Alert icon
We're changing our privacy policy. This stuff matters.  Learn more  Dismiss

Cambodia: THE FORCED LABOR OF ANGKAR LEU/CAP TREN 1975-79 (8/11) [KH-EN]

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
9,324
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Jun 12, 2009

Toward the end of morning a platoon of the young victors marched into the grounds of the Preah Ket Melea Hospital. Many of the doctors had already fled, and here, as in most other hospitals, patients lay untended in filth and agony. A mother had been sitting motionless with her children; she waved the flies off the bloated, patchy body of one dying baby. Wrapped in brown paper beside her, its feeding bottle by its head, lay the dead body of her other child. A soldier with a gaping, untreated stomach wound gasped for water he could not have swallowed. The corridors, on which bodies, alive and dead, were piled, were awash with blood and excrement.
The soldiers marched through the wards, and then they ordered all those patients who could walk to get off their beds and push out through the doors those who could not move. And so, in the heat of the day, a most dreadful parade began.
From hospitals all over the city crawled and hobbled the causalities of the war, the first victims of the peace. Men with no legs bumped down stairs, and levered themselves on skinny arms along the street; blind boys laid their hands on the shoulders of crippled guides, soldiers with one foot and no crutches dragged themselves away, parents carried their wounded children in plastic bags that oozed blood. Beds were pushed slowly, jolting along, the blood and plasma bottles breaking. One father stumbled through the heat with his daughter tied in a sheet around his neck. A man with a foot hanging only by skin to the end of his leg begged Father Francois Ponchaud, a Jesuit priest, for refuge as he passed his house. The priest refused him, feeling as he did so that he had lost the last shred of human dignity.
When the hospitals had been emptied, it was the turn of the ordinary townspeople and the refugees. They were ordered to abandon their houses, their apartments, their shacks, their camps. They were told to take with them only the food they could carry. Those who were separated from their families were not allowed to seek them. No demurral was allowed. As the sun began to sink that afternoon, men, women and children all over Phnom Penh straggled bemused out of the side streets and onto the highways. The roads became clogged; people could shuffle forward only a few yards at a time. In the crush, hundreds of families were split, and as they moved on more and more people fell under the strain. The old and the very young were the first to go; within a few miles of the city centre more and more bodies were to be seen lying where their relatives had been forced to leave them.
Out on the roads the evacuees found that the Communists had accumulated stocks of food in places. But theses and supplies of water were not adequate for more than two and a half million people. When the townspeople asked how they were to eat, where they could find drugs, where they to go, the response was one with which they were soon to become familiar. Angkar or Angkar Leu- The Organisation or Supreme Organisation-would provide. Angkar would instruct them. The nature of Angkar was not clear to the evacuees at first, but within hours millions of Cambodia ns had realized that its orders, transmitted through the fierce young soldiers who supervised their trek, were to be obeyed instantly, and that complaints were often met by immediate execution. As they walked into that first night of April 17 1975, they were told that from now on only Angkar ruled and that Cambodia was beginning again. This was Year Zero.

Taking this opportunity, Yuon Hanoi and Khmer puppets of Yuon who were the members of Khmer Peoples Revolutionary Party were former Khmer-Vietminh who jumped to take victory on 17 April 1975 at once, and then they reformed Kampuchea into the killing fields:
To masquerade, to mislead the international opinions and Khmer people. They formed this secret name was Mysterious Anonymous Higher Organisation who were the darkest commanders.
Look, Angkar Leu/Cap Tren who were shadowy and had only names like this evil spirit. Why were they so mysterious powerful? To answer reaffirming to Khmer brothers that because there were tens of thousands of Bo Dois who are the immortal strenuous armies on alert giving secret forces to Angkar Leu/Cap Tren.
Look! From 1970 to 1978, having complicity with Bo Dois to have killed gentle Khmers madly as the real landlords of Kampuchea.
Vietnamese leaders/Angkar Leu/Cap Tren always try to cover up whatever they have done against Khmers from the past up until today. But they cant conceal anything from the outside world and the Cambodians anymore because they could not kill all Khmers in one day. There is no other race on earth who can commit crimes against humanity like Yuon can. They have patiently tried every means to kill Khmers in many Brutal Tricky Genocidal ways:

Category:

Education

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 0 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (8)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • fuck that i couldnt kill anyone upon force whether my life or theirs...id rather die sacrificing mine. hope my mom didn't kill anyone!

  • it's very very very sad..

  • @waynealarsen

    you can find and play the playlist from the channel!

  • @thysawonn the skull crushing is grusome

  • I wish you would tell us which part is which. I'd like to watch it in order. I am still wondering where her Daughters are

  • i agree much  much better

  • very sad

  • This movie is much better than a " killing Field one"

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more