Pol Pot (92 page)

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Authors: Philip Short

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Editions Apsara, Paris, 1996 (
La Nuit
)
Vann Nath,
A Cambodian Prison Portrait: One Year in the Khmer Rouge’s S-21,
White Lotus Press, Bangkok, 1998 (
Portrait
)
Vergès, Jacques,
Le Salaud Lumineux,
Michel Lafon, Paris, 1994 (
Salaud
)
Vickery, Michael,’Looking Back at Cambodia [1945–1974]’, in Kiernan and Boua,
Peasants and Politics
(
Looking Back
)
—’Democratic Kampuchea: Themes and Variations’, in Chandler and Kiernan,
Aftermath
(
Themes
)

Kampuchea: Politics, Economics and Society,
Frances Pinter, London, 1986 (
Kampuchea
)

Cambodia, 1975–1982,
Silkworm Books, Chiangmai, 1999 (
Cambodia
)
Y Phandara,
Retour à Phnom Penh,
Métailié, Paris, 1982
Yi Tan Kim Pho,
Le Cambodge des Khmers Rouges: chronique de la vie quotidienne
(avec Ida Simon-Barouh), L’Harmattan, Paris, 1990 (
Cambodge
)
Yun Shui, ‘An Account of Chinese Diplomats Accompanying the Government of Democratic Kampuchea’s Move to the Cardamom Mountains’, in
Critical Asian Studies,
vol. 34, no. 4,2002, pp. 497–519 (
Diplomats
)
Zasloff, Joseph J., and Goodman, Allan E.,
Indochina in Conflict: A Political Assessment,
Lexington Books, Lexington, MA, 1972 (
Conflict
)
Confessions, unless otherwise indicated, are from the Tuol Sleng Archives, Phnom Penh. Other abbreviations are employed as follows:
CPK
Communist Party of Kampuchea
FUNK
National United Front of Kampuchea
GRUNC
Royal Government of National Unity of Cambodia
ICP
Indochinese Communist Party
PRPK
People’s Revolutionary Party of Khmerland (subsequently Kam puchea)
VWP
Vietnamese Workers’Party
AOM
Archives d’Outremer, Aix-en-Provence
ASEMI
Asie du Sud-est et le Monde Insulindien
BBC SWB
British Broadcasting Corporation Summary ofWorld Broadcasts
BCAS
Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars
CWIHP
Cold War International History Project
DC-Cam
Documentation Center of Cambodia, Phnom Penh
EMIFT
Etat-Major Interarmes des Forces Terrestres en Indochine
JCA
Journal of Contemporary Asia
MAE
Ministère des Affaires Etrangères
QD
Archives du Quai d’Orsay, Paris
RC
Réaltiés Cambodgiennes
SDECE
Service de Documentation Extérieur et de Contre-Espionnage
SHAT
Service Historique de l’Armée de Terre, Vincennes
VA
Vietnamese Archives, Hanoi
PROLOGUE
Page
3
The news reached . . . surrendered
:
This account is drawn from interviews with Ieng Sary in Phnom Penh on Nov. 30 2000, Mar. 9 and Nov. 12 2001.
5
If you preserve
:
Interview with Mey Mak, Pailin, June 25, Sept. 20 and 21 2000; Mar. 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17 2001.
‘Patriotic intellectuals’
:
See Caldwell and Lek Tan, pp. 418—33, where the text of the declaration and the list of signatories are reproduced.
6
Disaffected schoolmaster
:
RC
, Mar. 1 1968.
Cropped up again
:
The list was issued on Mar. 23 1972 (see Serge Thion, ‘Chronology’, in Chandler and Kiernan,
Aftermath,
p. 300).
During Sihanouk’s visit: China Pictorial,
June 1973.
‘The enemy is searching’
:
Sien An, confession, Feb. 25 1977.
‘Knew who I was’
:
Pol Pot,
Yugoslav interview
.
On April 17
:
The following account is drawn from interviews with Khieu Samphân (Pailin, Mar. 28 and 29, Apr. 2, 3 and 20 2001) and Phi Phuon (Malay, May 4 and 6, Nov. 14 and 15 2001); and from conversations with villagers during a visit to Sdok Toel on Dec. 16 2001.
7
It would build . . . gone before
:
Der Spiegel,
May 2 1977.
8
There the assembled . . . Buddha
:
Phi Phuon, Khieu Samphân, interviews.
Fateful decision
:
Phi Phuon, interview.
10
What I saw
:
Ong Thong Hoeung,
Récit,
p. 8.
One and a half million
:
Estimates of the number of deaths under Khmer Rouge rule from April 1975 to January 1979 range from 250,000 to 3 million. The ‘unbearable uncertainty of the number’, as one demographer has put it, stems from two main causes.
Estimates based on sampling—in other words, interviews with individual survivors about the numbers of their family members who died—may be inflated by double-counting and, more importantly, fail to take into account the enormous disparities which existed not just between zones and regions, but from one district to another and even, within districts, from one co-operative or village to another. Moreover, a disproportionate number of refugees interviewed were former city-dwellers, who accounted for only 800,000 out of a total population of about 7 million in 1975 and who suffered a far higher mortality rate than any other group in Democratic Kampuchea. (It must be noted that of the estimated 3 million people living in Cambodia’s towns in April 1975, the vast majority were peasants who had taken refuge there to escape the fighting and who returned to their home villages as soon as the war ended.)
Estimates based on demographic trends are bedevilled by uncertainties over the exact population in 1970; over the death toll from the war and the natural rate of population increase from 1970–5; over levels of emigration and over the numbers of famine victims after the Vietnamese invasion in 1979.
I have taken the figure of 1.5 million deaths as representing a reasonable midpoint. I suspect, but cannot prove, that the true death toll may have been lower. If the entire population of former city-dwellers had died (which it did not), there would have been 800,000 deaths; and if 10 percent of the remaining 6.2 million peasants died (again almost certainly an overestimate), the total woudl be 1.42 million. It is certainly possible therefore, that the actual death toll was of the order of one million.
That is surely horrific enough. Whether the true figure is 3 million, 1.5 million or ‘only’ 750,000 in no way alters the barbarism of a regime which brought about the demise of between 10 and 40 per cent of its own people.
CHAPTER ONE: SÅR
15
Prek Sbauv . . . civil war
:
This account relies mainly on my own visits to Prek Sbauv and on interviews with Saloth Nhep on Nov. 29 and Dec. 27 2001. Regarding Sâr’s change of birth date, Ieng Sary and Suong Sikoeun, among others, made themselves younger for the same reason (Ieng Sary, Suong Sikoeun, interviews).
March 1925
:
Pol Pot gave this date when he recounted his life-story to the Chinese journalist Cai Ximei, in May 1984. In 1997 he told Nate Thayer:’They wrote it on the wall in my home. The month
bos,
the year,
chluv
[ox]. January’. According to Thayer, he repeated the word in French: ‘Janvier’. The problem is that January 1925 fell in the Year of the Rat; the new lunar year of the Ox began in the month
cet,
in the last days of March 1925. The only way the different accounts can be reconciled is if Pol Pot meant the first month, not of the lunar year, but of the cyclical year, which would indeed correspond to March/April 1925 (see Institut Bouddhique,
Cérémonies des Douze Mois,
Phnom Penh, n.d., p. 15 and calendar).
16
French missionary
:
Khin Sok, pp. 239–40.
18
Keng Vannsak endured . . . fainted
:
Keng Vannsak, interview.
19
Sâr’s earliest memories . . . powers of protection
:
In Sopheap, interview. See also Ang Chouléan,
Etres surnaturels.
21
Each year . . . religious obligation
:
This account draws on an interview with the Abbot of Wat Botum Vaddei, Nhun Nghet, on Sept. 27 2001; on visits to the monastery that year; and on Chhang Song’s reminiscences of his childhood in a
wat
in Takeo in the late 1940s (interview, Phnom Penh, Oct. 25 2001).
21
–2
In those days . . . beaten
:
Nhun Nghet, interview.
22
Never turn your back
:
Saveros Pou,
Une Guirlande de Cpap,
Cedoreck, Paris, 1988, pp. 411–51.
23
Your eyes
:
Khing Hocdy and Jacqueline Khing,
Les Recommandations de Kram Ngoy,
Cedoreck, Paris, 1981; see also Khing Hocdy,
Ecrivains,
pp. 14–15.
They taught us
:
Nhun Nghet, interview. See also Migot,
supra
.
Catechism
:
‘Bref aperçu sur l’Ecole Miche, 1934–42’ by Fr.Yves Guellec, unpublished ms held at the Archives Lasalliennes, Lyons; interviews with Ping Sây in Phnom Penh, Nov. 25, Dec. 1 and 4 2000; Mar. 6, Apr. 25 and Oct. 30 2001. Sây, who spent several months at the Ecole Miche during the winter of 1944–5, remembered the catechism but not the prayers.
24
The street traffic
:
H. W. Ponder,
Cambodian Glory,
Butterworth, London, 1936, pp. 155–6.
25
Didn’t surprise us
:
Saloth Nhep, interview. See also Kiernan,
How Pol Pot,
p. 25.
26
Royal audiences
:
Meyer,
Sourire,
pp. 112–13.
27
Nostalgia
:
In Sopheap, interview.
Joke
:
Searching for the Truth,
no. 4, p. 8.
28
Politeness
:
Saloth Nhep, interview. See also Meyer,
Sourire,
pp. 32–3.
‘Nice to be with’
:
Ping Sây, for example, remembered:’He was a very, very nice person [in those days] . . . It was always really pleasant to be with him’ (interview). See also interviews with Nghet Chhopininto, Paris, Feb. 17 and 22 2001; Mey Mann; and Khieu Samphân. Saloth Nhep said Sâr and Chhay were both ‘good fun’.
‘Adorable child’
:
Interview with Saloth Suong (Loth Suong), Phnom Penh, Nov. 1991; Chandler,
Brother,
pp. 9 and 204 n.5; and Kiernan,
How Pol Pot,
p. 27.
31
At the college Preah Sihanouk . . . theatrical troupe
:
The following account is taken from Khieu Samphân, Ping Sây and Nghet Chhopininto (interviews).
32
–3
School was closed . . . breath away

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