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Khmer Rouge 'First Lady' Dead at 83


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Khmer Rouge 'First Lady' Dead at 83

Former top Khmer Rouge official Ieng Thirith has died, according to Cambodia's U.N.-backed war crimes tribunal.

Ieng Thirith died Saturday at the age of 83, said a statement by the Extraordinary Chamber in the Courts of Cambodia, or ECCC.

Known as the "first lady" of the Khmer Rouge, Ieng Thirith served as the minister of social action during the regime's bloody, four-year rule.

Her husband was former foreign secretary Ieng Sary, who died in 2013 at age 87, before the genocide case against him could reach a verdict.

Ieng Thirith was originally charged with genocide and crimes against humanity before being found mentally unfit for trial because of dementia and released. She remained under judicial supervision until her death.

The ECCC statement did not say how she died.

source: http://www.voanews.com/content/khmer-rouge-death/2928141.html

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,,, which attempted to create an agrarian communist utopia.

Some people, including some posters on TV, love to claim that religion is at the root of so many of humanity's woes and conflicts, but the Khmer Rouge, the Nazis, and the repressive regimes in North Korea, Albania, Cuba, Uganda, Cambodia, Zimbabwe, Central African "Empire," Romania , etc were/are totally absent anything to do with religion.

It's amazing to think of how many people buy into aiding & abetting the lunatics who head up these massively destructive inhuman "utopian" adventures ... and how many others are willing to stand by and essentially do nothing about them, unless the countries involved appear to be a threat to their own economic interests of course.

Hopefully in the next life Leng Thirith and others like her will get a chance to spend some up close & personal time with their victims.

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Top woman leader of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge dies at 83

SOPHENG CHEANG, Associated Press

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Ieng Thirith, a Khmer Rouge leader who was the highest-ranking woman in the genocidal regime that oversaw the death of nearly 2 million Cambodians in the late 1970s, died Saturday, her family and U.N. officials said. She was 83 years old.
Ieng Thirith was a sister-in-law of the movement's late supreme leader, Pol Pot. A Sorbonne-educated Shakespeare scholar, she served as minister of social affairs and was married to Ieng Sary, the regime's former foreign minister, who died in 2013 at age 87.
Her son, Ieng Vuth, said she had been suffering from dementia, heart troubles and other health problems. He said Buddhist funeral rites would be held at her family's hometown of Pailin in northwestern Cambodia, with a cremation scheduled for Monday.
"I don't have many words to say, but we lost a good mother today," Ieng Vuth said by phone from his home.
Ieng Thirith was one of just a handful of aging Khmer Rouge leaders put on trial by a United Nations-backed tribunal seeking justice for crimes committed by the radical movement.
But in September 2012, the tribunal was forced to free her after she was declared mentally unfit to stand trial because of an illness thought to have been Alzheimer's disease. However, the charges against her were not dropped.
Prosecutors had accused her of involvement in the "planning, direction, coordination and ordering of widespread purges," and charged her with crimes against humanity, genocide, homicide, torture and religious persecution. She denied the charges.
Though two of her high-ranking co-defendants were found guilty last year and sentenced to life in prison, her death highlights concerns that full justice may never be attained because death may overtake the judicial process.
The two — Nuon Chea, the regime's chief ideologist and No. 2 leader, and Khieu Samphan, a former head of state — are now in a second trial also related to charges of genocide.
Born the second daughter of a Cambodian judge on March 10, 1932, Ieng Thirith came from a relatively wealthy and privileged family and traveled to Paris to study.
She married Ieng Sary in 1951 during her stint in France, where she became the first Cambodian woman to earn a degree in English literature. Her original name was Khieu Thirith.
After returning to Cambodia in 1957, she worked as a professor and founded a private English school in the capital, Phnom Penh.
In the 1960s, she joined an underground circle of Cambodian leftists, and eventually followed her husband into the jungle in 1965, fleeing a harsh bout of government repression.
After the radical communist Khmer Rouge movement seized power in 1975, she was appointed minister of social affairs. Her older sister, Khieu Ponnary, became Pol Pot's first wife.
The following year, she toured Cambodia's northwest to investigate health conditions, which she reported — accurately — were disastrous. But her conclusion did not blame the government. She told Pol Pot foreign agents were infiltrating their ranks to undermine the revolution, according to the Documentation Center of Cambodia, an independent organization that gathers evidence of Khmer Rouge atrocities.
In response to her report, Pol Pot ordered a purge of Khmer Rouge cadres in the region whom he considered enemies of the revolution, the Documentation Center said. The sweep was one of several bloody episodes reflecting the regime's extreme paranoia.
Between 1975 and 1979, an estimated 1.7 million people in Cambodia died of starvation, exhaustion, lack of medical care or execution.
A U.N.-backed tribunal was established in 2006 to seek justice for crimes committed during the reign of the Khmer Rouge, and Ieng Thirith was arrested in 2007 along with her husband, and charged with crimes against humanity, genocide, homicide, torture and religious persecution.
Ieng Thirith said the charges against her were "100 percent false" and claimed she worked for the benefit of the people.
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-- (c) Associated Press 2015-08-23
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