
THE HANDSTAND |
NOVEMBER-JANUARY2010
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The Holocaust In
Cambodia And Its Aftermath Is Remembered
John Pilger recalls the stricken society he found in
Cambodia in 1979 which he described in his epic
dispatches and documentary, Year Zero: the Silent Death of
Cambodia He
reminds us that the Pol Pot horror emerged from the
bombing ordered by Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger, and
that Cambodia was again "punished" when its
liberators came from the wrong side of the cold war and
the Thatcher government send special forces to train the
Khmer Rouge in exile
By John Pilger
October 29, 2009 "Information Clearing
House"
-- The aircraft flew low, following the Mekong River
west from Vietnam. Once over Cambodia, what we saw
silenced all of us on board. There appeared to be nobody,
no movement, not even an animal, as if the great
population of Asia had stopped at the border.
Whole villages were empty. Chairs and beds, pots and mats
lay in the street, a car on its side, a bent bicycle.
Behind fallen power lines lay or sat a single human
shadow; it did not move. From the paddies, lines of tall
wild grass followed straight lines. Fertilised by the
remains of thousands upon thousands of men, women and
children, these marked common graves in a nation where as
many as two million people, or more than a quarter of the
population, were missing.
At the liberation of the Nazi death camp in Belsen in
1945, The Times correspondent wrote: It is my duty
to describe something beyond the imagination of mankind.
That was how I felt in 1979 when I entered Cambodia, a
country sealed from the outside world for almost four
years since Year Zero.
Year Zero had begun shortly after sunrise on April 17,
1975 when Pol Pots Khmer Rouge guerrillas entered
the capital, Phnom Penh. They wore black and marched in
single file along the wide boulevards. At one
oclock, they ordered the city abandoned. The sick
and wounded were forced at gunpoint from their hospital
beds; families were separated; the old and disabled fell
beside the road. Dont take anything with you,
the men in black ordered. You will be coming back
tomorrow.
Tomorrow never came. An age of slavery began. Anybody who
owned cars and such luxuries, anybody who
lived in a city or town or had a modern skill, anybody
who knew or worked with foreigners, was in grave danger;
some were already under sentence of death. Out of the
Royal Cambodian Ballet company of 500 dancers, perhaps 30
survived. Doctors, nurses, engineers, teachers were
starved, or worked to death, or murdered.
For me, entering the silent, grey humidity of Phnom Penh
was like walking into a city the size of Manchester in
the wake of a nuclear cataclysm which had spared only the
buildings. There was no power, no drinking water, no
shops, no services of any kind. At the railway station
trains stood empty at various stages of interrupted
departure. Personal belongings and pieces of clothing
fluttered on the platforms, as they fluttered on the mass
graves beyond.
I walked along Monivong Avenue to the National Library
which had been converted to pigsty, as a symbol, all its
books burned. It was dream-like. There was wasteland
where the Gothic Roman Catholic cathedral had stood; it
had been dismantled stone by stone. When the afternoon
monsoon rains broke, the deserted streets were suddenly
awash with money. With every downpour a worthless fortune
of new and unused banknotes sluiced out of the Bank of
Cambodia, which the Khmer Rouge had blown up as they fled.
Inside, a cheque book lay open on the counter. A pair of
glasses rested on an open ledger. I slipped and fell on a
floor brittle with coins.
For the first few hours I had no sense of even the
remains of a population. The few human shapes I glimpsed
seemed incoherent, and on catching sight of me, would
flit into a doorway. A child ran into a wardrobe lying on
its side which was his or her refuge. In a crumbling Esso
filling station an old woman and three emaciated infants
squatted around a pot containing a mixture of roots and
leaves, which bubbled over a fire fuelled with paper
money: such grotesque irony: people in need of everything
had money to burn.
At a primary school called Tuol Sleng, I walked through
what had become the interrogation unit and
the torture and massacre unit. Beneath iron
beds I found blood and tufts of hair still on the floor.
Speaking is absolutely forbidden, said a sign.
Before doing something, anything, the authorisation
of the warden must be obtained.
After a while, one sound had a terrible syncopation:
rising and falling day and night. Without milk and
medicines, children were stricken with preventable
disease like dysentery. It seemed that the very fabric of
the society had begun to unravel. The first surveys
revealed that many women had stopped menstruating.
What compounded this was the isolation imposed on
Cambodia by the West because its liberators, the
Vietnamese, had come from the wrong side of the cold war,
having driven America out of their country in 1975.
Cambodia had been the Wests dirty secret since
President Richard Nixon and his national security adviser
Henry Kissinger ordered a secret bombing,
extending the war in Vietnam into Cambodia in the early
1970s, killing hundreds of thousands of peasants.
If this doesnt work, an aide heard
Nixon say to Kissinger, itll be your ass,
Henry. It worked in handing Pol Pot his chance to
seize power.
When I arrived in the aftermath, no Western aid had
reached Cambodia. Only Oxfam defied the Foreign Office in
London, which had lied that the Vietnamese were
obstructing aid. In September 1979, a DC-8 jet took off
from Luxembourg, filled with enough penicillin, vitamins
and milk to restore some 70,000 children -- all of it
paid for by Daily Mirror readers who had responded to my
reports and Eric Pipers pictures in two historic
issues of the paper which sold every copy.
Following on from the Mirror, on October 30, 1979, ITV
broadcast Year Zero: the silent death of Cambodia, the
documentary I made with the late David Munro. Forty sacks
of post arrived at the ATV studios in Birmingham, with £1
million in the first few days. This is for Cambodia,
wrote an anonymous Bristol bus driver, enclosing his
weeks wage. An elderly woman sent her pension for
two months. A single parent sent her savings of £50.
People expressed that unremitting sense of decency and
community which is at the core of British society.
Unsolicited, they gave more than £20 million. This
helped rescue normal life in faraway country. It restored
a clean water supply in Phnom Penh, stocked hospitals and
schools, supported orphanages and re-opened a desperately
needed clothing factory.
Such an extraordinary public outpouring broke the US and
British governments blockade of Cambodia.
Incredibly, the Thatcher government had continued to
support the defunct Pol Pot regime in the United Nations
and even sent the SAS to train his exiled troops in camps
in Thailand and Malaysia. Last March, the former SAS
soldier Chris Ryan, now a best-selling author, lamented
in a newspaper interview when John Pilger, the
foreign correspondent, discovered we were training the
Khmer Rouge in the Far east [we] were sent home and I had
to return the £10,000 wed been given for food and
accommodation.
Today, Pol Pot is dead and several of his elderly
henchmen are on trial in a UN/Cambodian court for crimes
against humanity. Henry Kissinger, whose bombing opened
the door to the nightmare of Year Zero, is still at large.
Cambodians remain desperately poor, dependent on an often
seedy tourism and sweated labour.
For me, their resilience remains almost magical. In the
years that followed their liberation, I never saw as many
weddings or received as many wedding invitations. They
became symbols of life and hope. And yet, only in
Cambodia would a child ask an adult, as a twelve-year-old
asked me, with fear crossing his face: Are you a
friend? Please say.
www.johnpilger.com
Year Zero: The Silent
Death of Cambodia
A Documentary Film By
John Pilger
John Pilger vividly reveals the
brutality and murderous political ambitions of the Pol
Pot / Khmer Rouge totalitarian regime which bought
genocide and despair to the people of Cambodia while
neighboring countries, including Australia, shamefully
ignored the immense human suffering and unspeakable
crimes that bloodied this once beautiful country.
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article13769.htm
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