By Paul Chesser on 6.15.09 @ 11:47AM
The trial of Kaing Guek Eav, or "Comrade Duch" as the
wicked-but-apparently-repentant jailer of Pol Pot's regime is
nicknamed,
continues with a finding from the war crimes court that his
10-year detainment before trial violated his rights.
The trial of Kaing Guek Eav, or "Comrade Duch" as the
wicked-but-apparently-repentant jailer of Pol Pot's regime is
nicknamed,
continues with a finding from the war crimes court that his
10-year detainment before trial violated his rights. But the
seemingly forthright,
brutal testimony continues:
Duch said there "was a bad smell" in Tuol Sleng and told
judges he felt shame when he remembered the abuse of
prisoners.
However, he added that he avoided the holding area because
he did not want inmates -- most of whom were fellow Khmer Rouge
cadres -- to recognise him.
"Those people who were there and were being mistreated were
people who I knew before. So I would be shocked if I could see
them," Duch said.
"I closed my eyes, closed my ears. I did not want to see
the real situation... You could say I even betrayed my friends.
That was beyond cowardice," he added.
Shown a list of children executed at his prison on
suspicion of espionage, Duch told the court many more
undocumented children were killed after they had accompanied
their parents to Tuol Sleng, also known as S-21.
"Most of the women at S-21 were arrested because their
husbands were arrested," Duch said.
"The children were separated from their mothers and those
children were smashed. Because they needed the mothers to be
separated so they could be interrogated, those children were
smashed," he added.
"Smashed" was a word commonly used by top Khmer Rouge officials
to eliminate even those under the slightest suspicion of
disloyalty, but as you can see even those who were no threat at
all were killed. I'm sure some will disagree, but this period and
place represent a time where the only explanation can be is that
demonic forces took control.
topics:
genocide