From the BBC:
“Cambodia genocide: Khmer
Rouge prison chief Comrade Duch dies”
Comrade Duch, a former senior
figure of the Khmer Rouge convicted of crimes against humanity in Cambodia, has
died. He was serving a life term after being sentenced by a UN-backed court. Kaing
Guek Eav, known as Comrade Duch, ran the notorious Tuol Sleng prison where
thousands of people were tortured and murdered in the late 1970s. As many as
two million people are believed to have died under the Khmer Rouge, a Maoist
regime that controlled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. In 2010, Duch became the
first senior Khmer Rouge leader to be convicted by the UN-backed tribunal after
a journalist found him in hiding a decade earlier. He was sentenced in 2012. He
died on Wednesday, aged 77, a spokesman for the tribunal in the capital Phnom
Penh said, without giving details of the cause. He had been ill for many years.
"Duch died this morning at 00:52am, on 2 September at Khmer Soviet
Friendship Hospital. Details of what he died of, I can't tell," the spokesman
said. Duch's testimony at the tribunal was a landmark moment for Cambodians who
had suffered under the Khmer Rouge's brutal reign, and future generations. While
prison chief at Tuol Sleng, Duch maintained a huge archive of photos and
documents, including thousands of prisoner "confessions", that
revealed many aspects of the Khmer Rouge's inner workings. They also helped
prosecutors trace the final months of thousands of inmates' lives. In Phnom
Penh, there were mixed feelings about his death. "If he stayed alive then
we may still hear more of the history from him for the younger generation and
people," one man told Reuters news agency. Another resident said that she
would never forget his crimes. "He deserves to serve more prison terms.
But now he has died, I can forgive him and his case is finished."
What happened at Tuol Sleng
prison? Comrade Duch ran Phnom
Penh's S-21 prison, also known as Tuol Sleng, the most notorious Khmer Rouge
torture site. It is thought that at least 15,000 men, women and children
deemed enemies of the regime passed through the gates of the former
school-turned-prison. Most of them were tortured, forced to confess to
fictitious crimes against the Khmer Rouge and then put to death at the
so-called "killing fields" just outside the capital. Prisoners
were initially officials from the old government, people accused of being
middle class and later mainly Khmer Rouge members suspected of disloyalty. The
guards, who were often teenagers, forced the prisoners to write detailed
confessions to whatever they were accused of and implicate friends and family
who were then imprisoned in turn. Those who survived the torture where
eventually taken to the "killing fields" at Choeung Ek where they
were killed, sometimes after digging their own mass graves. Fewer than a
dozen prisoners survived Tuol Sleng. "Nothing in the former
schoolhouse took place without Duch's approval. His control was total,"
wrote photojournalist Nic Dunlop, who found him in 1999 hiding near the Thai
border. During his trial, Duch admitted he had been in charge of Tuol
Sleng and apologised for his part in the horrors committed there. He
later claimed he had only been following orders, but his appeal on those
grounds was rejected by the tribunal.
Who were the Khmer Rouge? The
brutal Khmer Rouge, in power from 1975-1979, claimed the lives of around two
million people. The regime led by Pol Pot tried to take Cambodia back to
the Middle Ages, or "Year Zero", forcing millions of people from the
cities to work on communal farms in the countryside. They at first
targeted "intellectuals" - often identified as those who wore glasses
or spoke a foreign language - and those connected to the old, US-backed regime
that they overthrew. But their paranoid leaders later began to see
"enemies" everywhere. Ethnic Vietnamese and Cham Muslims in
Cambodia were also targeted. Many of the Khmer Rouge's victims died from
starvation, disease and overwork. The regime was ousted in 1979 by
Vietnamese troops, but the Khmer Rouge leaders escaped and continued to resist
the new, Vietnamese-backed government from areas along the Thai-Cambodia
border.
When the UN ran a country The
UN helped establish a tribunal to try the surviving leaders, which began work
in 2009. Despite hundreds of millions of dollars in international aid
spent, only three former Khmer Rouge have ever been sentenced - Comrade Duch,
the regime's head of state Khieu Samphan and Pol Pot's second-in-command, Nuon
Chea, who died last year after being convicted of genocide. Pol Pot himself
died in 1998. The BBC's Guy de Launey, who attended Duch's trial, said
he sat impassively through proceedings while judges described the techniques
used at Tuol Sleng.
Who was Comrade Duch? Duch
was born in the early 1940s. He was a teacher but joined the communist party and
his leftist activism led to brushes with the authorities. When the
Vietnam war threatened to spill into neighbouring Cambodia, Duch joined the
Khmer Rouge communist rebels under leader Pol Pot. After the rebels took
control in 1975, he became the director of Tuol Sleng. In 1979, he fled
along with other senior Khmer Rouge members into countryside near the Thai
border. Living under a false name, he was identified by Nic Dunlop in
1999. In subsequent interviews, he admitted to the atrocities at Tuol Sleng but
said the orders came from the Khmer Rouge's central committee. "Whoever
was arrested must die. It was the rule of our party," he said. "We
had the responsibility to interrogate and give the confession to the central
committee of the party." Ten years later, facing the UN-backed
tribunal, he described himself as "deeply remorseful" and apologised
to relatives of his victims. In the closing days of his trial, he asked
to be freed, saying he had not been a senior member of the Khmer Rouge hierarchy.
^ It’s always nice to hear that
these people are no longer living and they can no longer do any harm to the
world. ^
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