The Star Malaysia

Forgetting a deadly past

Cambodia marks 40th anniversar­y of Khmer Rouge ouster

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Cambodia marks the 40th anniversar­y of the end of a brutal Khmer Rouge regime.

Phnom Penh: Tens of thousands of Cambodians packed a stadium in Phnom Penh to celebrate the 40th anniversar­y of the expulsion of the brutal Khmer Rouge regime – a day strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen called the country’s “second birthday”.

The ultra-Maoist Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, installed a reign of terror in 1975 that left two million Cambodians dead from starvation, hard labour, torture and mass executions.

It ended on Jan 7, 1979, when Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rouge cadre, led Vietnamese forces into the capital to expel the murderous regime.

The 66-year-old premier hailed the day as Cambodia’s “second birthday” at an elaborate ceremony in Phnom Penh’s Olympic Stadium, where he was joined by traditiona­l Khmer apsara dancers and marching bands.

“Today we celebrate this ceremony in order to recall unforgotte­n memories of the most heinous crimes of Pol Pot’s group,” Hun Sen told the crowd, and thanked Vietnam for saving the country.

A UN-backed tribunal found two top Khmer Rouge leaders guilty of genocide in a landmark ruling in November.

The feisty prime minister – who has ruled the country for 33 years – also took the opportunit­y to revisit history, hitting back at countries which continued supporting the Khmer Rouge after its ouster.

“These countries ... boasted about humanitari­an and human rights and democracy (but) unjustly blocked when the people needed assistance from the internatio­nal community,” he said, without naming any specific nation.

After the regime was toppled in 1979, Hun Sen found his Vietnambac­ked government caught between geopolitic­al forces as the United States sought to keep the ousted Khmer Rouge at the table in the United Nations.

The South-East Asian country in recent years has tilted towards China thanks to loans for infrastruc­ture and few complaints on human rights issues.

Last July, his party won a much-criticised election handily, after his government dissolved the country’s main opposition group and jailed its leader – effectivel­y turning Cambodia into a one-party state.

Hun Sen yesterday vowed to “deny the actions of extremist opposition politician­s and the foreign circle behind them”, claiming that they were trying to push Cambodia from a democratic path.

Critics say Hun Sen’s 33-year reign, as one of the longest serving premiers in the world, has created a more repressive Cambodia, where journalist­s, rights defenders and opposition politician­s are routinely jailed for dissent. — AFP

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 ??  ?? Pretty as a picture: Dancers lining up to perform during the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) ceremony to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime at the National Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh. — AFP
Pretty as a picture: Dancers lining up to perform during the Cambodian People’s Party (CPP) ceremony to mark the 40th anniversar­y of the fall of the Khmer Rouge regime at the National Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh. — AFP
 ??  ?? Huge turn-out: Thousands attending the 40th anniversar­y celebratio­ns at the National Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh. — AP
Huge turn-out: Thousands attending the 40th anniversar­y celebratio­ns at the National Olympic Stadium in Phnom Penh. — AP

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