A young woman writes a letter to a  newspaper, saying that the country’s history includes both the  “marvellous period” of Angkor and the hellish nightmare of Pol Pot’s  regime. For many others, the country’s recent history is painful,  useless and better left forgotten. Activists warn that UN trials ...
Friday, May 06, 2011
Spero News
Phnom Penh – “I believe that if we do not learn from mistakes, the same mistakes will happen again,”  wrote a young Cambodian woman, Kunty Seng, in a letter published on  phnompenhpost.com. For her, Cambodians must study the “marvellous  period” of the Angkor era as well as the genocidal “reign of horror”  under Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge acolytes. In the meantime, human  rights groups are sounding the alarm because the United Nations tribunal  currently trying former Khmer Rouge leaders, including former deputy  prime minister and “Brother Number Three” Ieng Sary, could close before  it finishes its work. Likewise, many are concerned that prosecutors are  not conducting investigations properly, which could compromise future  prosecutions.
Cambodia still bears the scars  of the four years of Khmer Rouge rule (1975-1979), which killed almost  two million people (about a quarter of the population), including the  country’s elites (intellectuals, doctors, teachers and artists)
Sociologists and Catholic  leaders have told AsiaNews several times that Cambodians are not much  inclined towards in-depth self-analysis and historical introspection.  Largely, “money and economics”, not the past, are what counts. Still,  there are some signs that something is changing.
In her letter, Kunty Seng wrote that some  of her friends “say we should not talk about it because it is painful  to be reminded of such a horrible time in our history.” They “view the  Khmer Rouge tribunal as being useless because it can never bring all of  the Khmer Rouge cadres to justice. They say: ‘The tribunal is a fake  symbol; it is for a political gain only’.”
“I have a different view. I  think that one needs to talk about what happened during the Khmer Rouge  regime. I know that Cambodian leaders made a big mistake and future  leaders must not make the same mistake again. I believe that if we do  not learn from mistakes, the same mistakes will happen again.”
“Since my childhood, I have been  taught about Cambodia, the Land of Sovann Phumi or ‘Golden Land’,”  about “the marvellous period of Angkor era”, a place with beautiful  temples that are now part of the world’s heritage.
However, “I have learned very  little in school about what happened during the reign of horror of the  Khmer Rouge,” she wrote. “What I have learned I have learned from my  parents and other survivors.”
“I believe that [the] younger  generation should be taught both the good things about Cambodia” during  the “Angkor era” and “the terrible history of the Khmer Rouge.” 
Meanwhile, legal and human  rights activists are concerned that Cambodia's UN- backed genocide  tribunal might shut down before the main accused, Ieng Sary, Nuon Chea,  Khieu Samphan and Ieng Thirith, are tried, undermining any future trial  against other former Pol Pot officials.
Defence lawyers have in fact  demanded the release of their aged clients, who are on trial for war  crimes and crimes against humanity.
Last week the co-investigating  judges, a Cambodian and a German, officially informed the court that  their investigation for Case No. 3 was complete. The names of those  being probed have been kept secret, but they are believed to include at  least five second-tier Khmer Rouge officials.
Critics including Human Rights  Watch say the co-investigating judges have done an incomplete probe in  an effort to scuttle future prosecutions.
So far, the only accused that  was convicted is Kaing Guev Eav, better known as Comrade Duch, who ran  the notorious S-21 prison in Phnom Penh. 
He admitted his guilt, saying he followed orders, and for this was sentenced to 35 years in jail. 
 
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