2007年VOA标准英语-Cambodia Puts Khmer Rouge Reign of Terror on Tr(在线收听) | ||||||||
By Rory Byrne Phnom Penh 15 August 2007
A monument outside Phnom Penh shows some of the enormous scale of the killing in Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. Almost two million people, a quarter of the populations, died under the Khmer Rouge from overwork, starvation and execution. The ultra-Maoist group wanted to create a rural socialist utopia. It executed political opponents, the educated and ethnic minorities. Many died brutal deaths.
He is the first member of the Khmer Rouge to be indicted in connection to the regime's reign of terror. Almost 30 years after the Khmer Rouge were ousted from power, a joint international and Cambodian court is preparing to try those accused of being most responsible for the deaths. Five former leaders are scheduled to be tried at a new court outside Phnom Penh, although more may follow later. Civic groups warn that because Cambodia's judiciary is weak, the tribunal may be subject to political interference.
Civic groups see the tribunal as part of a wider process aimed at helping the country come to terms with its traumatic past. Lawyer Theary Seng says, "The core benefits of a trial are becoming the ancillary benefits and the side benefits of outreach, engaging the Cambodian people, of disseminating information, of talking about history, of human rights abuses, of rule of law -- those issues are now becoming the core values of having this tribunal." This annual re-creation of Khmer Rouge atrocities aims to help Cambodians remember the past and to heal the wounds of that era. Rights activists hope the Khmer Rouge tribunal will play another part of that healing process. | ||||||||
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2007/8/42340.html |