Popular Post geovalin Posted September 2, 2020 Popular Post Share Posted September 2, 2020 Duch, the former director of the Khmer Rouge’s S-21 interrogation center in Phnom Penh’s Tuol Sleng, has passed away due to illness at 00:51 a.m on 2 September 2020, Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia Spokesman Neth Pheaktra. In 2010, Duch, whose real name was Kaing Guek Eav, was convicted of crimes against humanity and war crimes for his role at S-21, where as many as 16,000 men, women and children were brutalised before being systematically exterminated, according to reports. Duch, who real name was Kaing Guek Eav had been hospitalised at the Khmer Soviet Hospital since Monday after becoming ill while serving his life sentence. Duch, 78, reportedly fell gravely ill at about 4pm on Monday in Kandal provincial prison where he has served his life sentence after becoming the first Khmer Rouge official to be found guilty by the Khmer Rouge tribunal of crimes against humanity in 2010. read more https://www.khmertimeskh.com/50759743/duch-chief-of-khmer-rouges-s-21-prison-dies/ 2 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deli Posted September 2, 2020 Share Posted September 2, 2020 Has lived by far too long, exactly 78 years Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
natway09 Posted September 2, 2020 Share Posted September 2, 2020 Great, Good riddance 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TPI Posted September 2, 2020 Share Posted September 2, 2020 I hope he goes into the deepest dankest hole in hell, there to live for eternity listening to the screams of the innocent victims of S21! 1 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andy from Kent Posted September 2, 2020 Share Posted September 2, 2020 I wanted him to live a long long time. In a nasty prison of course. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IAMHERE Posted September 2, 2020 Share Posted September 2, 2020 13 hours ago, geovalin said: first Khmer Rouge official to be found guilty by the Khmer Rouge tribunal of crimes against humanity in 2010. How many were found guilty ? Certainly it took more than just the one guy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Orton Rd Posted September 2, 2020 Share Posted September 2, 2020 Proof karma is a myth for fools Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
geovalin Posted September 3, 2020 Author Share Posted September 3, 2020 Cambodia's Khmer Rouge executioner turned born-again Christian, Duch, dies PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - The Khmer Rouge commander known as Comrade Duch, Pol Pot’s main executioner and security chief who oversaw the murder of at least 14,000 Cambodians at the notorious Tuol Sleng prison, died on Wednesday. He was 77. Kaing Guek Eav, or Comrade Duch, was the first member of the Khmer Rouge leadership to face trial for his role in a regime blamed for at least 1.7 million deaths in the “killing fields” of Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. Duch died at 00:52 a.m. (1752 GMT on Tuesday) at the Khmer Soviet Friendship Hospital in Phnom Penh, said Neth Pheaktra, a spokesman for a tribunal set up to prosecute top Khmer Rouge leaders. He gave no details of the cause but Duch had been ill in recent years. In 2010, the U.N.-backed tribunal found him guilty of mass murder, torture and crimes against humanity at Tuol Sleng prison, a former Phnom Penh high school that still stands as a memorial to the atrocities committed inside. He was given a life sentence two years later after his appeal, on the grounds that he was just a junior official following orders, was rejected. Duch - by the time of his trial a born-again Christian - expressed regret for his crimes. U.S. Ambassador to Cambodia W. Patrick Murphy, in a comment on Twitter, called his conviction “a milestone in ensuring accountability”. There was no immediate reaction from the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rouge cadre who rebelled, fled to Vietnam and later helped to drive them from power. Duch was one of only a handful of top Khmer Rouge figures convicted before they died. Paramount leader Pol Pot died in a Khmer Rouge jungle hideout in 1998. Under Duch’s leadership, detainees at Tuol Sleng prison, codenamed “S-21”, were ordered to suppress cries of agony as Khmer Rouge guards, many of whom were teenagers, sought to extract confessions for non-existent crimes through torture. The guards were instructed to “smash to bits” traitors and counter-revolutionaries. For the Khmer Rouge, that could mean anyone from school teachers to children, to pregnant women and “intellectuals” identified as such for wearing glasses. FORMER MATHS TEACHER Beneath Tuol Sleng’s chaotic facade, Duch - himself a former maths teacher - had an obsessive eye for detail and kept his school-turned-jail meticulously organised. “Nothing in the former schoolhouse took place without Duch’s approval. His control was total,” wrote photographer and author Nic Dunlop, who found Duch in 1999 hiding near the Thai border, two decades after the Khmer Rouge fell. “Not until you walk through the empty corridors of Tuol Sleng does Stalin’s idiom that one death is a tragedy - a million a statistic, take on a terrifying potency,” Dunlop wrote in his account of Duch and his atrocities, “The Lost Executioner”. At S-21, new prisoners had their mugshots taken. Hundreds are now on display within its crumbling walls. Norng Chan Phal, one of the few people to have survived S-21, was a boy when he and his parents were sent to Duch’s prison and interrogated on suspicion of having links to the Khmer Rouge’s mortal enemy, Vietnam. His parents were tortured and killed but Chan Phal survived to give testimony at Duch’s trial in 2010. “He was cooperative, he spoke to the court frankly. He apologised to all S-21 victims and asked them to open their hearts. He apologised to me too,” Chan Phal told Reuters. “He apologised. But justice is not complete.” Reporting by Chan Thul Prak; Writing and additional reporting by James Pearson; Editing by Matthew Tostevin and Robert Birsel - - - - REUTERS Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jack7106 Posted September 4, 2020 Share Posted September 4, 2020 Thank God that he found God. Just goes to show that religion really is the biggest killer known to mankind???????????????? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Burma Bill Posted September 4, 2020 Share Posted September 4, 2020 (edited) At last this tyrant is no longer with us, but for many his name will live on like those of Hitler, Stalin, Pinochet and Saddam Hussein to name a few! The infamous prison, Station 21 (S-21), was Tuol Sleng School in Phnom Penh and is now a museum respectfully dedicated to the victims of Duch and his "cronies" (many were young boy soldiers). In 1979, 7 members who survived were photographed together. In 2016 I had the honor of meeting one of them, Chum Mey, who kindly autographed a copy of his book whilst I was visiting Tuol Sleng. Some may find a visit to S-21 very harrowing. Chum Mey:- Edited September 4, 2020 by Burma Bill additional information 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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