Google – AFP,
Michelle Fitzpatrick (AFP), 13 November 2012
![]() |
Many Khmer
Rouge survivors have kept their sexual traumas secret (AFP/File,
Tang Chhin
Sothy)
|
PHNOM PENH
— For three decades the scars branded onto Kim Khem's arms have been a reminder
of the sexual torture she saw under the Khmer Rouge. Now, aged 80, she is
finally breaking her silence on the horrors of the past.
"They
did bad things and if I continue to hide it, it's like hiding an enemy in my
village," she told AFP of the Khmer Rouge troops who terrorised fellow
female inmates at a detention centre in Cambodia in the late 1970s.
![]() |
Cambodia's
killing fields (AFP/
Graphic)
|
She went on
to describe a brutal sexual assault inflicted on one woman using the implement.
The soldiers then used the same scalding bar on her own arms, Kim said, sobbing
as she unbuttoned her white blouse to show thick, jagged scars across her
weathered skin.
In a
country raised on the proverb "men are like gold, women are like white
cloth" -- implying that only the former can be cleaned after being stained
-- many Khmer Rouge survivors have kept their sexual traumas secret.
But a
growing number of women are now coming forward to shed light on a largely
hidden chapter of the country's "Killing Fields" era, when up to two
million people died from starvation, overwork, torture or execution.
Kim said
she outlived some 600 women at a prison in southern Takeo province after her
guards were apparently spooked that she had survived being clubbed into a mass
grave. Last month she told her story at a public forum in Phnom Penh.
![]() |
"I
speak on behalf of the dead
women," Khmer Rouge survivor
Kim Khem said
(AFP/File, Tang
Chhin Sothy)
|
Tearfully,
she recounted how women were taken from the facility to be "played
with" by soldiers, never to be seen again. She said while she did not
witness those rapes "I heard the screaming".
Kim decided
to speak at the two-day event after attending Cambodia's first
"truth-telling forum" last December, also organised by the non-profit
Cambodian Defenders Project (CDP).
"Sexual
violence under the Khmer Rouge was widespread but there has been little
research on it," said Duong Savorn from the CDP, which has set up a series
of events to raise awareness of the issue.
Led by the
late Pol Pot, the hardline Khmer Rouge dismantled modern Cambodian society,
broke up families and forced the population to work in huge labour camps in a
bid to create a communist utopia during its 1975-1979 reign.
Its three
most senior surviving leaders are on trial at Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes
court, but the case is expected to be the last prosecution by the tribunal and
sexual crimes are absent from the list of atrocities -- with the exception of
rape within forced marriages arranged by the Khmer Rouge.
![]() |
"As an
unmarried mother, I
could not hide that I had been
raped," Hong Savath
told AFP
(AFP/File, Tang Chhin Sothy)
|
This
position was not shared by the prosecution, which argued in vain that
"thousands of civilians were the victims of rape and sexual violence
sanctioned... or condoned by the authorities".
Duong, who
turned survivors' stories on the topic into a book last year, said he believed
more people would again be inspired to speak out after last month's
"women's hearing", which also heard stories from other conflict areas
including Nepal and Timor-Leste.
"There
is no hope of the (Khmer Rouge) court dealing with gender-based violence,
that's why we do this to give the victims a voice, a kind of healing to find
justice outside the judicial process," he added.
Kim, who
was imprisoned for daring to mourn the deaths of her mother and husband, said
telling her story for the first time was painful but necessary.
"I was
afraid my children would be embarrassed by my history. But as long as I kept it
to myself my chest felt heavy," she told AFP.
In another
testimonial at the forum, Hong Savath said that when she was just 14 she was
gang-raped by three Khmer Rouge cadres until she fell unconscious and was left
for dead in the jungle.
![]() |
A growing
number of women are
coming forward to shed light on a
hidden chapter of
Cambodia's "Killing
Fields" era (AFP/File, Tang Chhin Sothy)
|
"As an
unmarried mother, I could not hide that I had been raped," Hong, now 48,
told AFP. "Some people were okay, others discriminated against me."
Hong is now
taking part in the legal proceedings against the former regime leaders as a
civil party for the deaths of her relatives, but she expressed frustration the
court will not take her own experiences into account.
She said
participating in the public forum was a way of finding closure.
"If we
don't say anything, we'll regret it at the end of our lives. We have to tell
the world that Cambodians suffered sexual violence under the Khmer Rouge."
But not
everyone agreed that sharing memories was enough if the crimes went unpunished.
As the event drew to a close, an elderly Cambodian woman from the audience
stood up and took the microphone.
"I
can't describe all my suffering because it's too much," she began, before
asking how the victims could ever find "comfort".
"The
Khmer Rouge trial is going to finish soon... and the government has not yet
taken sexual violence (under the regime) seriously," she said.
"We
feel disappointed. We are like floating weeds in the river."





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.