September 20, 201
International Business Times, UK
As the years quickly pass by, most of the perpetrators
of Cambodia's "Killing Fields" (1975-1979) escape their just deserts by
dying before the rather slow UN-backed Cambodia Tribunal pass judgement
or, in the case of Ieng Thirith, being declared unfit to plead because,
in her case, she is suffering from severe Alzheimer's Disease.
Of the numerous Khmer Rouge (Democratic Kampuchea) officials who
handed down the orders for the torture leading to death of countless
thousands, and the massacre of some two million of Cambodia's eight
million people at this time, through starvation, overwork or execution,
Ieng Thirith couldn't have been much closer to the top of the command
chain.
Now 80 years old, she was born Khieu Thirith and from a well-to-do
family. Studying English Literature at the Sorbonne, she married her
husband Ieng Sary, in Paris in 1951. Between 1975 and 1979, Ieng
Thirith served as Minister of Social Affairs in the Government of the
Khmer Rouge and - wait for it - Head of the Red Cross Society of
Cambodia.
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Ieng Sary, will be 88 in October 2012 and from a similarly privileged
background as his wife, was Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister
between 1975 and 1979 in the Mao-inspired regime and is currently in
detention on charges of crimes against humanity, war crimes, and
genocide arising from the killing of Vietnamese and Muslim minorities in
Cambodia.
Ieng Thirith's sister, Khieu Ponnary (1920-2003) in 1956 married
Saloth Sar, much better known as Pol Pot, though he divorced her in
1979. Between 1975 and 1979 the two couples were known as "Cambodia's
Gang of Four".
Mrs Ieng was declared mentally unfit on Thursday, 13 September 2012,
to face any of the charges against her. These charges accused her of
being involved in the "...planning, direction, coordination and ordering
of widespread purges" and crimes against humanity, genocide, homicide
and torture. But the frail old dear had to wait until Sunday before she
was conditionally released with her mental impairment acknowledged by
the Court after Prosecuting Counsel had lodged objections challenging
the degree of mental impairment.
It is difficult to comprehend the enormity of the crimes committed
by, or on the orders of, Khmer Rouge leaders, be they at the top like
Brother No 1, Pol Pot or the cadre leaders in some remote corner
perpetrating monstrous cruelty "In defence of people and development of
Fatherland...More extreme and more Communist" (than their Maoist Chinese
mentors).
A most chilling and upfront account of what occurred was an investigative report called Voices From The Killing Fields by
Cambodian journalist Thet Sambath and shown on Channel 4 on 05 July
2011. Thet Sambath, who also lost close family members at the hands of
the Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979, spent a considerable time in the
remote north-west of Cambodia gaining the confidence and later, intimate
reflections of a number of the uneducated farmers that the officials of
the regime used to do most of the actual killing. He also was able to
interview no less a leader than Brother No 2, Nuon Chea.
The 86-year-old Nuon Chea was President of the Standing Committee and
the Party's ideologist and has been in detention since late 2007 - the
bad obviously don't die young - charged with war crimes and crimes
against humanity.
The real impact of the documentary is when the killer farmers are
interviewed and one learns how they went about their gruesome task and
the realisation that these few, could be repeated throughout the country
thousands upon thousands of times. Only then can one begin to match
the deeds to the dry legal language of the International Court.
One farmer, a Mr Khoun, standing by a shallow marsh where most of the
bodies were disposed and now full of remorse, told Thet Sambath:
"So many bodies 'boiling' in decomposition...I feel terrible (every
moment of the day). My mind, my soul, my body is spinning inside...I
felt sick in the pit of my stomach...The smell of blood was worse than
buffalo flesh."
Obviously very depressed, Mr Khoun wondered as to how many
reincarnations he would have to pass through before being allowed to
become a human again. Having killed dozens of people of all ages,
usually by cutting their throats, he went on to demonstrate with the
help of a neighbour and fellow killer, how they did it.
Even with a plastic knife, it was a most chilling presentation. He
added that sometimes they would slaughter the children in front of their
parents and at other times, the parents in front of the children,
whichever took their whim.
I believe the programme can still be downloaded.
Given this tiny example of the acts perpetrated by the authorities
and their willing lackeys in Cambodia between 1975 and the overthrow of
the Pol Pot regime by the Vietnamese in 1979, it is little wonder that
the Court's verdict in the case of Ieng Thirith, did not please the
victims of the regime who (somehow) survived, or those who had lost
family members - and not a few, all the other members of their family.
Andrew Buncombe reporting in the Independent on 14 September from
Agence France Presse sources, quoted one of the few survivors of Phnom
Penh's Tuol Sleng jail (torture chamber). Mr Bou Meng, now 71
complained:
"I cannot oppose the Court, but I am not happy with its decision.
The decision is mocking the souls of the dead, including my wife and
children. It is hard to receive justice from the Court now."
Justice is indeed a rare commodity.
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