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soc.culture.hmong |
A bit of a change of pace, this story on the Khmere Rouge in Cambodia. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/asia-pacific/8123541.stm (link) 09:13 GMT, Monday, 29 June 2009 10:13 UK A foreign photographer, left, takes a photo of Vann Nath, 63, during One of the few survivors of the Khmer Rouge regime's notorious Tuol Van Nath described how hunger had driven him to eat insects, and said He was appearing at the trial of the man who ran the prison, Comrade About 15,000 people were detained at Tuol Sleng in the late 1970s, but Unique perspective Van Nath has been waiting for his day in court for 30 years. The tribunal has already heard plenty from Comrade Duch himself - as WHO WERE THE KHMER ROUGE? * Maoist regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975-1979 Kaing Guek Eav, pictured in February But according to the BBC's Guy DeLauney in Phnom Penh, Van Nath can "The conditions were so inhumane and the food was so little," Van Nath He said he was fed twice a day, but each meal only consisted of three "We were so hungry, we would eat insects that dropped from the He described how prisoners were kept shackled - 20 or 30 of them Van Nath owed his survival to his skills as a painter. He was forced "I thought that if I could do good pictures and they were satisfied Van Nath's portraits passed muster - and he has since become one of Admission of guilt Comrade Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, is accused of Earlier in his trial, the 66-year-old admitted responsibility for his But he also insisted that he did not hold a senior role in the regime, Four other former Khmer Rouge leaders are currently in detention at
Unbelievably bad.
Khmer Rouge survivor testifies
the tribunal
Sleng detention centre has testified at a UN-backed tribunal in
Cambodia.
he had also eaten the food beside corpses of starved fellow prisoners.
Duch.
only seven are thought to have survived.
well as a number of expert witnesses.
* Founded and led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998
* Abolished religion, schools and currency in a bid to create
agrarian utopia
* Up to two million people thought to have died from starvation,
overwork or execution
provide a unique perspective, as one of only three men still alive who
know what it is like to have been a prisoner at Tuol Sleng.
told the tribunal, as he broke down in tears. "I even thought eating
human flesh would be a good meal."
teaspoons of rice porridge.
ceiling," he said. "We ate our meals next to dead bodies, and we
didn't care because we were like animals."
together - and ordered not to speak or move.
to produce portraits of Khmer Rouge leaders - on pain of death.
with what I painted, they would be happy and I would survive," said
Van Nath before taking the stand.
Cambodia's most famous artists, and his work often depicts scenes from
Tuol Sleng.
overseeing the torture and extermination of prisoners at the jail.
role as governor of the jail, and begged forgiveness from his victims.
and that he had had little choice but to work there.
the court, and are expected to face trial in 2010.