In the interest of encouraging participation in this blog, I've posted a photo of past meal I enjoyed. Guess the dish... ? Answer forthcoming.
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Suicide prevention
One of the upper floors of a Toul Sleng prison bldg. Toul Sleng used to be a large high school complex. During the Khmer Rouge period, 1975-1979 it was converted into a prison in which the urban class, intelligentsia, and former regime members were kept for interrogations and ultimately death. The barbed wire in the picture here was constructed for the purpose of preventing prisoners from escaping the prison via suicide. The primary strategy of the Khmer Rouge was to take Cambodia back to "Year Zero" which means all technology, education, modernity were destroyed in the name of starting all over again. In the end, arguably the Khmer Rouge succeeded. while no census could define how many truly died but it is suspected to have been in the millions. In the immediate aftermath of the Khmer Rouge regime.. only 7 Cambodians in the country possessed law degrees. The medical profession and pretty much all educational institutions were utterly destroyed. In some ways it speaks a great deal for the Khmer people and their ability to revive since the society has made immense strides in almost all areas since the 1980s. Particularly in light of the fact that while the Khmer Rouge were ousted by the Vietnamese army in 1979, they continued to fight an intense war against the Vietnamese and the Cambodian "government" into the late 1990s.
Saturday, June 28, 2008
A cell in Toul Sleng
This is a room in Toul Sleng. It contained 1-2 people. As you can see it is barely much more than a closet space. Now also imagine that if you were imprisoned here, your legs were shackled to the floor/wall 24/7 with the exception of the random times that they removed you from the room for your confession or interrogation period. I will refrain from posting many photos and commentary for respect for those who passed through these halls but I think the few photos I did post will suffice to give at least a glimpse into the horrors of S-21. A prison which saw 20,000 human beings and only allowed 7 to survive.
Toul Sleng Floor 1
One thing that immediatly comes to mind when walking these halls is the question of "how could this happen?" "Who could possibly perpetrate such horrific acts against other human beings and be able to look at themselves in the mirror the next day?" These and many other questions inevitably arise in any visit to a genocide museum, death camp, killing field, or mass gravesite. We asked these questions after World War II, Rwanda, Yugoslave, Sierra Leone, Cambodia, East Timor, and many other locations. There are always answers that one can find specific to the circumstances of these horrors but inevitably I suspect we always arrive at the overall common idea that human beings in all cultures carry with them the seeds for great achievment... as well as horrific depravity. I think its all too easy and lazy of us to simply dismiss war crimes, human rights violations, and genocidal campaigns to the unique byproducts of these horrible regimes but I think we do greater justice to genocide studies and international legal institutions if we devoted not only our efforts to the post-campaign, post-conflict application of justice.. but also to strategies and tools for prevention. The first step in doing this perhaps is coming to the realization that acts of genocide, war crimes, and human rights abuses are not anomalies of our contemporary era or byproducts of contemporary ideological movements but a human condition that must be addressed and dealt with both in terms of retributive victims' justice as well as preventative measures for denying regimes the ability to sacrifice human life for utopian dreams.
On a more somber - Toul Sleng Prison
Read this and see above postings. This is posting 1 on the Toul Sleng Prison, known as S-21 run by Duch (pronounced Doik) who is currently charged for crimes against humanity and other related offences in the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, ECCC. Of the 20,000 prisoners who passed through S-21, only seven (7) survived. That means 99.97 percent of all people to go through this prison died.
Friday, June 27, 2008
Tree 1, Temple 0
Rich life or a life that is rich?
Dining on a Non-Vegetarian-Non-Meat Diet
Frolic and Detour
Even monkeys in Southeast Asia can be morbidly obese!!! Yes that is his gut touching the ground. When we arrived on the road where this small herd of young marsupials (sic- spelling?) decided to congregate we discovered that not only had we discovered an eager band of monkeys happy to partake of our food.. but they were eager to eat all food. apparently this monkey herd has abandoned it foraging skills to take up tourist operations on the road into the angkor wat temple complex. This guy off hand.. was marked by the Khmer as "Boss Monkey." As soon as we saw him.. all our tuk tuk Khmer drivers.. began pointing at him, saying "He .. Boss Monkey!... He the Boss." Even the Khmer know a Boss Monkey when they see him. Note to Self.. Big Gut = Big "Respect."
Thursday, June 12, 2008
A detour
the internet in cambodia is far from advanced and recent assignments and events have kept me from this board. I've decided to divert to my current work and get comments on it. Right now I am working on judicial independence and impartiality for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia. I don't expect the readers of this blog to understand the multitude of issues in this topic but maybe I can put my work on this board finally as I move ahead in some of work research. Basically the ECCC is under enormous pressure. It is faced with a cultural, political and social climate that appears to hinder its every move. This is to be expected. The Court is far from an ideal structure for dealing with the war crimes and crimes against humanity of Khmer Rouge leaders perpetrated more than 30 years ago. To compound the problems of the ECCC, it must prosecute these leaders within the Cambodian Court system using a majority of Cambodian justices and a supermajority rule that prevents any decision from being determined without the concurrence of an international judge. The issues go on and on of course. Probably more than could be stated in any blog. But regardless, I'll end with a question that ultimately strikes at the heart of any international war tribunal: What is the purpose of international law? Is it more appropriate to consider these courts as mediums for conferring legitimacy to victorious powers (i.e. Nuremberg's victor's justice) or should we really adhere to strict rules of procedure in order to truly live up to the concepts of justice? Of course the former seems wrong today, but we mustn't forget that for prosecutiorial goals, Nuremberg was extremely successful. Some Nazis were acquitted but the majority were prosecuted and done so quite quickly. On the other hand, it recieved much criticism for putting biased judges on the court as well as lacking many procedural safeguards and imposing retroactive laws. One justice in Tokyo was actually a Bataan Death March survivor! On the other hand, we have the ICTY -dealing with Yugoslav criminals. The Prosecutor followed a much more strict regimen in building the case against the Yugoslav war criminals, so much so that Milosovec died before even receiving a sentence! The difficulty in prosecuting war criminals is always compounded by politics and this explains my initial discussion on Law, Politics and Culture. However due to time constraints and technological difficulties, I decided to jump to the chase and move right into the primary topic for this blog.
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