-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

This was forwarded to me by or on behalf of Roger Bunn, U.K. coordinator of
MIHRA.org, currently campaigning on behalf of Burma OUT!
http://www.mihra.org/2k/burma.htm
Support a genuine war on drugs and Human Rights abuse:
THE OLYMPICS : SYDNEY 2000 Burma OUT!!


Dave Hartley
http://www.Asheville-Computer.com/dave


-----Original Message-----
From: Anja van Dijk [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, January 12, 1981 4:42 PM
To: 'Rob Rijbering, LKG Vietnam/KP'
Subject: Butcher of Cambodia set to expose Thatcher's role


Butcher of Cambodia set to expose Thatcher's role

Ta Mok, one of Pol Pot's genocidal henchman, who faces trial, tells Jason
Burke in Phnom Penh he will expose the West's part in training the Khmer
Rouge

Sunday January 9, 2000

In a small, dark, heavily guarded cell in Phnom Penh's main military prison
sits a man of 74, wizened, white-haired, one-legged. He is in good health
and surprisingly high spirits, given his grim future and grimmer past.
He is Ta Mok, also known as the Butcher or Chhit Chouen - possibly the
cruellest and most violent of the Khmer Rouge commanders who turned
Cambodia's green countryside into the killing fields.
The Prime Minister of Cambodia, Hun Sen, has hopes to try Ta Mok for his
crimes next month. Many in his shattered country are happy at the prospect.
Others, including many of the political leadership and bureaucracy, fear his
testimony will unveil their own roles during the time of Pol Pot's genocide.
The unease is not restricted to the small, desperately poor, swampy country
of 10 million that is modern Cambodia. For when Ta Mok takes the stand, his
lawyers promise, no one will be spared - least of all the Western leaders
who, they say, supported the Khmer Rouge despite the Maoist extremists'
atrocities being widely known.
The most damaging element, for Britain at least, of Ta Mok's court
appearance will be new evidence about how British troops and diplomats
helped the Khmer Rouge in their fight for power.
Contacted in his prison cell through an intermediary last week, he confirmed
to The Observer that the extent to which London and Washington helped the
Khmer Rouge in their fight to control Cambodia would be revealed during his
trial. The evidence will contradict statements made by Margaret Thatcher's
Government - which authorised the operation at the time.
Ta Mok's lawyer, Benson Samay, said the court would hear details of how,
between 1985 and 1989, the Special Air Service (SAS) ran a series of
training camps for Khmer Rouge allies in Thailand close to the Cambodian
border and created a 'sabotage battalion' of 250 experts in explosives and
ambushes. Intelligence experts in Singapore also ran training courses, Samay
said.
To allow Ministers to deny helping the Khmer Rouge, the SAS was ordered to
train only soldiers loyal to the ousted Prince Norodom Sihanouk, and the
liberal democrat former Prime Minister, Son Sann, who were fighting
alongside Pol Pot's Communists. However, Samay said the court would be told
the Khmer Rouge benefited substantially from the British operation.
'All these groups were fighting together - but the Khmer Rouge were in
charge. They profited from any help to the others. If they had won the war
outright, then Pol Pot would have been back in charge,' Samay said.
The Khmer Rouge and their allies were fighting against the Vietnamese-backed
puppet regime Hanoi had installed after ousting Pol Pot's extremist
Communists and exposing the horrors of the killing fields.
In a classic piece of Cold War realpolitik, Britain - prompted by the
Americans - appears to have given military assistance to the Khmer Rouge-led
coalition, despite knowing of Pol Pot's atrocities, in an attempt to limit
the power of the Soviet-backed Vietnamese.
'Thatcher, Reagan, Kissinger - they should all be on trial along with Ta
Mok,' Samay said last week. He said the court would also hear that
humanitarian supplies for Cambodian refugees in Thailand were diverted to
the Khmer Rouge with, he claims, the knowledge of the Americans and the
British. The court would also hear, he said, how the diplomatic support
offered by London and Washington to the coalition led by the Khmer Rouge was
'a great help and morale booster' for Pol Pot's troops. The coalition
retained the Cambodian United Nations seat throughout the Eighties.
Ta Mok's journey from jungle hideout to power to hideout and eventually to
prison last May is a powerful symbol of the political tides that have washed
over Cambodia in the past decades. In April it will be 25 years since Pol
Pot's Chinese-backed Maoist revolutionaries defeated a weak pro-US
government and entered Phnom Penh. They themselves were ousted by the
Soviet-backed Vietnamese four years later and for 15 years a vicious civil
war - fuelled by Cold War politics - racked the country.
The trial of Ta Mok and his Khmer Rouge colleague Kaing KhekIev (nicknamed
'Deuch') - who ran the regime's most notorious torture centre - is a litmus
test for this deeply scarred nation. Arguments over the format of
proceedings have yet to be resolved - the United Nations and human rights
groups fear the trial will be used by the government for political ends or
be a sham, or both. But it seems likely it will go ahead nevertheless. Few
feel, however, that anyone will be pleased by the outcome.
Not far from the prison where its former commander is being held, the Tuol
Sleng torture centre still stands. Its iron beds, manacles and electric
cables are intact, though tourists and groups of school children now walk
wide-eyed through its cells.
Overlooking the rusting barbed wire are the garish villas of the nouveaux
riches who have successfully exploited Cambodia's recent shift towards a
new, hugely corrupt, free-market economy. Outside its gates loiter half a
dozen beggars - dirty children and disabled victims of the mines that still
litter Cambodia's countryside - hoping to beg a few riels (Cambodia's
virtually worthless currency) from wealthy farang (tourists).
They know what should happen to Pol Pot's henchmen. 'They should all be
punished,' said Pheach Yui, 35, who lost his leg to a mine while fighting
against the Khmer Rouge 12 years ago. 'They should all be rounded up and
judged and punished for their sins. They should be in jail until they die.'
Yui is likely to be disappointed. There are thought to be 50,000 former
Khmer Rouge fighters in government positions. At least five are Cabinet
Ministers. Others have been effectively pardoned and live well. They include
Ieng Sary, the Khmer Rouge number three and Pol Pot's brother-in-law, Nuon
Chea, who was known as 'Brother Number Two' and Khieu Samphan, the
movement's one-time Prime Minister.
Even Ta Mok says that they should face punishment. 'I know about only a
fraction of what happened,' he told The Observer through an intermediary.
'You should ask Ieng Sary and the others too.' Several key Khmer Rouge
commanders are gen erals in the Cambodian army and look untouchable. Even
the Prime Minister himself was a Khmer Rouge cadre until being recruited by
the Vietnamese.
Ta Mok and 'Deuch' may end up being the only senior Khmer Rouge brought to
justice for their crimes. Pol Pot, the architect of the the massacres, died
in 1998 and no one else has been arrested or is likely to be.
Though some argue that 'national reconciliation' means forgetting the past,
to many the failure to bring the Khmer Rouge killers to justice merely
emphasises the cheapness of human life in Cambodia today.
The psychological scars of genocide and war are obvious everywhere. The
smallest incident can provoke extreme violence. The crime columns in the
press are almost grotesque: three men blow themselves, and a caf�, to bits
playing Russian roulette with an anti-tank mine; a man is murdered in a row
over whether the millennium bug is a hoax; a syphilitic farmer kills five
children and drinks their blood in the hope of being cured; a chess game
ends with one dead, two badly injured. Arguments over land regularly lead to
murder.
Attacks with acid have become more common. Last month a government
official's wife hideously burnt her husband's mistress by pouring five
litres of nitric acid over her while bodyguards held the screaming woman
down. Such 'crimes of jealousy' are increasing. Last summer Cambodia's most
famous actress was shot dead in the street. The press reported that her
murderers had been hired by the wife of the Prime Minister - her alleged
lover.
'There is an ingrained culture of might is right,' said one Western
diplomat. 'It needs very little to spark off appalling violence.' Armed
robbery is common and, as the police are corrupt and ineffectual, people
take the law into their own hands. Vigilante killings are routine, with even
novice monks and art students beating suspected robbers to death. The
customs and the military, often with the co-operation of senior members of
the government, collude in massive smuggling - of beer, drugs, people,
tropical hardwood and the country's archaeological heritage.
Cambodia has lost half its forests in the past 30 years, and the trees are
still falling fast. Last year soldiers used heavy equipment to break up 30
tonnes of stone carvings from 1,000-year-old archaeological sites before
loading them into army trucks and driving them to Thailand to sell to
dealers with rich Western clients. The military have even been reported to
have been extorting 'protection money' from those trying to conserve Angkor
Wat - Cambodia's world-famous jungle temple complex.
The level of development is appallingly low. Average life expectancy is 52,
one in five children dies before reaching the age of five, more than a third
of the population live below the poverty line and half the children show the
effects of malnutrition. Aids killed 6,000 people last year. The elite's
exclusive golf course, on the outskirts of Phomh Penh, charges $20,000
(�12,000) for membership, 80 times the average income.
Even the international community's well-meaning interventions often come
unstuck. The UN peacekeeping operation hugely boosted Aids in the country
and created a parallel dollar economy. A senior French aid worker was
reported to be pimping the orphans in his care.
Recently the partly British-funded Cambodian Mine Action Centre was found to
have been clearing land for former Khmer Rouge warlords. They included
Chhouk Rin - the commander who, in 1994, kidnapped and killed three Western
tourists including a Briton.
Khieu Phen is, like Ta Mok, an old man. He was 30 when the Khmer Rouge came
to power and lost his brothers, sisters and brother-in-law in the massacres.
He survived the killing fields - where he was forced to work 'day and night'
and watched 'sons forced to murder their fathers' - by working harder than
everyone else. Now he rides a scooter around Phnom Penh hoping to pick up a
passenger and earn enough for a bowl of noodles.
'Sometimes I think we are cursed,' he said. 'Everybody takes from this
country. So few people give anything. Everybody betrays us in the end.'

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