Cambodian Genocide
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Cambodian Genocide
“What is rotten must be removed”
When: 1975-1979
1925: Pol Pot (Saloth Sar) is born into a farming family in central Cambodia
1949: Pol Pot moves to Paris and becomes absorbed in Marxism (communism)
1953: Pol Pot returns to Cambodia and joins the underground Communist movement
1962: Pol Pot, now leader of the Cambodian Communist Party, is forced to flee into the jungle and forms the armed resistance movement against Prince Sihanouk, known as the Khmer Rouge and wages war on Sihanouk
1970: Prince Sihanouk is ousted by a U.S. military coup and joins Pol Pots group in opposing the new military government
1970: U.S. invasion of Cambodian border occupied by the North Vietnamese, forces the Vietnamese deeper into the jungle where they ally themselves with the Khemer Rouge
1969-1973: The U.S. occasionally bombs North Vietnamese sanctuaries in eastern Cambodia, killing 150,000 Cambodian peasants, and hundreds of thousands of Cambodian peasants fled to Phnom Penh, Cambodias capitol
By 1975: U.S. had withdrawn all troops from Vietnam and Cambodia lost its American military support
April 17, 1975: Seizing the opportunity in Cambodias disorganized government, Pol Pots Khmer Rouge army marched into Phnom Penh and took control of Cambodia
December 25, 1978: Vietnam launches a full-scale attack of Cambodia
January 7, 1979: Phnom Penh falls and Pol Pot was deposed
1979-1996: Pol Pot retreats into Thailand with his Khmer Rouge and continues to attack a succession of Cambodian governments
1996: Pol Pot loses control of the Khmer Rouge
April 1998: Pol Pot dies of a heart attack before he could be tried for the events of 1975-1979.
Where: Cambodia
Cambodia in South East Asia
Pol Pot renamed Cambodia the “Democratic Republic of Kampuchea” and instituted prisons and new provincial boundaries all over Cambodia, including the evacuation of Cambodias capital: Phnom Penh, and S-21: a secret prison operated by Pol Pots regime in Phnom Penh
Vietnam: which attacked on the borders of Cambodia leading to the overthrow of Pol Pot
Application of the United Nations Definition:
Killing of members of the group:
Deadly purges to kill many target groups
20,000 tortured and killed in Tuol Sleng
People suspected of disloyalty were shot on sight
212,500 Chinese living in Cambodia perished
20,000 killed on the evacuation of Phnom Penh
Causing serious bodily or mental harm
Prisoners in the camps were beaten to submission so that they would not question authority and only work
Imposed a harsh schedule on those who survived the march from the cities, so that the only thing they could think of was sleep, if they resisted while working, they were shot
In camps, prisoners were tortured into false confessions of crimes and were beaten until they believed what they said
Told that “whether or not you die is not of great significance”
Inflicting on the group conditions of life
Forcibly evacuated all cities
March to the countryside, as many as 20,000 died along the way
Millions forced into slave labor
Accustomed to city life, the Cambodians started to die from diet of one tin of rice every other day, 18 hours of work every day, one day of rest every 10 days, disease, malnutrition, and overwork, in Pol Pots “killing fields”
Imposing measures to prevent births and Transferring children of the group
Pol Pot did not try to prevent births of the target groups, he tried to force births from the acceptable Cambodian population
Pol Pot forcibly took thousands of children from the cities, marry them in communals against their will, and force them to have children
The women that were of the target groups had their children not old enough for reproduction killed brutally
Determination of Target Group: Communist opposition, ethnic Vietnamese and Chinese, Buddhist monks, anyone of “the old society”
Pol Pot said “What is rotten must be removed” and that 1975 was “year zero.” His idea of recreating society was to “purify” Cambodia by removing capitalism, western culture, city life, religion, and all foreign influences, in favor of peasant Communism
The educated
The wealthy
Buddhist monks
Police, doctors, lawyers, teachers, former government officials and anyone else who had a position of authority or intelligence in Cambodia
Ex-soldiers and their families
Anyone suspected of disloyalty
Ethnic groups, the Vietnamese, Chinese, and Cham Muslims, and 20 other smaller groups
Political