Monday 16 December 2019

Choeung EK, Killing Fields

Today is another day in Phnom Penh, and the optional tour we chose to tour the Killing Fields.
The best known monument of the killing fields is at the village of Choeung Ek.
Today it is the site of a Buddhist memorial to the victims and Tuol Sleng has a museum commemorating the genocide.
Between 1975 and 1978, about 20,000 men, women, children and infants who had been detained and tortured at S-21 prison were transported to the extermination camp of Choeung Ek.
It is a peaceful place today, where visitors can learn of the horrors that unfolded here decades ago.
The site was a former orchard and has mass graves of victims of the Khmer Rouge, killed between 1975 and 1979.
The Khmer Rouge executed over one million people between 1975 and 1979.
Our journey to the fields was just under an hour, most of our group was very somber, after we had seen the documentary on Pol Pot and this genocide, being just a little over 40 years ago, very recent we did not know what to expect.
The photos posted may cause some anxiety, if sensitive do not look at them.
 The entry in the killing fields
 The monument with thousands of skulls, bones and torture instruments.
The monument from a distance
 Sign boards explains the execution process.
 The truck stop.

The chemical execution 
 Skulls of victims between 40 to 60 years of age.
 Femur bones with wires still attached.
 Mass grave of 450 victims
 This tree has thousands of bracelets attached to the trunk, infants heads were bashed against this tree, many thousands died.


 The barbs if the sugar palm, were used as swords, to save the bullets.
 Sign says it all.
 This is a photo of bones still buried in the dirt, when walking through the fields, we were walking on buried bodies, not all have been recovered.
 Explanation on the tree.
 Mass grave of victims without heads
 More bones
Strips of clothing, still half buried in the dirt.

More skulls
After our visit to the killing fields we then went to the Tuol Sleng museum.

 The Tuol Sleng genocide museum.
 Monument to the people that died.
 This elderly gentleman is a survivor of Pol Pot and is selling his story.

 The rules of execution
 This statue shows how, victims were left in the sun, dehydrated near death and if they went unconscious, there head would be dunked into the water jars to either rouse them or drown them.
 Graves of victims, no photos were allowed of the photos of victims being tortured.
More skulls.
Why did all this happen, according to history, the chaos and devastation caused by the war was spread through Indochina due to the US carpet bombing in Laos and Cambodia.
This resulted in the collapse of the US puppet regime in Cambodia and the rise of the Khmer Rouge.
You may ask what was Pol Pots goal......
To recreate the lost glory of Cambodia by annihilating all forms of external influence, transforming a diverse group of people into a cohesive working unit, eradicating family and society and starting the country from zero. Any real or perceived threat was killed.
DH and I have visited many holocaust sites, we both feel that these killing fields, being so recent was a tragedy that should not have happened, let it never be repeated.
This will be our last day in Cambodia, tomorrow we cross the border into Vietnam.
The tour so far has been very busy, with two tours daily, so the majority of us are looking forward to having a day and night of cruising for some R & R.



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