Thirty-five years after
the genocidal rule of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge ended, a UN-backed tribunal
on Thursday Aug 07,2014 sentenced two top leaders of the former regime - Khieu Samphan and Nuon Chea to life in
prison for 'extermination, inhumane acts and attacks against human
dignity'
The historic verdicts were announced
against Khieu Samphan, the regime's 83-year-old former head of state,
and Nuon Chea, its 88-year-old chief ideologue - the only two surviving
leaders of the regime left to stand trial.
Both are seen on a screen at the court's press center of the war crimes tribunal in Phnom Penh
The case,
covering the forced exodus of millions of people from Cambodia's towns
and cities and a mass killing, is just part of the Cambodian story.
Nearly
a quarter of the population — about 1.7 million people — died under
rule of the Khmer Rouge through a combination of starvation, medical
neglect, overwork and execution when the group held power in 1975-79.
A tourist looks at human skulls of genocide victims at the Tuol Sleng
Genocide Museum, formerly the most notorious Khmer Rouge prison, in
Phnom Penh
THE BRUTAL TERROR OF LIFE UNDER THE KHMER ROUGE
- The
Khmer Rouge, the communist ruling party in Cambodia between 1975 and
1979, was responsible for the deaths of almost two million people,
through executions, torture and starvation.
- Its leader, Pol Pot, was determined for society to be transformed into classless agricultural communism – at any cost.
- City
dwellers were marched into the countryside to become farmers in labour
camps, with those refusing to move shot dead and their homes burned to
the ground.
- Factories, schools, banks and even hospitals were shut down and the population denied medicine.
- Many
died through starvation – after all, most people from cities had no
idea how to fend for themselves in the countryside and farmers were
often too terrified to help them adapt.
- Some died through exhaustion, because the regime severely overworked those tending the land.
- Many were tortured and executed for being ‘enemies of the regime’.
- Anyone
with links to the former Cambodian government, filmmakers, writers and
indeed anyone deemed to be intellectual deserved to be put to death in
the eyes of Pot.
- Even
simply owning a pair of glasses could prove fatal, because as far as
the regime was concerned, it meant that books were being read instead of
hard labour being carried out.
- Religion was outlawed, so Christians, Muslims and Buddhists were also executed in huge numbers.
The
tribunal, formally known as the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of
Cambodia and comprising of Cambodian and international jurists, began
operations in 2006. It has since spent more than $200million, yet it had
convicted only one defendant — prison director Kaing Guek Eav, who was
sentenced to life imprisonment in 2011.
The
current trial began in 2011 with four senior Khmer Rouge leaders; only
two remain. Former Foreign Minister Ieng Sary died in 2013, while his
wife, Social Affairs Minister Ieng Thirith, was deemed unfit to stand
trial due to dementia in 2012. The group's top leader, Pol Pot, died in
1998.
Khieu
Samphan has acknowledged that mass killings took place. But testifying
before the court in 2011, he claimed he was just a figurehead who had no
real authority. He denied ordering any executions himself, calling the
allegations a 'fairy tale.' Instead, he blamed Pol Pot for its extreme
policies.
Nuon
Chea, who is known as Brother No. 2 for being Pol Pot's trusted deputy,
had also denied responsibility, testifying in 2011 that Vietnamese
forces — not the Khmer Rouge — had killed Cambodians en masse.
'I
don't want them to believe the Khmer Rouge are bad people, are
criminals,' he said of those observing to the trial. 'Nothing is true
about that.'
Because
of the advanced age and poor health of the defendants, the case against
them was divided into separate smaller trials in an effort to render
justice before they die
The Tribunal's Chief Judge Nil Nonn asked both men to rise for the verdicts
but the frail Nuon Chea, wearing dark sunglasses, said he was too weak
to stand from his wheelchair and was allowed to remain seated.
The Tribunal's Chief Judge Nil
Nonn said both men were guilty of 'extermination encompassing murder,
political persecution, and other inhumane acts comprising forced
transfer, enforced disappearances and attacks against human dignity.'
There
was no visible reaction from either of the accused, both of whom have
denied wrongdoing.
The rulings can be appealed, but Nil Nonn told the
court that 'given the gravity of the crimes' both would remain in
detention.
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