Did the Khmer Rouge commit genocide?
By Robert Carmichael
IRIN Asia
IRIN Asia
Photo: ECCC
Former Khmer Rouge deputy leader Nuoun Chea at the war crimes tribunal in Cambodia in early 2015
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School of Vice: The first and most important question that demands to be asked, and has yet to be asked by the ECCC and the world community is: 'Who are/were the Khmer Rouge'? Once this question will have been 'answered' comprehensively and rationally will the next question as to their empirical role in the commission of "genocide" be properly posed - and the right answer[s] found.
The full and exact extent of their complicity or otherwise in that commission can then be also measured within the historical context of their birth, growth, rise to power and their destructive engagements with perceived external threats posed to their movement as well as those circumstances that gave forms to their widely noted "xenophobia" and "paranoia". Merely reading out selective statistics does not tell the whole story or reveal the full, complete picture that would otherwise be provided through balanced examination and impartial, dispassionate historical inquiry. One thing is certain, though: the practice of genocide itself predates the Khmer Rouge, and has been no stranger to the peoples and history of Indo-China or the region in question. Indeed, one could point out [with reason and evidence] that a subtler form of genocide; or processes leading to it, is being practiced today.
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The full and exact extent of their complicity or otherwise in that commission can then be also measured within the historical context of their birth, growth, rise to power and their destructive engagements with perceived external threats posed to their movement as well as those circumstances that gave forms to their widely noted "xenophobia" and "paranoia". Merely reading out selective statistics does not tell the whole story or reveal the full, complete picture that would otherwise be provided through balanced examination and impartial, dispassionate historical inquiry. One thing is certain, though: the practice of genocide itself predates the Khmer Rouge, and has been no stranger to the peoples and history of Indo-China or the region in question. Indeed, one could point out [with reason and evidence] that a subtler form of genocide; or processes leading to it, is being practiced today.
***
PHNOM
PENH, 14 September 2015 (IRIN) - During its short stay in power in the
late 1970s, the Khmer Rouge killed about a quarter of Cambodia’s
population, but did they commit genocide? After four years of trying
surviving senior leaders of the regime, a war crimes tribunal is only
now attempting to answer that question.
Demographers at the UN-backed tribunal estimate that between 1.7 million
and 2.2 million people died between 1975 and 1979 under the regime. The
Khmer Rouge was led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998 before facing justice.
To most people in Cambodia and abroad, what took place constitutes a
clear case of genocide. They would be surprised to learn that, largely
speaking, it doesn’t.
That is because the majority of victims were Khmers, ethnically no
different from their rulers. The 1948 Genocide Convention regards the
crime as the intent, either in part or in full, to eliminate others as a
group – others being distinguished by race, religion, nationality or
ethnicity. Should any of these elements be lacking, those acts are not
genocide, though they might well be crimes against humanity or war
crimes.
If the genocide charge does not deal with the mass killings of around
two million people, what does it refer to in the ongoing case against
the two surviving Khmer Rouge leaders: Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan?
Targeting minorities
The regime’s deputy leader and its head of state have already been found
guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and have appealed. In
this second part of their trial they are charged with genocide against
two minority groups: Cham Muslims and ethnic Vietnamese.
Farina So, who heads the Centre of Gender and Ethnic Studies at the
Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam), a research group, reckons 36
percent of the estimated pre-war Cham population of 300,000 died under
the regime – a much higher proportion than the 25 percent death rate
cited for the total population.
The Khmer Rouge’s actions against Chams and ethnic Vietnamese, which
have been well documented, constitute several dozen pages in the
indictment. The Khmer Rouge, the indictment states, “succeeded in
physically destroying a significant portion of the Cham population,
solely because of their ethnic and religious background”, and culminated
“in 1977 and 1978 with organised mass executions of entire Cham
communities.”
By contrast, it notes, the Khmer Rouge’s persecution of ethnic
Vietnamese saw 90 percent of the 200,000-strong population forcibly
deported to neighbouring Vietnam, with the remaining 20,000 murdered by
1979 in a process that “involved mass killings of Vietnamese civilians
who were sought out solely on the basis of their ethnicity”.
Whether either constitutes genocide will be up to the judges to
determine. Noted scholar David Chandler believes a lack of documentation
from the leadership will make it difficult to prove a key element of
genocide: intent.
Anecdotal evidence of mass killings in 1978 of ethnic Vietnamese “killed
because they were Vietnamese”, however, means a genocide charge is apt,
he said, “(but) it’s unclear if this was the case with the Chams, or
that the killing of Chams as Chams was ever directed from the top.”
Photo: ECCC
Former Khmer Rouge head of state Khieu Samphan at the war crimes tribunal in Cambodia in early 2015
Changing Views
Whatever the tribunal rules, it will surely prove contentious, not least
among genocide scholars. Although legal experts rank genocide on a par
with war crimes and crimes against humanity, in the public eye it is
perceived as the “worst” of crimes.
In an essay titled Auto-Genocide, scholar John Ciorciari notes that the
Khmer Rouge’s killing of hundreds of thousands of ethnic Khmer as a
means of eliminating perceived enemies would constitute “political
genocide”, because the “primary basis for most of the crimes against the
majority population indeed appears to have been political”. But as
there is no such category, and because the victims and the leaders were
the same ethnicity, those actions are not punishable under the Genocide
Convention.
Unsurprisingly, scholars have been pushing for decades for the term to be amended, although they don’t agree on what is needed.
Clair Duffy, an international legal consultant, said views tend to
differ in four areas: which acts should be regarded as genocide; by whom
genocide can be committed (only states or senior leaders, for
instance); which categories of people should comprise the targeted
“geno” (or “race”); and whether the definition should keep the element
of intent to destroy.
Duffy, who worked for five years at the International Criminal Tribunal
for Rwanda and a further two years as an observer to the Khmer Rouge
tribunal, said limiting the “geno” element to the national, racial,
ethnic or religious lines “is a fiction, especially in modern times
where global movement of peoples means that group membership (based on
ethnic or racial lines) is fluid”.
And while some scholars want to add categories – political, social,
gender-based or economic – to the four currently in the definition,
Duffy said it makes more sense to have a single category: any group that
a perpetrator defines as a target for annihilation.
“This is preferable and would reflect our evolving societies,” she said.
“This might include, for example, those targeted on the basis of sexual
orientation, or the targeting of albinos or, certainly, the targeting
of those with particular political views, or of a particular
socio-economic status.”
Duffy said the term needs greater flexibility, not least because society
sees genocide as “the crime of crimes”, more reprehensible than, say,
crimes against humanity. Prosecuting certain acts as crimes against
humanity – the current approach – downplays such persecution in the
general consciousness because “it is not seen to be as serious as
genocide."
Photo: ECCC
Students including members of the ethnic Cham Muslim minority visited the war crimes tribunal in Cambodia in March 2013
Language matters
Youk Chhang, DC-Cam’s director, is more concerned with how the term is understood by ordinary Cambodians.
The phrase used for genocide in the country’s most widely-spoken
language, Khmer, is prolai pouch-sas, which roughly means, “to eliminate
the race (or the seed) of the nation”. The terms for “crimes against
humanity” and “war crimes” on the other hand are taken from Pali and
Sanskrit, and are typically understood only by those with a good
education.
“For the victims: it’s about killing their family members; it’s about
separation; it’s about being forced to work in the rice fields; it’s
about killing their wife or husband,” Chhang said. “The word ‘genocide’
has been widely used in that context, and that is how people refer to
it.”
Most Cambodians, then, don’t know there is a difference between genocide
and crimes against humanity, and believe what happened to them was
genocide. Before handing down its next verdict, Chhang said, the
tribunal must work to explain these terms – something, he added, it
should have done when announcing last year’s convictions.
Robert Carmichael is a Cambodia-based journalist and the author
of a book published this year about the causes and consequences of the
Khmer Rouge regime: When Clouds Fell from the Sky: A Disappearance, A Daughter’s Search and Cambodia’s First War Criminal.
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