Former Khmer Rouge leader detained

by everchanging | September 19, 2007 at 02:08 am
501 views | 17 Recommendations | 5 comments

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Former Khmer Rouge leader detained "Skulls ReArranged" 2005

Former Khmer Rouge leader detained "Skulls ReArranged" 2005

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uploaded by ACE PRESTON

One of the top known surviving leader of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia was arrested today. Nuon Chea at the age of 82 years old was taken Phnom Penn, Cambodia for a hearing in front of A U.N backed genocide tribunal. For Many survivors of the Khmer Rouge rule over Cambodia in the late 1970s they may final see the trial become not only a dream with hopes despair, now a possiblity of a reality before their eyes. Many of who never thought that they would live to see Nuon Chea brought to justice for the genocide of 1.7 Million people who died from hunger, disease, overwork and execution during these times of Khmer Rouge rule.

Some history on Nuon Chea:

 He helped the group’s notorious leader Pol Pot seize control of Cambodia’s communist movement in the 1950s and ’60s and then became the movement’s chief political ideologue during its murderous rule in the 1970s.

Via Reuters UK FACTBOX

Following are five facts about Khmer Rouge "Brother Number Two" Nuon Chea, who was taken into custody by the United Nations-backed "Killing Fields" tribunal on Wednesday.

Of the surviving Khmer Rouge cadres, Nuon Chea is believed to be the one most responsible for the deaths of the regime's estimated 1.7 million victims. Most were executed or died of starvation, torture or disease.

-- Born Long Bunruot around 1923, he grew up in the northwestern province of Battambang. His family is thought to have had Chinese ancestry.

Like many Khmer Rouge leaders, he used a number of aliases throughout his life, including Long Rith, Nuon, Second Brother and Grand Uncle.

-- Unlike many of Pol Pot's inner circle, Nuon Chea did not study in Paris. Instead, he read law at Bangkok's prestigious Thammasat University, where he became a member of the Thai Communist Party.

After cutting a deal with the Cambodian government in December 1998, he lived in a small wooden house in forests along the Thai border. His university connections and fluent Thai gave him ready access to medical treatment in Bangkok.

-- Was appointed Deputy Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea (the Khmer Rouge's name for Cambodia) in 1960, a position that put him in charge of party and state security.

This included Phnom Penh's notorious S-21 interrogation and torture centre at the capital's Tuol Sleng high school.

-- On Jan 5, 1979, two days before the Vietnamese army overran Phnom Penh, Nuon Chea ordered S-21 head Duch, who has been charged with crimes against humanity, to kill all remaining prisoners.

Despite Duch's compliance, seven people are known to have survived. Along with Duch, they are expected to be key witnesses at the trial.

-- At a December 1998 news conference confirming his peace deal with Phnom Penh, Nuon Chea issued an apology of sorts to the Cambodian people. Those who had lived through four years of horror under the regime were unimpressed.

"Naturally, we are sorry -- not only for the lives of the people, but also for the animals. They all died because we wanted to win the war," he said.

(Sources: Reuters, "Pol Pot: The History of a Nightmare" by Philip Short)

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Khmer Rouge Leader Detained ic Wales.co.uk

 

Top Khmer Rouge leader arrested  afp.com

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Jordan Yerman
Jordan Yerman
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:47 on September 19th, 2007

everchanging,very well done.

(Personally, I don't care if he's 82: genocide is genocide, and Toul Sleng (S-21, a school-turned-torture center, now a museum), is the perfect microcosm of the Khmer Rouge's brand of so-called "Commmunism"- they couldn't afford too many bullets, so prisoners were simply beaten to death. 

0
everchanging

 Thank you jordan,

I agree crimes against humanity such as these are genocide and should be taken in the harshes form of strict force by all government to bring them to trial and tried accordanly for the crimes they did. The world court (aka International court of justice) at the hauge in the Hetherlands needs to bring more to their court so the acts and actions like these here are thought twice before starting them. Interesting to note the U.S is not part of this court although there was always an American jurist on the bench.

 


angryindian
angryindian
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 07:34 on September 19th, 2007

everchanging, thanks for this piece.  I wonder of CIA and the Carter administration in particular will be held liable for selling Pol Pot munitions to fight the Vietnamese communists they hired him to combat on their behalf.  This is perhaps the biggest stain Mr. Carter has on his otherwise spotless presidential record.  Good find.

gryphon
gryphon
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:41 on September 19th, 2007

everchanging, you've convinced me you've done the work - it's authentic. I also think that you've been fair and thorough. I didn't get the sense that you were hiding your biases, or passing off other's work as your own. Or worse -- getting paid by those you cover -- so it's transparent and independent. I also think you deserve praise for being an eyewitness, and for your investigative efforts. Good stuff.

0
ACE PRESTON

Never too late for justice but they need to include the Prime Minister himself Hun Sen.

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