Khmer Rouge cadres held killing competitions, court hears
Phnom Penh (AFP) - Guards at a Khmer
Rouge death camp held competitions to see how many prisoners they could
murder in an hour, a court heard Monday, the latest harrowing testimony
at the trial of two top regime leaders.
"Brother
Number Two" Nuon Chea, 89, and ex-head of state Khieu Samphan, 84, are
on trial at a UN-backed court in Cambodia for the killing of ethnic
Vietnamese and Muslim minorities, and for the regime's use of forced
marriage and rape.
The pair have already been jailed
at a previous trial for their pivotal role in a regime responsible for
the death of up to two million Cambodians from 1975-1979.
Their
first trial focused on the forced evacuation of Cambodians from Phnom
Penh into rural labour camps and murders at an execution site.
Throughout
the Khmer Rouge's brief but brutal time in power an estimated 100,000
to 500,000 Cham Muslims and 20,000 Vietnamese were murdered by the
regime.
Before these charges were filed, the mistreatment of the two minority groups was rarely discussed.
Witness
Sen Srun, called to testify about the sufferings of Cambodia's Muslim
minorities, told the court that thousands of people, including hundreds
of Chams, were detained and murdered at Wat Au Trakuon, a pagoda which
was turned into a detention centre by the Khmer Rouge.
Sen
Srun recalled how security guards, some as young as 15, would race each
other carrying out executions in a bid to gain promotion -- with one
guard managing a murder rate of more than one a minute.
"Some
of them were competing to kill more people per hour, and one reached a
record of killing 70 people in an hour," the 66-year-old survivor
recalled.
"They were actually competing among one
another, and if they killed more, then they would be selected to be in
charge a unit, for instance," he added.
The witness estimated that up to 20,000 were killed at Wat Au Trakuon in the northeastern province of Kampong Cham.
Sen Srun added that Cham and Khmer women were often stripped naked and raped before they were killed.
"It
was widespread," Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of
Cambodia which researches the Khmer Rouge atrocities, told AFP.
He said "brainwashed" Khmer Rouge cadres often killed for promotion.
Last
week the court heard how Cham Muslims were forced to eat pork and
banned from speaking their language while copies of the Koran were
"collected from houses and burned" by Khmer Rouge cadres.
The Khmer Rouge dismantled modern society in Cambodia in their quest for an agrarian Marxist utopia.
Many key Khmer Rouge leaders have died without facing justice, including "Brother Number One" Pol Pot who died in 1998.
The
former Khmer Rouge "first lady" Ieng Thirith, 83, died last month also
without facing trial on charges of genocide and crimes against humanity.
Her husband, former regime foreign minister Ieng Sary, died in 2013 aged 87, before a verdict was delivered in his trial.
No comments:
Post a Comment