atrocity trial of Ieng Sary, Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan, who all three stand accused of crimes that include genocide, for their leadership of the Khmer Rouge.
Pol Pot was an absolutist, Saloth Ban said, and no one was safe in his regime. Pol Pot’s oldest sister-in-law, Khieu Thirath, was killed in a Khmer Rouge security center, he added.
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