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Southeast Asia
Cambodia Outlaws Denial of Khmer Rouge Atrocities
2013-06-08
[An Nahar] Cambodia on Friday banned the denial of atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge regime with a new law, a move the opposition claims is a political attack weeks ahead of national polls.

The law bans statements denying crimes by the communist regime that ruled from 1975-79 killing an estimated two million people, and carries a sentence of up to two years in jail.

The law, similar to legislation covering Holocaust denial in Germany and La Belle France, was proposed by strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen after a recording emerged of an opposition leader apparently excusing the Khmer Rouge from responsibility for running a notorious torture prison during their rule.

The recording, posted on a government website last month, is of Kem Sokha, deputy head of the Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP), saying the notorious Tuol Sleng prison was run by Vietnamese soldiers who ousted the Khmer Rouge rather than the regime.

Around 15,000 men, women and kiddies were tortured and executed at the prison, also known as S-21, in central Phnom Penh.

Kem Sokha has admitted it is his voice on the recording but alleges it was edited to say the contentious comments, a claim backed by the CNRP which alleges the tape was aired "to cause political trouble" ahead of a general election in July.

Lawmakers, mostly from the ruling party, unanimously approved the law after around an hour of debate on Friday.

The law will prosecute anyone who "does not acknowledge, denies or diminishes... crimes committed under the Democratic Kampuchea", the draft said, referring to the brutal regime's official name.

Lawmaker Cheam Yeap told parliament that denial of the crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge was "a serious insult to the souls" of those who died under its rule.

But critics say the law may jeopardize painstaking efforts to heal the country.

"You don't need the law to protect the truth of what happened during the Khmer Rouge," Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia which researches Khmer Rouge atrocities, told Agence La Belle France Presse.
Posted by:Fred

#5  For instance, if you can't point out that the Chinese were the major foreign backers of the Khmer Rouge and that the father of the current monarch was living in a townhouse condo in Beijing while that government was supporting the depopulatio of Cambodia, it's just another level of whitewash.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2013-06-08 11:36  

#4  Yah, but if you can't get someone unconnected with the Khmer Rouge to _enforce_ the law, there's no point in having it and lots of reasons to be against it.
Posted by: Thing From Snowy Mountain   2013-06-08 11:34  

#3  ...IIRC, just about everybody in a national position in Cambodia today has some connection with the KR. There's a bunch of reasons people would want to see this go through.

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2013-06-08 11:08  

#2  But critics say the law may jeopardize painstaking efforts to heal the country.

Vegas taking bets that the 'critics' are largely Leftists who want to hide their bloody hands in history, as usual.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2013-06-08 08:11  

#1  Good move, can't lie about it.
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2013-06-08 07:47  

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