VOANews.com

Voice of America - Khmer

 
News in 45 Languages
In Prayers, Duch Seeks Forgiveness


23 June 2009

Jailed Khmer Rouge prison chief Duch, who is charged with orchestrating the deaths of 12,380 people, told the UN-backed tribunal Tuesday that his faith in God, discovered after the fall of the regime, had helped him overcome his dark past.

“Every time I worship Jesus Christ, I always pray for all the Khmer Rouge victims,” Duch told the tribunal on Tuesday. “I never missed my prayers for the dead victims, even when I was in [military] prison,” he said, following a screening of a short video featuring him replaying his role as chief of the notorious Tuol Sleng prison.

Duch, whose real name is Kaing Kek Iev, became a Christian in the mid-1990s, prior to his 1999 arrest and detention in military prison. He said on his birthday every year he would make offerings, even when he was in jail, “to console the spirits of the dead.”

In response to Duch’s expression of remorse, the Trial Chamber’s chief judge, Nil Non said he could do that “later.”

Duch faces charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture and murder for his role as Tuol Sleng’s administrator.

In Tuesday’s apology, Duch referred specifically to the family of a former professor, Phuong Ton, who was killed at Tuol Sleng after he returned from Europe.

Phuong Ton was a respected professor of international law, and one of his students, Kar Savuth, is currently a defense attorney for Duch. 


Download Pich Samnang report aired 23 June 2009 (712 KB)
Download  (MP3)
Listen to This Report Pich Samnang report aired 23 June 2009 (712 KB)
Listen (MP3)
E-mail This Article E-mail this article
Print This Article Print Version
  Cambodia News
Cambodia's Garment Workers Hit by Recession  Video clip available

  More Stories
Group Seeks to Keep Cambodian Arts Alive
NGOs Too Lack Resource Protection Capacity  Audio Clip Available
Cambodia Marks Independence Day  Audio Clip Available
Appeals Court Postpones Acid Attack Case  Audio Clip Available
Former King Remembered for Independence Day  Audio Clip Available
Thais Threaten to Close Cambodian Borders  Audio Clip Available
Journalist Handed Two Years for Disinformation  Audio Clip Available
Hun Sen in Tokyo To Discuss Mekong Development  Audio Clip Available
Thais Recall Ambassador Over Thaksin Job  Audio Clip Available
Tribunal Gives Update on Second Investigation  Audio Clip Available
National Budget Risks High Deficits: World Bank  Audio Clip Available
National Power Plan Outdated: Report  Audio Clip Available
Appeals Court Takes Up Acid Attack Case  Audio Clip Available
Thaksin Appointed ‘Adviser’ to Hun Sen  Audio Clip Available
Private Companies Prepare To Enter Stock Exchange  Audio Clip Available
Spirit of Tribunal Honors Victims: Official  Audio Clip Available
Carter To Visit Habitat for Humanity Homes  Audio Clip Available
Water Festival Wraps Up in Capital  Audio Clip Available
Opposition Accused of Border Post Destruction  Audio Clip Available
Thais Protest Over Soldiers on Border  Audio Clip Available
Beehive Radio Owner Dons Monk Robes  Audio Clip Available
Cambodia Mulls Resource Transparency Initiative  Audio Clip Available
‘Peace’ a Legacy of Sihanouk: Official  Audio Clip Available
New Tribunal Budget Anticipates More Indictments  Audio Clip Available
Opposition Lawmaker To Return from US  Audio Clip Available
‘Jungle Girl’ Falls Ill After Return to Forest  Audio Clip Available
Filmmaker Hopes to Bring Justice in Acid Attack  Audio Clip Available
Areas Near Lake Development Now Flooded  Audio Clip Available
Thais To Explain Thaksin Charges to Hun Sen  Audio Clip Available
H1N1 Claims Fourth Cambodian  Audio Clip Available
Katina Worshippers Barred from Remote Pagoda  Audio Clip Available
Sex Trade Continues Despite Laws: Group  Audio Clip Available
Telecoms Ordered to Allow Cross-Network Calls  Audio Clip Available
Appeals Court Upholds Fines for Mu Sochua  Audio Clip Available