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Mr. Weiss

Mr. Weiss. The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979. http://www.yale.edu/cgp/.

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Mr. Weiss

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  1. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 http://www.yale.edu/cgp/ The Cambodian genocide of 1975-1979, in which approximately 1.7 to 2.0 million people lost their lives (21% of the country's population), was one of the worst human tragedies of the last century. As in Nazi Germany, and more recently in East Timor, Guatemala, Yugoslavia, and Rwanda, the Khmer Rouge regime headed by Pol Pot combined extremist ideology with ethnic animosity and a diabolical disregard for human life to produce repression, misery, and murder on a massive scale.

  2. Mr. Weiss Major Genocides of the 20th Century – The Century of Genocide

  3. Convention on thePrevention and Punishmentof the Crime of Genocide Adopted by Resolution 260 (III) A of the United Nations General Assembly on 9 December 1948. Article 1 The Contracting Parties confirm that genocide, whether committed in time of peace or in time of war, is a crime under international law which they undertake to prevent and to punish. Article 2 In the present Convention, genocide means any of the following acts committed with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial or religious group, as such: (a) Killing members of the group; (b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group; (c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; (d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group; (e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.

  4. Mr. Weiss Genocide There are four kinds of people in every genocide: 1. Perpetrators:people committing genocide 2. Victims:the people who the perpetrators are committing acts of genocide on 3. Bystanders:the people who stand by and just watch the genocide. 4. Upstanders:the people who stand up to the perpetrators and try to stop the genocide. (One of the key questions is how do we turn bystanders into upstanders.) Dr. Roger Smith

  5. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Cambodia traditionally has suffered from ethnic rivalry between the substantial Vietnamese minority and the Buddhist Khmer majority. 1953 – Independence - Prince Norodom Sihanouk took charge of the newly born state. 1970 - A revolution led by General Lon Nol temporarily dispelled the government. They attempted to suppress the Communist and Vietnamese presence. 1975 - Small Communist group, the Khmer Rouge, grew in popularity and was able to take over, proclaiming the Republic of Democratic Kampuchea. http://www.cambodiangenocide.org/genocide.htm

  6. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 1975 to 1978 – a campaign of “cleansing” by The Kampuchean Communist Party They required destruction of cities and the foreign-educated elite in order to rustify, or to make rural, the country. The goal was a centralized communal organization of atheistic factory workers and peasant farmers free of external support. Cities were raided and people relocated to communal farms. Most people were left to starve or work to death. http://www.cambodiangenocide.org/genocide.htm

  7. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Comrade Duch (pronounced Doik), Duch, head of the TuolSleng prison complex, was a former schoolteacher named Kang KechEav

  8. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 http://www.trial-ch.org/en/trial-watch/profile/db/facts/duch__313.html

  9. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 The exhumation of the Killing Fields at ChoeungEk in 1980 by the People's Republic of Kampuchea was one of the first concrete proofs to the outside world that something terrible had happened in Democratic Kampuchea.Photograph by Ben Kiernan, 1980

  10. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Khmer Rouge Prisoners – Almost All Prisoners Died

  11. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Khmer Rouge Prisoners – Almost All Prisoners Died

  12. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Cambodian people leaving Phnom Penh after Khmer Rouge forces seized and emptied the Cambodian capital on the 17 April 1975. AFP PHOTO/AgenceKhmere de Presse Young Khmer Rouge soldiers in 1975.

  13. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Map of Asia Cambodia

  14. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Map of Cambodia Phom Penh - Capital Map of Southeast Asia

  15. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 The Killing Fields (1984) Sydney Schanberg is a New York Times journalist covering the civil war in Cambodia. Together with local representative DithPran, they cover some of the tragedy and madness of the war. When the Americans forces leave, DithPran sends his family with them, but stays behind himself to help Schanberg cover the event. As an American, Schanberg won't have any trouble leaving the country, but the situation is different for Pran; he's a local, and the Khmer Rouge are moving in.

  16. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 S21 The Khmer Rouge Killing Machine (2002) In 1975-79, the Khmer Rouge waged a campaign of genocide on Cambodia's population. 1.7 million Cambodians lost their lives to famine & murder as the urban population was forced into the countryside to fulfill the Khmer Rouges' dream of an agrarian utopia. In S21, Panh brings two survivors back to the notorious TuolSleng prison (code-named "S21"), now a genocide museum where former Khmer Rouge are employed as guides. Painter Vann Nath confronts his former captors in the converted schoolhouse where he was tortured, though by chance he did not suffer the fate of most of the other 17,000 men, women & children who were taken there, their "crimes" meticulously documented to justify their execution. The ex-Khmer Rouge guards respond to Nath's provocations with excuses, chilling stoicism or apparent remorse as they recount the atrocities they committed at ages as young as 12 years old. To escape torture, the prisoners would confess to anything, & often denounce everyone they knew, though their final sentence was never in doubt.

  17. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Ex-Khmer Rouge minister arrested in Cambodia The Associated Press Sunday, November 11, 2007 PHNOM PENH, Cambodia: IengSary, who served as foreign minister in Cambodia's brutal Khmer Rouge regime, was brought before the country's U.N.-backed genocide tribunal with his wife on Monday to face charges of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

  18. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 The man accused of being the Khmer Rouge's chief torturer put down his prepared speech, removed his eyeglasses and gazed at the courtroom audience Tuesday as he pleaded for forgiveness from the country he helped terrorize three decades ago. "At the beginning I only prayed to ask for forgiveness from my parents, but later I prayed to ask forgiveness from the whole nation," KaingGuekEav (pronounced "Gang GeckEe-uu") -- better known as Duch ("Doik") -- recounted on the second day of his trial before Cambodia's genocide tribunal.

  19. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 The tribunal's proceedings are the first serious attempt to fix responsibility for the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million Cambodians from starvation, medical neglect, slave-like working conditions and execution under the 1975-79 rule of the Khmer Rouge, whose top leader, Pol Pot, died in 1998. Duch, 66, is charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity as well as murder and torture and could face a maximum penalty of life in prison. Cambodia has no death penalty. He commanded the group's main S-21 prison, also known as TuolSleng, where as many as 16,000 men, women and children are believed to have been brutalized before being sent to their deaths.

  20. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Cambodia's torture prison survivors testify at tribunal Updated July 3, 2009 10:56:25 In Cambodia, evidence is being heard against the former head of the notorious TuolSleng prison, Comrade Duch.Only a handful of prisoners survived TuolSleng, during the four years of Khmer Rouge rule. Yesterday, a former child survivor, now aged 39, cried as he told the Khmer Rouge Tribunal of being separated from his mother at the jail.

  21. Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 Posted on May 28, 2010 Verdict Nears in Cambodian Genocide Trial – 8:15

  22. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 The Phnom Penh Post Khmer Rouge tribunal staff stand with faculty and students during a court outreach event. KHMER Rouge tribunal officials yesterday told a standing-room-only auditorium of roughly 350 students at the Royal University of Law and Economics in Phnom Penh that they should learn from July’s verdict in the case of TuolSleng prison chief KaingGuekEav, alias Duch, as they work to strengthen Cambodia’s judicial system.“What is important for you to remember – and this is probably my most important lesson for you today – you are the judicial reform,” said Knut Rosandhaug, deputy director of administration at the tribunal. “If you don’t do it, nobody will.”On July 26, the Trial Chamber found Duch guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentenced him to 30 years in prison, a sum that took into consideration his unlawful pretrial detention.

  23. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 February 8, 2012 The Khmer Rouge's Perfect Villain By THIERRY CRUVELLIER International criminal courts usually begin their work with a mid-ranking defendant and impose a heavy sentence after their first conviction. The war crimes tribunals for Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia were the first to do so. On Friday, the appeals chamber of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia — a mixed tribunal based in Phnom Penh and tasked with trying the worst offenders of the Pol Pot regime — followed in their footsteps: it imposed a life sentence on KaingGuekEav, also known as Duch, the 69-year-old former commander of the Khmer Rouge’s infamous S-21 prison in Phnom Penh, where between 1975 and 1979 more than 12,000 people were detained, tortured and sent for execution. This decision brought the appeals process to a close after Duch’s 2010 conviction for war crimes and crimes against humanity and sentencing to 30 years in prison.

  24. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 18 November 2011 Khmer Rouge leaders facing trial A UN-backed genocide tribunal in Cambodia is set to begin its second trial, this time of the top-most leaders of the Khmer Rouge regime. Up to two million people were killed or starved to death under Khmer Rouge rule in the 1970s. Three main leaders - NuonChea, KhieuSamphan and IengSary - will be in court. Another, IengThirith, has been found incapable of standing trial because of ill health. NuonChea is viewed as the chief ideologue of the movement

  25. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 2 Khmer Rouge Leaders Are Convicted in Cambodia SoumRithy, center, who lost his father and three siblings during the Khmer Rouge regime, hugged another survivor after the verdict was delivered. DAMIR SAGOLJ / REUTERS

  26. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979 By THOMAS FULLER and JULIA WALLACE - AUGUST 6, 2014 PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — A court on Thursday found the two most senior surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge, which brutalized Cambodia during the 1970s, guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced them to life in prison. The chief judge, Nil Nonn, said the court found that there had been a “widespread and systematic attack against the civilian population of Cambodia” and that the two men had been part of a “joint criminal enterprise” that bore responsibility. They were convicted of murder and extermination, among other crimes. More than 1.7 million people died under the rule of the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979. The proceedings of the tribunal, a joint effort of the Cambodian government and the United Nations, have been criticized for being extremely belated and for covering only a narrow sliver of the Khmer Rouge’s crimes. The judgments against the two men — NuonChea, 88, and KhieuSamphan, 83 — were the first handed down against the Khmer Rouge leadership, although a lower-ranking official, who ran a notorious prison for the regime in Phnom Penh, was convicted in 2010. Both defendants will appeal, their lawyers said.

  27. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979

  28. FRIDAY, 22 OCTOBER 2010 15:02 THOMAS MILLER Mr. Weiss The Cambodian Genocide – 1975 - 1979

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