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Forty Years On, Khmer Rouge Fall Still Dominates Cambodian Politics


Primary school students in Anlong Veng look and read a banner about Khmer Rouge, placed inside Anlong Veng district hall compound, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)
Primary school students in Anlong Veng look and read a banner about Khmer Rouge, placed inside Anlong Veng district hall compound, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)

Despite the majority of people in the area being former Khmer Rouge, there are some newcomers who came to do business in Anlong Veng, including restaurants, grocery stores, and entertainment venues.

Chhat Ib, a former Khmer Rouge soldier, lives in Anlong Veng, the last Khmer Rouge stronghold in Oddor Meanchey province near the northwestern border with Thailand.

Chhat Ib, 63, a former Khmer Rouge soldier, who currently lives in Anlong Veng, the last Khmer Rouge stronghold, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)
Chhat Ib, 63, a former Khmer Rouge soldier, who currently lives in Anlong Veng, the last Khmer Rouge stronghold, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)

After the collapse of the Khmer Rouge in 1979 after the Vietnam-led invasion following Prime Minister Hun Sen’s defection to Vietnam in 1977, Ib remained loyal to the Khmer Rouge leaders, fleeing to the border where he hid in the mountains and kept fighting against Hun Sen’s forces.

The 63-year-old former Khmer Rouge fighter said he was injured on his right hip by an explosion, but survived the war.

“I was lucky that I still survived from the regime,” he said in a recent interview at his home in Anlong Veng.

“I told my children that my life was full of fighting and being a soldier,” he added.

He first fought against the U.S.-backed Lon Nol regime, to bring the late King Norodom Sihanouk back to power, but the regime that sprung up from this conflict was more brutal than he could have imagined.

“We didn’t know what would happen. We just followed the leaders. If the leaders lead badly, it will be bad,” he said. “Like we just follow the driver in the car and they can drive into forests or water.”

His neighbors are also mostly former Khmer Rouge, he added.

“Some former Khmer Rouge are village and commune chiefs,” he added. “I am just an ordinary farmer.”

Anlong Veng contains numerous physical reminders of Cambodia’s horrific past. Most of the Khmer Rouge who live here depend on farming rice and other crops.

Another former Khmer Rouge fighter, Chhim Baing, said he also followed the Khmer Rouge after their defeat in 1979.

Chhim Being, former Khmer Rouge solider who now sells some vegetable along a street in Anlong Veng, said he also followed the Khmer Rouge after their defeat in 1979. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)
Chhim Being, former Khmer Rouge solider who now sells some vegetable along a street in Anlong Veng, said he also followed the Khmer Rouge after their defeat in 1979. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)

“I still served them after 1975 because I didn’t know what to do, so I just followed them,” he said.

“Some went to their home provinces since they were afraid that there would be fighting here again. Some still stay here and they depend on farming and crops.”

“But I still stay here and sometimes I visit my home province,” he said. “Every regime is okay, but one thing I don’t want is war.”

Despite the majority of people in the area being former Khmer Rouge, there are some newcomers who came to do business in Anlong Veng, including restaurants, grocery stores, and entertainment venues. Like the rest of contemporary Cambodia, Anlong Veng has embraced capitalism and karaoke bars.

Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, explains about Khmer Rouge past story to participants, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)
Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, explains about Khmer Rouge past story to participants, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)

Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, or DC-Cam, said 85 percent of the population here are former Khmer Rouge.

“In their mindset, they were the war’s losers. It was not a peace that came from reconciliation,” he said.

“But we want them to know that there are higher-ranking officials responsible, including Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan,” he said.

The home of military commander, Ta Mok, which is located in Anlong Veng district, becomes a tourist place, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)
The home of military commander, Ta Mok, which is located in Anlong Veng district, becomes a tourist place, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)

The area is also steeped in the history of the conflict, with the grave of Pol Pot and the home of his military commander, Ta Mok, close by. Countless other reminders of the regime that oversaw the deaths of more than 1.7 million Cambodians are scattered around the countryside.

Prime Minister Hun Sen, who was himself a former Khmer Rouge soldier, on Monday led the 40th anniversary of the regime’s downfall in Phnom Penh with thousands of survivors. There were dancers and performers with banners to mark the event.

Prime Minister Hun Sen, Heng Samrin and their wives celebrated 40th anniversary of victory over Khmer Rough on January 7th 2019 at Olympic stadium. (Photo from Facebook page of Samdech Hun Sen, Cambodian Prime Minister)
Prime Minister Hun Sen, Heng Samrin and their wives celebrated 40th anniversary of victory over Khmer Rough on January 7th 2019 at Olympic stadium. (Photo from Facebook page of Samdech Hun Sen, Cambodian Prime Minister)

In the speech, Hun Sen, who took power under a government installed by Vietnam, praised his role in bringing “peace and stability” to Cambodia.

“Starting from zero, Cambodia has been on the way full of countless obstacles,” he said.

Hun Sen in the past denied that he was a Khmer Rouge soldier since he claimed he did not know it was the Khmer Rouge that he joined.

“I don’t accept that [I was a former Khmer Rouge soldier], since in the past I hated the Khmer Rouge the most, but I joined because I followed the call from late King Sihanouk,” he told American filmmaker Robert H. Lieberman in an interview for the 2016 documentary “Angkor Awakens”.

“King Sihanouk was not Khmer Rouge,” he added.

Some former Khmer Rouge are still afraid of the Khmer Rouge tribunal, according to Chhang of DC-Cam.

“They are still scared since Im Chaem, who lives here, was charged and investigated by the court, but it is lesson that the one who made a mistake has to be responsible,” he added.

Im Chaem, a local regime official accused of mass murder and enslavement among other crimes, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)
Im Chaem, a local regime official accused of mass murder and enslavement among other crimes, January 5, 2019. (Sun Narin/VOA Khmer)

Chaem, a local regime official accused of mass murder and enslavement among other crimes, has enjoyed a peaceful retirement on her farm in Anlong Veng since the charges against her were dropped last year. She recently converted to Christianity.

However, former Khmer Rouge soldier Ib said he still wanted the leaders to be held accountable.

“Every leader wants to be good. But when it is bad, they don’t accept it,” he said. “But if we reflect on the Khmer Rouge era to now, it is bad.”

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