1 The killing fields – Cambodia – Thames Television
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Respected Thames TV journalist Julian Manyon returns to Cambodia with survivor Var Hong Ashe. In this emotional programme Var seeks out her mother, now living in the counties capital of Phnom Penh. In this documentary Julian Manyon also discovers that the Khmer Rouge are trying to make a return to power
First shown: 18/01/1990
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quote: VT50536
please note some scenes in this documentary some viewers may find distressing.
2 Cambodia Will Not Forget The Khmer Rouge (2000)
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30 okt 2018
Children of Genocide (2000) – Cambodian children play in the killing fields, telling stories of caves full of bones. But here the horrors really happened and the monsters are alive and well.
From 1975 to 1979 the Khmer Rouge killed a staggering 1.7 million people. In an orchestrated slaughter, more ambitious than even Hitler’s or Stalin’s, they exterminated almost a quarter of Cambodia’s population – old, young and babies. Today, nearly two years after the last remnants of the Khmer Rouge surrendered their arms, the victims of their genocide are still waiting for justice. So far not a single Khmer Rouge leader has been tried over the crimes. Instead, in recent years, the Government has granted the killers a series of amnesties to persuade them to give up their armed struggle.
What are the key points of the legacy of Pol Pot
Pol Pot was the leader of the Khmer Rouge, a communist party that ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. His regime was characterized by extreme brutality and resulted in the deaths of an estimated 1.7 to 2.2 million people. Here are some of the key points of his legacy:
- Genocide: Pol Pot’s regime is responsible for the genocide of the Cambodian people, particularly those who were perceived as enemies of the state. The Khmer Rouge targeted intellectuals, political dissidents, religious minorities, and anyone suspected of opposing the regime.
- Forced Labour and Collectivization: The Khmer Rouge implemented a policy of forced labour and collectivization, forcibly relocating people from cities to rural areas to work on communal farms. Many people were forced to work long hours without adequate food or medical care, resulting in widespread starvation, disease, and death.
- Education and Religion: The Khmer Rouge abolished formal education and persecuted religious groups, resulting in the loss of cultural and intellectual heritage.
- Trauma and Suffering: The legacy of Pol Pot’s regime is still felt by the Cambodian people today, with many survivors still suffering from the physical and psychological scars of the regime’s atrocities.
- International Criminal Tribunal: Pol Pot died in 1998, but his legacy lives on through the International Criminal Tribunal for Cambodia, which was established to prosecute those responsible for crimes committed during the Khmer Rouge regime.
Overall, Pol Pot’s legacy is one of extreme brutality and suffering. His regime caused the deaths of millions of Cambodian people and left a lasting impact on the country’s cultural and social fabric.
3 Killing Fields – The Horror of the Cambodian Genocide – [45 Years of War Speacial] – War Stories
In première gegaan op 19 jan 2022
When Pol Pot came to power, he immediately turned the country into a dictatorship with cruel outcomes.
Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
0:28 Pol Pot´s rise to power
1:28 Socialist Policies
3:05 Reforming Society
5:55 Killing Fields
8:05 The Purge
9:35 The Fall of the Khmer Rouge
4 – S21 – The Khmer Rouge Prison From Hell
5 Pol Pot – The Khmer Rouge & the Killing Fields Documentary
6 Pol Pot: The Man Behind the Khmer Rouge
7 The Lost World Of The Khmer Rouge: Pol Pot’s Cambodian Genocide | Timeline
3 aug 2019
Cambodia is a country of impenetrable jungles and ruins lost in time. Where kings became gods and monks still seek heavenly peace. Now, this mysterious land has begun to open up to reveal the dark beauty that has lured adventurers here for centuries. For more than 30 years, the jungles have been cut off from the modern world, and much of that time it has been a Khmer Rouge stronghold.
David Adams boldly penetrates these jungles to meet with former Khmer Rouge militants to enter the last bastion of the Khmer Rouge and visit the final resting place of one of the most ruthless killers in history, Pol Pot. Their new purpose is to protect the forests and the populations of endangered wildlife. Though jungles and along the river the trek is not easy, nor is it in vain.
8 De geschiedenis van Cambodja: Het verhaal van Pol Pot
12 dec 2018
Cambodja heeft een turbulente geschiedenis. Onder het regime van Pol Pot werden er in de jaren 70 bijna 2 miljoen inwoners vermoord. Dat was toen een kwart van de bevolking.
In de periode daarna werd het voor de buitenwereld langzaam duidelijk wat zich hier heeft afgespeeld. Er werden in het hele land meer dan 400 massagraven ontdekt. Ook wel Killing Fields genoemd. Een van de bekendste Killing Fields is die van Choeung Ek, net buiten Phnom Penh. Naast het bezoeken van de Killing Fields, is het bezoeken van de S21, Tuol Sleng Gevangenis, ook echt een aanrader.
Wil je meer weten over de geschiedenis van Cambodja of de bezienswaardigheden in Phnom Penh? Check m’n website voor meer informatie:
https://www.semopreis.nl/de-geschiede…
9 Death Of A Nation: The Khmer Rouge’s Cambodia
16 sep 2017
Video Edit: I heavily understate the UN’s role in jailing criminals in the video, and want to clarify. A number of Khmer Rouge leaders have been to jail, including the head of S-21 and Brother Number Two, due to their efforts.
Welcome to Season Two of Rare Earth. This is our first video from Cambodia, and as you might have guessed from the thumbnail, it isn’t exactly a happy story.
But, as it is impossible to understand modern Cambodia without knowing about the genocide, we feel obligated to make this the opener. Hopefully, it helps educate people on the horrors of the recent past, and how the results of instability can sometimes be worse than the war itself. We certainly grew as people while filming it.
10 Why the Khmer Rouge Po Chrey Massacre Was Worse Than We Thought
11 Bringing the Khmer Rouge to Justice (2004)
6 dec 2019
Khmer Rouge on Trial: Under the Khmer Rouge, almost a quarter of Cambodia’s population perished. Now a deal has been brokered to finally put its leaders on trial.
Up to 2 million people died in Cambodia under the Khmer Rouge; Samphan was one of its most fearsome heads. While Khieu Sampan now admits atrocities happened, he maintains he had no idea of the true extent. “In the Khmer Rouge regime, the head of state is under the discipline of the party,” he explains. But few believe him. “I don’t believe you could be a leader and not know that people under your supervision were killing people,” states victim Chhit Bun Hoeu. It seems that Samphan may have a tough job convincing the jury that ignorance makes him innocent.
12 Khmer Rouge’s Grip over Cambodia is Weakening (1995)
7 aug 2007
June 1995
The Khmer Rouge is waning in Cambodia. With defections becoming more common, even amongst senior members, it seems that the party’s days are numbered, especially as their leaders become increasingly elderly. For most normal Cambodians this is a blessed relief, as the reign of terror becomes a bad memory.
Cambodia badly needs international support. Tourists are starting to return to the beautiful ancient temples in the north of the country, although the recent killing of three foreigners has deterred many. The Khmer Rouge are being pushed back into the jungle and their leadership is growing old. Some supporters defected after they were ordered to burn villages in which they had relatives. In the south the government has persuaded a senior guerrilla commander to defect with several hundred fighters. In return it has turned a blind eye to his involvement in the kidnapping and murder of three Western hostages. Life with the government is better, but not yet perfect. Cambodia’s deputy prime minister admits that the corruption is a problem.
13 The Cambodian Genocide – Short History Documentary
14 Cambodia | Khmer Rouge | TV Eye |1979
15 Dateline: Cambodia, 1975 – ABC News
This episode of the ABC News series “The Eagle and the Bear” explores the events that led to Prince Sihanouk’s overthrow by Lon Nol in 1970. Also discusses the political situation which determined Cambodia’s fate, how the Khmer Rouge came to power, and its reign of terror.
16 A haven from the civil war, Cambodia’s Hotel Le Phnom | War Hotels
23 mrt 2022
Behind the elegant colonial facade of Hotel Le Phnom lie some of the grimmest stories of Cambodia’s brutal civil war.
When the Vietnam War spilled over into neighbouring Cambodia in the 1960s, journalists, cameramen and correspondents from around the world flocked to the Cambodian capital to cover the story.
They based themselves in Le Royal hotel, later renamed Le Phnom, which became “a home away from home”, a communications centre and a media headquarters during the long and bloody war.
Some of those reporters and media recall their experiences and relate the story of the war, through one of its enduring characters, this Cambodian war hotel.
17 The Khmer Rouge Rice Fields: The Story of Rape Survivor Tang Kim_Part 1
27 feb 2016
One night, newly married Tang Kim was told by the Khmer Rouge that she was being taken to live with her soldier husband. But instead, she and eight other women were sent to a rice field near her village for execution. Huddled on a dike with only one soldier to guard her, Tang Kim heard the screams of the other women being raped. Knowing she would be next, Tang Kim begged her guard for protection. But the other soldiers returned and raped her as well.
This documentary relates the story of Tang Kim (who is a Buddhist nun today) and her constant struggles to come to terms with what happened to her during the Khmer Rouge regime. It has been screened in Thailand, the Brussels Film Festival, the Prix Bruno Mersch Film Festival, and the Museum of Modern Art and Asian Cultural Council in New York. It was also nominated as a finalist at the 2005 US ASEAN Film, Video and Photography Festival. Earnings from DVD productions of the film are being used to support the education of Taing Kims children.
Copies of this film are available at the Documentation Center of Cambodias Public Information Room (66A Sihanouk Blvd., Phnom Penh, 023-211-875, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.).
18 The Khmer Rouge Rice Fields: The Story of Rape Survivor Tang Kim_Part 2
27 feb 2016
One night, newly married Tang Kim was told by the Khmer Rouge that she was being taken to live with her soldier husband. But instead, she and eight other women were sent to a rice field near her village for execution. Huddled on a dike with only one soldier to guard her, Tang Kim heard the screams of the other women being raped. Knowing she would be next, Tang Kim begged her guard for protection. But the other soldiers returned and raped her as well.
This documentary relates the story of Tang Kim (who is a Buddhist nun today) and her constant struggles to come to terms with what happened to her during the Khmer Rouge regime. It has been screened in Thailand, the Brussels Film Festival, the Prix Bruno Mersch Film Festival, and the Museum of Modern Art and Asian Cultural Council in New York. It was also nominated as a finalist at the 2005 US ASEAN Film, Video and Photography Festival. Earnings from DVD productions of the film are being used to support the education of Taing Kims children.
Copies of this film are available at the Documentation Center of Cambodias Public Information Room (66A Sihanouk Blvd., Phnom Penh, 023-211-875, Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m.).
19 The History of The Unluckiest Country In The World | Cambodia
20 The Sudden Demise of the Khmer Empire Explained
21 កំពង់ឆ្នាំង | KHMER ROUGE HISTORY | KAMPONG CHHNANG: CRIMES SITES IN MY VILLAGE
22 How The USA Brought Pol Pot To Power | Promo | Angkor Awakens
22 feb 2018
Before the Vietnam War was illegally and secretively extended into Cambodia, the country was ruled by a popular liberal monarch, who kept Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge at bay. However as American bombing of the Ho Chi Minh trailer expanded indiscriminately , more and more Cambodians were driven into the arms of the revolutionaries.
Cambodia is a nation split between the past and the future; tending to the savage wounds wrought upon its people by the Khmer Rouge, whilst preparing for a bright future through a young and determined new generation. This deep and incisive portrait of a vibrant and bustling country moves through verdant hills, ancient stone steps and swarming metropolises to reveal a past full of violence and pain, but also a future of hope and expectation.
23 – 1979 : La fin du régime des Khmers rouges | Archive INA
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7 jan 2019
Cambodge : un pays à refaire | TF1 | 12/04/1979
Reportage réalisé par Roger PIC au Cambodge en 1979. Les troupes vietnamiennes entraient alors pour libérer le pays d’un régime sanglant, le régime khmer rouge de Pol Pot. Entre 75 et 79, 2 millions de personnes ont été exécutées. Etat des lieux dans la ville de Phnom Penh, des réfugiés témoignent de leur vie sous le régime de Pol Pot et des traumatismes subis.
24 – 1975 : Le Khmers Rouges et le Vietnam dans “Les Dossiers De L’écran” | Archive INA
25 Plateau : spéciale Cambodge
26 Cambodian Communities Are Being Destroyed by Their Own Government
27 Cambodia, My New Home | 101 East
1 apr 2016
For thousands of asylum seekers, Australia represents the country of their dreams. But the government has declared that anyone who comes to Australia by boat will not be allowed to stay.
Instead, they are sent to detention centres on the island nations of Papua New Guinea and Nauru.
Unable to remain there indefinitely, refugees have been offered the chance to start a new life in Cambodia. But critics say the country is plagued by poverty and corruption. To date, only five refugees have taken up the offer.
101 East follows Cambodia’s resettled refugees and investigates the repercussions of this multimillion-dollar refugee transfer deal.
28 Cambodia: Dying for fashion | 101 East
21 mrt 2014 #AlJazeeraEnglish #Cambodia #GarmentWorkers
101 East – Cambodia: Dying for fashion
Cambodia’s largest export industry is facing its biggest crisis, with garment workers and security forces engaged in a series of ongoing clashes. One recent protest left five people dead and scores injured.
The violence comes after weeks of political and labour unrest crippled Cambodia’s garment industry.
While the international spotlight has focused on the garment factories of Bangladesh, Cambodia’s garment workers have been staging their own revolution. Hundreds of industrial strikes have left the industry in turmoil and presented Prime Minister Hun Sen with the toughest political challenge in his nearly three-decade rule.
Last year 381 industrial strikes were recorded, up from 102 the previous year. Backed by a powerful workers’ union, the nationwide strikes are fuelled by opposition-led, anti-government protests demanding Hun Sen’s resignation.
Cambodia began exporting garments in the 1990s. Low wages and an abundant workforce, powered mainly by the country’s rural population, have drawn major clothing brand names like GAP, H&M, Nike and Puma to Cambodia. Today, the industry is a $5bn-a-year business with almost 550 factories, mostly owned by Taiwanese, Korean, Chinese, Hong Kong and Singaporean companies.
The garment sector accounts for more than 80 percent of Cambodia’s exports and is the cornerstone of the country’s economy. Yet these fashion powerhouses pay their workers a pittance, and a series of tragedies threaten to shut down the industry.
Early last year, the ceiling of a shoe factory collapsed, killing three workers. The workers in the company, Wing Star Shoe, were working on Asics shoes. Eyewitnesses say that the heavy weight from the second floor caused the ceiling to collapse. Mass faintings are also common. Investigations show that garment workers typically toil in poorly ventilated factories, work long overtime hours to earn extra income and suffer from malnutrition.
We travel to Sihanoukville to investigate allegations that a factory producing shoes for Japanese international brand Asics has continued to hire underage workers despite repeated warnings.
Back in the capital Phnom Penh, frustrated workers have begun protesting outside factories, demanding better pay and working conditions. Strikes have become common. Following Bangladesh’s high-profile garment factory accidents, Cambodia’s union leaders and workers are demanding a minimum wage of $160 a month – $60 higher than what the government has offered.
Cambodia’s most recent strike began on December 24, 2013. Protests began with relatively minor clashes with police, who used tear gas and batons. But on January 3, 2014, military police armed with assault rifles fired into a defiant crowd gathered outside the Canadia Industrial Park area. Police said the workers were hurling objects at them. At least five people died and 23 were arrested.
“The situation is like a war,” Ath Thorn, the president of the Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union, says of the crackdown. He says demands for a higher minimum wage reflect Cambodia’s rising cost of living.
Cheam Yeap, a government spokesperson, estimates losses of $200m in the two-week nationwide strike. International clothing retailers like Adidas and H&M have stepped forward to say they oppose the violence and called on the government to find a peaceful solution, stating that the workers have a right to safe working environments. But Ken Loo from the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia believes increasing the minimum wage will result in manufacturers closing down their factories and leaving Cambodia in search of cheaper options. He says the unions “are being silly” with their demands.
101 East examines the stalemate and asks, will the garment workers get what they deserve or will they continue to be fashion’s victims?
29 Cambodia’s Orphan Business: The Dark Side of ‘Voluntourism’ | REWIND
15 sep 2019
After emerging from more than two decades of war in the 1990s, Cambodia has relied heavily on tourism to rebuild its economy.
It is one of the top destinations for young travellers, many of whom sign up with global volunteering companies.
‘Voluntourists’, however, may be unwittingly fuelling the exploitation of children in poorly regulated orphanages.
Reports of child neglect and appalling living conditions, as well as stories of orphanage directors embezzling donor money, have emerged.
Companies that organise volunteers are also accused of exploiting tourists and children for profit.
In 2012, reporter Juliana Ruhfus travelled to Phnom Penh to investigate. She spoke to children, volunteers and orphanage staff, as well as activists working to stem child abuse in the country. She also went undercover as a volunteer to understand just how little protection children had in a failing orphanage.
Seven years on, Ruhfus reflects on what she discovered there, beginning with why so many children end up in orphanages in the first place.
“The vast majority of the children in these so-called ‘orphanages’ actually do have parents,” she says. “There are people who go around and who effectively recruit these children. They say to the parents that the children are going to get a great education, that they’ll be in touch with lots of Westerners, and the parents allow these recruiters to take the children and then they get put into these ‘orphanages’, and … some of these orphanages are a money-making machine.”
She says that many of the children who grow up away from family, looked after by caregivers and volunteers who come and go, can be traumatised.
“A lot of the children are really damaged. They are damaged firstly because they are being taken away from their parents, and then secondly a lot of them … have what is called an attachment disorder. So that they continuously get attached to a new person; a new volunteer plays with them, showers them with affection, and then leaves very quickly.”
For Ruhfus, posing as a volunteer and requesting to have a day out with some of the children was the most difficult part of covering the story. Without any vetting process, she and her team were allowed to pick any children they wanted and walk out with them. While Ruhfus had a social worker with her for her and the children’s protection, she was shocked by how little oversight they had.
“It was extraordinary because actually, Cambodia is a country that has a well-known problem with child abuse, especially with paedophilia,” she says. “So the idea that we could take these children out without any supervision was quite astounding, and that is really the thing that hit me. I was so focused on ‘Will this happen, can we take the kids out’ that when we finally sat with these kids in the car it was actually quite emotional, because we had this sense, we were driving off with them in a car, and we could have done absolutely anything to these kids.”
But she says awareness has improved over the years since filming.
“On an international level, the awareness has really grown,” she says, pointing to the example of Australia, which has made the trafficking of children into orphanages illegal, deeming it a modern form of slavery.
“In Cambodia itself, the authorities have reacted to some degree. They have shut down some orphanages and they have worked with international agencies like the UN and also international organisations to close these orphanages down and actively reunite the children from orphanages with the families where possible. But also … some of the companies that run voluntourism schemes have decided to ban the sending of untrained volunteers into orphanages.”
31 JFL Hidden Camera Pranks & Gags: Explosive Toilet
Man goes in, toilet explodes, man goes out. Bystanders look in shock and awe that he managed to escape unharmed.