WORLD: The trial of a Khmer Rouge torturer
WORLD: The trial of a Khmer Rouge torturer --- In
the latest issue of Torture
Magazine
(Hong Kong, 30
September 2016) "The evacuations and arrests were
just part of a larger Khmer Rouge project of mass social
engineering which involved obliterating everything that
smacked of capitalism, privatism, and class oppression,"
writes Alexander Laban Hinton, Founding Director, Center for
the Study of Genocide and Human Rights and Professor of
Anthropology at Rutgers University. He is the co-editor
ofColonial Genocide in Indigenous North America,
published by Duke University Press, and author of the
award-winning Why Did They Kill?: Cambodia in the Shadow
of Genocide.
"Broadly, the Khmer Rouge targeted
Buddhism, the family, village structure, economic activity,
and public education - key sociocultural institutions in
prerevolutionary Cambodia. More specifically, they sought to
eliminate corrupting influences from the past by banning
non-revolutionary art and styles, destroying and damaging
temples, curtailing media and communication, ending
traditional holidays and rituals, separating family members,
homogenising clothing, and eliminating private property,
including photos and other mementos," Hinton
observes.
The full text of this essay is available in the
latest issue of the Torture: Asian and Global
Perspectives (Torture Magazine), to be published soon.
The essay was adapted from the author's forthcoming book,
which focuses on the commandant of the S-21 security centre
where thousands of unarmed civilians were eliminated. During
the Khmer Rouge's brutal reign in Cambodia in the
mid-to-late 1970s, a former maths teacher named Duch served
as the commandant of the S-21 security centre, where as many
as 20,000 victims were interrogated, tortured and
executed.
Meanwhile, focusing on enforced disappearances
in Sri Lanka, M.C.M. Iqbal argues, "the Government is
confronted with the legacy of persistent misrule by a regime
that believed itself invincible. Condoning and overlooking
the breaches of the rule of law by regime agents led to its
demise. If that pattern is allowed to continue unchecked and
appropriate remedial measures are not undertaken diligently,
the perpetrators of human rights abuses and disappearances
will continue to be a law unto themselves."
"The current
regime has to face the challenge of disciplining the very
same state machinery that brought disrepute to the previous
regime. The lessons learnt should not be in vain. The state
should henceforth be seen as the protector of its citizens
and not as the perpetrator of abductions, torture and
enforced disappearances. It should not also be seen as a
protector of those responsible for enforced disappearances
or other offences. The Disappearances Convention does not
condone enforced disappearances even when the country is at
war or in situations of internal political instability," he
continues.
M.C.M Iqbal is well known Sri Lankan Human
Rights activist who had been involved in conducting
inquiries and investigations into nearly 30,000 complaints
of disappearances of persons in Sri Lanka while serving with
Presidential commissions of inquiries appointed for this
purpose.
In his essay on violence, Henry Giroux argues,
"Popular culture not only trades in violence as
entertainment, it also delivers violence to a society
addicted to an endless barrage of sensations, the lure of
instant gratification and a pleasure principle steeped in
graphic and extreme images of human suffering, mayhem and
torture. Violence is now represented without the need for
either subtlety or critical examination."
Henry Armand
Giroux received his Doctorate from Carnegie-Mellon in 1977,
before becoming a professor of education at several
universities. He also served as the Director of the
Waterbury Forum in Education and Cultural Studies and
authored numerous of books and essays on the subject of
pedagogy.
Our regular columnists, Tisaranee Gunasekara,
Ron Jacobs, Binoy Kampmark, and Javeria Younes, provide
their contributions, while this issue’s guest column is
written by Phattranit Yaodam.
The online version of Vol.5
No. 2 will be available on www.torturemag.org
soon.
Finally, it is with pride that we inform
our readers and contributors across the globe that this is
the fifth anniversary of Torture: Asian and Global
Perspectives. After five years’ worth of publications, we
feel that we have produced a meaningful contribution to the
larger discourse centred on the eradication of the practice
of torture. As we work to rebrand the magazine to build our
audience and strengthen the anti-torture community network,
we thank you for your continued
support.
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The Asian Human
Rights Commission (AHRC) works towards the radical
rethinking and fundamental redesigning of justice
institutions in order to protect and promote human rights in
Asia. Established in 1984, the Hong Kong based organisation
is a Laureate of the Right Livelihood Award,
2014.