June 27, 2009
Last month an Enid attorney attended two days of a U.N.-assisted genocide tribunal while on vacation in the capital city of Cambodia.
"You felt like you were seeing history when you were sitting there," John M.
By Cass Rains
Last month an Enid attorney attended two days of a U.N.-assisted genocide tribunal while on vacation in the capital city of Cambodia.
"You felt like you were seeing history when you were sitting there," John M. Jameson said.
Jameson was visiting his fiancee in Phnom Phen and attended two days of the trial of Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch, who commanded Phnom Penh's notorious S-21 prison May 18-19.
"It was very interesting to go because it's such a big production," he said.
Jameson said there were about 40 people involved in the court, which could be seen through floor-to-ceiling glass windows in an auditorium from one of about 400 seats. The proceedings are translated into three languages: English, French and Khmer, and could be heard through headphones via a wireless device that broadcast the hearing.
"The auditorium was about one-fourth filled when I was in attendance," Jameson said.
He said the mixture of people there was about half westerners, who he said he believed were mostly European journalists and the other half Cambodians.
"The people in Cambodia really aren't that interested in going out and attending," he said, noting he had trouble finding the tribunal when in Phenom Phen due to a lack of interest or indifference.
"As a tourist in Phenom Phen nobody talks about it," Jameson said. "It's hard to find someone who knows about it, or to know where to drive to. I was all on my own getting there."
Duch (pronounced Doik) is the first senior Khmer Rouge figure to face trial and the only one to acknowledge responsibility for his actions. Senior leaders Khieu Samphan, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Ieng Sary's wife, Ieng Thirith, are all detained and likely to face trial in the next year or two.
The S-21 interrogation and torture center, also known as Tuol Sleng, was a converted high school in the middle of Cambodia's capital city. More than 12,000 men, women and children passed through it, with only a handful surviving. The S-21 is only one of at least 167 documented Khmer Rouge torture and death centers across the country.
Jameson said there are others who were involved with torture camps across the country who live openly among those they once oppressed.
"There's lots of Khmer Rouge officers living openly throughout the country that haven't been charged," Jameson said. "They're not going to be arrested and they're not going to go to trial."
He said Duch does not face the death penalty, only incarceration, although he had admitted to being head of the torture center. Duch has said he was only following orders when he undertook to torturing and killing Cambodians.
The Khmer Rouge came to power April 17, 1975, wanting to remake society into an agrarian utopia free of the West and capitalism. Money was abolished, the calendar was remade starting with Year One and the group's leader Pol Pot was named "Brother Number One." Then, the purges began.
Last month an Enid attorney attended two days of a U.N.-assisted genocide tribunal while on vacation in the capital city of Cambodia.
"You felt like you were seeing history when you were sitting there," John M.
By Cass Rains
Last month an Enid attorney attended two days of a U.N.-assisted genocide tribunal while on vacation in the capital city of Cambodia.
"You felt like you were seeing history when you were sitting there," John M. Jameson said.
Jameson was visiting his fiancee in Phnom Phen and attended two days of the trial of Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch, who commanded Phnom Penh's notorious S-21 prison May 18-19.
"It was very interesting to go because it's such a big production," he said.
Jameson said there were about 40 people involved in the court, which could be seen through floor-to-ceiling glass windows in an auditorium from one of about 400 seats. The proceedings are translated into three languages: English, French and Khmer, and could be heard through headphones via a wireless device that broadcast the hearing.
"The auditorium was about one-fourth filled when I was in attendance," Jameson said.
He said the mixture of people there was about half westerners, who he said he believed were mostly European journalists and the other half Cambodians.
"The people in Cambodia really aren't that interested in going out and attending," he said, noting he had trouble finding the tribunal when in Phenom Phen due to a lack of interest or indifference.
"As a tourist in Phenom Phen nobody talks about it," Jameson said. "It's hard to find someone who knows about it, or to know where to drive to. I was all on my own getting there."
Duch (pronounced Doik) is the first senior Khmer Rouge figure to face trial and the only one to acknowledge responsibility for his actions. Senior leaders Khieu Samphan, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Ieng Sary's wife, Ieng Thirith, are all detained and likely to face trial in the next year or two.
The S-21 interrogation and torture center, also known as Tuol Sleng, was a converted high school in the middle of Cambodia's capital city. More than 12,000 men, women and children passed through it, with only a handful surviving. The S-21 is only one of at least 167 documented Khmer Rouge torture and death centers across the country.
Jameson said there are others who were involved with torture camps across the country who live openly among those they once oppressed.
"There's lots of Khmer Rouge officers living openly throughout the country that haven't been charged," Jameson said. "They're not going to be arrested and they're not going to go to trial."
He said Duch does not face the death penalty, only incarceration, although he had admitted to being head of the torture center. Duch has said he was only following orders when he undertook to torturing and killing Cambodians.
The Khmer Rouge came to power April 17, 1975, wanting to remake society into an agrarian utopia free of the West and capitalism. Money was abolished, the calendar was remade starting with Year One and the group's leader Pol Pot was named "Brother Number One." Then, the purges began.
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