Survivors of KR Era Get First Look at Trial Process
The
Monday, February 27, 2006
By Douglas Gillison and Pin Sisovann
Meach Rem could hardly breathe. The horror of her four children’s fate was beyond doubt.
For Meach Rem, who stood weeping outside the prison, “it was too emotional,” Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, said later that day. He and others from the organization held Meach Rem as she suffered an apparent panic attack, fanning her in the morning heat.
She refused to go home. Youk Chhang said, and continued with the tour instead.
“If I know the date, and if I have the money, I will come to the hearing even if I am not invited to testify,” said Sen Kob, a 60-year-old Muslim rice farmer who had traveled three days form Kroch Chhmar district in Kompong Cham province to take part in the field trip.
“I feel deep sorrow that my siblings and other Islamic people were killed during the Khmer Rouge,” he said.
His siblings’ families were killed as well. “Peace be upon you,” he said in Arabic, before parting.
“Foreigners cannot understand the profound suffering under the Khmer Rouge,” Funcinpec lawmaker Monh Sophan said to the group later that morning at the National Institute of Education.
“Those who have only heard about it have different feelings and ... don’t understand the way Cambodians do.” Muslims are Cambodians, too, he told the gathering. “Religion is the only difference.”
After a brief description of the court’s procedures, Monh Sophan, who has been involved in the preparations for the tribunal, warned that the UN could withhold support for it if it felt the proceedings did not meet international standards.
“So it depends on you all who have lived through the genocide of the Khmer Rouge. Please testify accurately so the UN has no pretext to withdraw. I place my hope and trust in your testimony.” he said.
The first question from the audience rang out. “Why are we waiting until 2007 to start the trial?” asked Sum Rithy, 52, who said he had waited 27 years for justice.
“If you continue to delay, the Khmer Rouge leaders and witnesses will die one by one,” he said, to the obvious satisfaction of the audience.
Who will guarantee safety for witnesses, he demanded to know. And why had death toll estimates been revised downward? “I want to find out who is Angkar. Who is behind it?” he said, referring to the Khmer Rouge name for its faceless organization. “I heart this tribunal will be a farce... just to cover the situation,” he said.
“The UN will spend $56 million,” he said. “Now is still too early to say whether it will be a farce. They haven’t started yet. We have to wait and see. I don’t believe it will be a farce.”
Standing that aftenoon by a pile of smashed human bones at the Choeung Ek killing fields, Sum Rithy said he had not previously told his story to a reporter.
Of those evacuated from Cambodian towns and cities after the Khmer Rouge victory, he said he was the only man to survive at a Khmer Rouge prison in Siem Reap province, which held prisoners from three other provinces.
His jailers falsely accused him of having been a Lon Nol solidier and a
Nuns surrounded the bones and led a prayer as one nun poured water over them. “They chant for the souls of those who died,”said 68-year-old unu Lor Lan.
In the chamber where the trials are to be held in
“We cannot walk through the door,” he said. “We need the UN appointed judges to turn the key.”
“Three million died,” Chum Mey, 75, a survivor of Tuol Sleng, told the audience. “I do not believe that only two million or 1.5 million died.” Would Pol Pot be tried posthumously, he asked.
Sean Visoth doubted this, though the trial should bring relief to every Cambodian, he said.

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