Wednesday, 3 February 2016

Ex-cadre recalls meetings in KRT testimony

Ex-cadre recalls meetings in KRT testimony
Tue, 2 February 2016 ppp
Alessandro Marazzi Sassoon


School of Vice: In "peace time" the KR and Angka Leu [Organisation-on-High] operated by method of secrecy and deception, just as they had done in time of war. This is beyond question from all empirical evidence as well as testimonies and accounts given by their victims and survivors. Even Pol Pot himself acknowledged his movement's and leadership's responsibility for the elimination of military officers and defeated members of Lon Nol's forces. The elimination process had been applied more or less universally throughout the country [including the much cited/hyped "liberal" Eastern Zone, due to its surmised ideological and physical proximity to Vietnam] and had been extended to include relatives and close family members of those already executed, among these are sons and male relatives of former Lon Nol soldiers and officials. Having entertained any open 'policies' on such practices would have gone against the traits and volition of the highly secretive and invisible presence and nature of the 'party' itself. 

Moreover, the Pol Pot leadership trusted no one within the party's administrative and political ranks, hence the preference for Toul Sleng 's S-21 [located closest to the seat of power and Pol Pot] as detention-elimination centre for party cadres and elements believed to pose the greatest threat to the party from within.

Sao Van gives his testimony before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia during Case 002/02 against Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan yesterday in Phnom Penh. ECC==\]
Sao Van gives his testimony before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia during Case 002/02 against Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan yesterday in Phnom Penh. ECCC


Witness Sao Van, a commune official during the Khmer Rouge regime who attended meetings presided over by the Southwest Zone’s Sector 13 chief Ta Saom, denied the existence of policies to harm Lon Nol officials and other allegedly targeted groups yesterday at the Khmer Rouge tribunal.

Van had been commune chief in Takeo province’s Sector 13 before the Khmer Rouge “liberation” on April 17, 1975. Later that year, he was transferred to become commune chief in Kandal province’s Sector 25. Between 1975 and 1976, Van testified to attending two meetings, one at Phnom Trael mountain in 1975 and one in Takeo town.

The witness, who had previously testified before the Supreme Court Chamber in July of last year in Case 002/01 appeal hearings, offered a slightly different account of the meeting at Phnom Trael, specifically as to whether it was Southwest Zone chief Ta Mok or Sector 13 chief Ta Saom who had given instructions to not harm Lon Nol soldiers below the rank of colonel.

Repeating nearly verbatim his testimony from July, Van said instructions were given not to harm Lon Nol soldiers because “their relatives live among us and fought for the liberation cause”. However, yesterday he said the instructions came from Ta Saom, and not Ta Mok, as he had last year.

Asked to clarify, Van instead recalled a 1973 meeting with Ta Mok at which he was told that cadres below the zone level “did not have the authority to kill anyone”.

Questioning by both trial chamber judges and the prosecution hardly clarified the matter. Responding to prosecutor Dale Lysak, Van said “it was not my intention to make different statements”.

“I stand by my previous statements . . . I am getting old,” he said, adding, “Honestly, I am delighted to be here and testify before this chamber.”


Ultimately, Van stated he was unfamiliar with the Lon Nol military’s structure and was not in a position to answer the prosecution’s questions.

However, Van also testified that his older brother Sao Chrun had been a low-level Lon Nol official who was taken away for re-education at Office 24, although Van said he secretly visited the centre chief asking him to be lenient with Chrun, who survived the regime.

Throughout the day, Van recalled statements from Khmer Rouge officials saying that the New People – evacuees from cities – should be treated with humility, a far cry from the conditions described by many evacuees.

He also maintained that in 1976, Vietnamese people were “invited” to return to their country, and that officials had admonished cadres that the Vietnamese’s “lives should never be touched or harmed”.

The alleged genocide of the Vietnamese is a central charge in the current Case 002/02 against ex-regime heads Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan.

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