Kaing Guek Eav, the former Khmer Rouge chief at Tuol Sleng prison
where nearly 17,000 Cambodians (and a few others) were tortured
and killed (or sent to nearby Choeung Ek for execution), has been
on trial the last few weeks in Phnom Penh. Unlike the few other
top officials from Pol Pot’s regime who are awaiting trial, Eav
— known as “Duch” — has admitted responsibility for the evil.
The brutalities committed under his authority are unimaginable:
beatings, electrocutions, fingernail-ripping, burning, cutting,
etc. Guards would toss infants in the air like they were skeet
and fire away.
But in today’s reports about the trial, the discussion of whether
Tuol Sleng guards engaged in waterboarding was
seized upon by the obsessive media. From Agence France-Press:
But (Duch) said he had not used the simulated drowning
technique called waterboarding, and had not put plastic bags
over prisoners’ heads because of the danger they could
suffocate to death.
“The kind of waterboarding technique was not employed and
the plastic bag was also not a kind of technique,” Duch
said.
I guess that makes the Khmer Rouge more humane than the United
States.
Duch said he discussed interrogation tactics with Khmer
Rouge cadres soon after he began working at the prison.
“There were two techniques. The normal beating technique
and the electrocution technique with use of a telephone
(line)… which was connected to an electric current to
electrocute prisoners. That was true,” Duch said.
You would think if he was willing to ‘fess up to electrocution
and beatings, that if waterboarding was happening it wouldn’t be
a big deal to admit to that also. But that’s not the point,
obviously:
The United States has been heavily criticised for using
waterboarding to interrogate suspected Al-Qaeda prisoners, with
many commentators citing it as a brutal method of the Khmer
Rouge.
Since when are commentators news? And if they are, why not also
cite the commentators who believe it is justified? That is, if we
are going to make commentators part of the story.
A similar reporting template was
followed by Associated Press, which also emphasized Duch’s
waterboarding denial:
“The way people were detained, interrogated and smashed
(killed) was unique to the prison (S-21),” said Duch, one of
five senior Khmer Rouge leaders expected to face the
tribunal,
Answering questions from prosecutor Alex Bates, Duch
(pronounced Doik) said hundreds of children between the ages of
12 and 17 were rounded up from poor families in the countryside
to serve as “special and honest security guards” at the
prison.
“Because they were young, they were like clean pieces of
papers that can be easily written or painted on,” Duch said. “I
myself educated them. I trained them.”
That prisoners were only fried, smashed, and their children
brainwashed — that must come as a great relief to the
anti-American, anti-waterboarding media.