NATE THAYER
As Pol Pot’s body
lies bloating 100 metres away in a spartan shack, exhausted Khmer Rouge leaders
gather in a jungle-shrouded ammunition depot filled with home-made mines and
crude communications equipment. Explosions of heavy artillery and exchanges of
automatic-weapons fire echo in the mountains as the Khmer Rouge’s remaining
guerrillas hold off government troops.
Ta
Mok, the movement’s strongman, vows to fight on, and blames his longtime
comrade-in-arms for the Khmer Rouge’s desperate plight. “It is good that Pol
Pot is dead. I feel no sorrow,” he says. Then he levels a bizarre accusation
against the rabidly nationalistic mass murderer: “Pol Pot was a Vietnamese
agent. I have the documents.”
A young Khmer Rouge
fighter, his leaders only metres away, leans close to a visiting reporter and
whispers in Khmer: “This movement is finished. Can you get me to America?”
Besieged
in dense jungles along the Thai border, the remnants of the Khmer Rouge are
battling for survival in the wake of three weeks of chaotic defections and the
loss of their northern stronghold of Anlong Veng. Having lost faith in the harsh
leadership of Ta Mok, several commanders are negotiating to defect to the
guerrilla forces loyal to deposed Prime Minister Norodom Ranariddh.
Ta Mok’s growing paranoia and
isolation were only some of the revelations to come out of an exclusive tour of
shrinking Khmer Rouge-held territory north of Anlong Veng the day after Pol
Pot’s death. Khmer Rouge cadres and Pol Pot’s wife recounted the last,
ignominious days of his life, as he was moved through the jungle to escape
advancing troops.
There was no visible evidence that
the former Cambodian dictator was murdered. Cadres say he died of a heart
attack on the night of April 15. In the days after his death, Khmer Rouge
envoys held secret peace talks in Bangkok with Cambodian Defence Minister Tea
Banh, and had their first direct contact with U.S. officials in more than two
decades. Yet at the same time, Khmer Rouge holdouts were joining up with
Ranariddh’s rebel forces, making it likely that the insurgency will continue as
Cambodia prepares for crucial elections
he Khmer Rouge
weren’t trying to expose their shaky future when they allowed a REVIEW reporter
to enter their territory, but to prove to the world that the architect of
Cambodia’s killing fields was indeed dead. Leading the way to Pol Pot’s house
to display the ultimate proof, a cadre warns against stepping off the path. “Be
careful, there are mines everywhere.”
The
sickly-sweet stench of death fills the wooden hut. Fourteen hours have passed
since Pol Pot’s demise, and his body is decomposing in the tropical heat. His
face and fingers are covered with purple blotches.
Khmer
Rouge leaders insist that Pol Pot, aged 73, died of natural causes. Already
visibly ill and professing to be near death when interviewed by the REVIEW in
October, he had been weakened by a shortage of food and the strain of being
moved around to escape the government offensive. “Pol Pot died of heart
failure,” Ta Mok says. “I did not kill him.”
That night, Ta Mok
had wanted to move Pol Pot to another house for security reasons. “He was
sitting in his chair waiting for the car to come. But he felt tired. Pol Pot’s
wife asked him to take a rest. He lay down in his bed. His wife heard a gasp of
air. It was the sound of dying. When she touched him he had passed away already.
It was at 10:15 last night.”
There
are no signs of foul play, but Pol Pot has a pained expression on his face, as
if he did not die peacefully. One eye is shut and the other half open. Cotton
balls are stuffed up his nostrils to prevent leakage of body fluids. By his
body lie his rattan fan, blue-and-red peasant scarf, bamboo cane and white
plastic sandals. His books and other possessions have been confiscated since he
was ousted by his comrades in an internal power struggle 10 months earlier. Two
vases of purple bougainvillea stand at the head of the bed. Otherwise, the room
is empty, save for a small short-wave radio.
Pol
Pot listened religiously to Voice of America broadcasts on that radio, but the
April 15 news on the Khmer-language service may have been too much to bear. The
lead story was the REVIEW’s report that Khmer Rouge leaders–desperate for food,
medicine and international support–had decided to turn him over to an
international tribunal to face trial for crimes against humanity. “He listened
to VOA every night, and VOA on Wednesday reported your story at 8 p.m. that he
would be turned over to an international court,” says Gen. Khem Nuon, the Khmer
Rouge army chief-of-staff. “We thought the shock of him hearing this on VOA
might have killed him.”
A week earlier, Nuon
had said that Pol Pot knew of the decision, but now he says the aging leader
had not been fully informed. “We decided clearly to send him” to an
international court, says Nuon, “but we only told him that we were in a very
difficult situation and perhaps it was better that he go abroad. Tears came to
his eyes when I told him that.”
Perched
nervously by the deathbed is Pol Pot’s wife, a 40-year-old former ammunition
porter for the Khmer Rouge named Muon. Clutching her hand is their 12-year-old
daughter, Mul. A peasant woman, Muon says she has never laid eyes on a
Westerner before. She corroborates Ta Mok’s account of Pol Pot’s death. “Last
night, he said he felt dizzy. I asked him to lie down. I heard him make a
noise. When I went to touch him, he had died.”
Pol Pot married her
after his first wife went insane in the 1980s as the Khmer Rouge tried to
survive in the jungle after their reign of terror was ended by invading
Vietnamese troops. Muon seems oblivious to her husband’s bloodstained past,
caught only in the anguish of the present.
“He
told me a few weeks ago: ‘My father died at 73. I am 73 now. My time is not far
away,’” she says. “It was a way of telling me that he was preparing to die.”
Reaching down to caress his face, she bursts into tears. “He was always a good
husband. He tried his best to educate the children not to be traitors. Since I
married him in 1985, I never saw him do a bad thing.”
Asked about his reputation as a mass-murderer, her lips
quiver and she casts a terrified glance at senior Khmer Rouge cadres hovering
nearby. “I know nothing about politics,” she says. “It is up to history to
judge. That is all I want to say.”
She has reason to be
terrified. “As to what I will do with his family, I haven’t decided,” says Ta
Mok. “If I let them go, will they say anything bad about me? Maybe they might
be used by Hun Sen,” he says, referring to his nemesis, the Cambodian premier.
Outside
the front door is a small vegetable garden tended by Pol Pot’s wife and
daughter; next to it, a freshly dug trench where Pol Pot and his family were
forced to cower as artillery bombarded the jungle redoubt in recent weeks.
Pol Pot’s last days
were spent in flight and fear of capture–a humiliating end for the man who
ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979. According to his wife and Khmer Rouge leaders,
he dyed his hair black on April 10 in a desperate attempt to avoid capture by
mutinying Khmer Rouge troops as he fled to the Dongrek mountains north of
Anlong Veng. “Pol Pot feared that he could be caught. By dying his hair he was
trying to disguise himself. For such a person to do that, it showed real fear
in his mind,” says Gen. Nuon.
The
guerrillas had been unable to provide their ousted leader with sufficient food
since being forced from their headquarters in late March. “For the last few
weeks he had diarrhea and we haven’t had much food because of the fighting with
the traitors,” recounts Ta Mok.
As
Pol Pot fled, the remnants of the movement he created 38 years ago crumbled
before his eyes. A few days before his death, he was being driven with his wife
and daughter to a new hideout by Gen. Non Nou, his personal guard. From his
blue Toyota Land Cruiser, Pol Pot saw Khmer Rouge civilians–cadres say around
30,000–who had been forced from their fields and villages by government troops
and Khmer Rouge defectors.
“When he saw the peasants and our cadres lying by the side of
the road with no food or shelter, he broke down into tears,” says Non Nou. His
wife echoes the account, and quotes Pol Pot as saying: “My only wish is that
Cambodians stay united so that Vietnam will not swallow our country.” Pol Pot
never expressed any regrets, she says. “What I would like the world to know was
that he was a good man, a patriot, a good father.”
Asked how she wanted
her father remembered, Pol Pot’s only child stands with her head bowed, eyes
downcast and filled with tears. “Now my daughter is not able to say anything,”
interjects Muon. “I think she will let history judge her father.”
History
will have to, because death has deprived the world of the chance to judge the
man responsible for the deaths of more than 1 million people.
Although Pol Pot has
cheated justice, other leaders of that regime remain at large, including Khieu
Samphan and Nuon Chea, who are sheltering with Ta Mok. Others, such as Keo Pok,
Mam Nay and Pol Pot’s former brother-in-law, Ieng Sary, have defected with
their troops to the government side since 1996.
Although
Pol Pot’s life will stand as the darkest chapter in Cambodian history, his
death is likely to be just a historical footnote. What’s more likely to affect
Cambodia’s future is the continuing disintegration of the Khmer Rouge. This is
prompting desperate attempts by what’s left of the movement to find security.
The day after Pol Pot
died, senior Khmer Rouge officials traveled to Bangkok, where they held secret
negotiations with Cambodian Defence Minister Tea Banh. There, they offered for
the first time to cooperate with elements of the Cambodian government. “Yes, we
are prepared to negotiate. We are in the process,” says Ta Mok. “But I am not
going to be a running dog of Vietnam like Ieng Sary. In a nutshell, we want to
dissolve the Hun Sen government and establish a national government that
includes all national forces.”
Interviewed
on April 18, one of the chief Khmer Rouge negotiators, Cor Bun Heng, said of
the unprecedented meeting: “It was a good beginning and cordial. But these
things take time.” Added the other senior negotiator, Gen. Nuon: “We believe
that the only way out is national reconciliation between all the parties. We
know that the entire Cambodian population wants peace.”
What’s
more, Nuon and Cor Bun Heng said they met secretly on April 17 with American
officials in Bangkok, and laid out their demands for a political settlement. It
was the first official, direct contact between the United States and the Khmer
Rouge for at least two decades. U.S. officials wouldn’t comment
In
the jungles, Ta Mok knows that his capture and trial is sought by the
international community. He wants to use Pol Pot’s death to wipe the slate
clean. “The world community should stop talking about this now that Pol Pot is
dead. It was all Pol Pot. He annihilated many good cadres and destroyed our
movement. I hope he suffers after death,” he says. He then asks a visiting
reporter to get hold of a satellite telephone for him, sketching a collapsible
phone he has seen. “I want a good telephone. One that I can call anywhere in
the world.”
But working the phone
will not prevent Ta Mok from rapidly losing the loyalty of his own commanders.
Privately, many of his top officers and cadres hold him responsible for the
collapse of the movement since he seized control from Pol Pot last July. “He is
very tired,” says a senior Khmer Rouge official. “No man can shoulder all the
political, diplomatic and military burdens by himself.” Others are less kind.
“He has no more support from many of his own people,” whispers one cadre. “But
we don’t know where to go. Cambodia has no good leaders.”
Fear
was in the faces of many leaders and cadres still holed up near the Thai
border–and for good reason. “There may be more traitors, it is normal. But in
the end they will all die,” Ta Mok says. He’s a man of his word: Three top
commanders arrested with Pol Pot last year were executed in late March because
some of the fighters who mutinied were loyal to them. “It was a decision made
by the people,” Ta Mok shrugs.
He gives the
impression of being increasingly out of touch with reality, seeing enemies
everywhere and unwilling to compromise. His brutal tactics are also a source of
unease among his remaining loyalists. “Our movement will only get stronger. We
have sent our forces close to Phnom Penh and they have carried out their tasks
successfully,” he says. The “task” he boasts of was the recent massacre of 22
ethnic Vietnamese, including women and children, in a fishing village in
Kompong Chhnang province.
The
REVIEW has learned that many of the estimated 1,600 guerrillas still nominally
under Ta Mok’s command have pledged allegiance to the forces loyal to
Ranariddh’s Funcinpec party, who occupy nearby jungles. Cadres say that in
negotiations with Funcinpec’s Gen. Nyek Bun Chhay, they have pledged loyalty to
Ranariddh’s party and agreed to force Ta Mok into “retirement.”
Scores
of uniformed Funcinpec troops, including senior commanders, are fighting
alongside Ta Mok loyalists north of Anlong Veng. Gen. Meas Sarin, a Funcinpec
commander and governor of Preah Vihear province before Hun Sen’s coup in July,
is present at Khmer Rouge headquarters. He says 600 Funcinpec troops are
fighting government forces alongside Ta Mok’s commanders. The heavy fighting
nearby is audible during the interview.
This
presents a political dilemma for Ranariddh. He has pledged to abide by a
Japanese peace plan that aims to create conditions for Funcinpec to campaign
freely ahead of the July elections–something Hun Sen has resisted. The Japanese
plan specifically calls for the severing of links between Funcinpec troops and
Ta Mok’s guerrillas. For the moment, Ranariddh is choosing denial. “I do not
have any cooperative relations with the Khmer Rouge,” he said on April 17.
“Rumours currently circulating to the effect that forces loyal to me are
supporting the Khmer Rouge forces in Anlong Veng are not true.”
That’s not the only
obstacle facing Japan and ASEAN as they try to find a formula that would allow
Ranariddh to return home to campaign for the polls. The job was already hard
enough for the Thai, Philippine and Indonesian foreign ministers who met King
Norodom Sihanouk in Siem Riep in mid-April. But then Sihanouk made it harder by
telling them Ranariddh should pull out of the elections–and Cambodian politics
altogether–and instead prepare to be king, according to furious Funcinpec
members.
Meanwhile,
Cambodia’s neighbors are becoming increasingly exasperated by the seemingly endless
war. Interviewed in Bangkok, Thai Foreign Minister Surin Pitsuwan expresses
optimism that elections could be held in Cambodia, but also voices a warning.
“Without a resolution to the Cambodian conflict, the region is being perceived
as insecure, unstable. That prevents further cooperation and development for
Asia,” he says, pointing to plans to develop the Mekong basin that are now
delicately poised.
China,
previously hesitant about taking part in the Mekong’s development, is now
willing to participate, Surin says. That means that Cambodia, at the heart of
the Mekong Basin, is now the major remaining obstacle. “The region is being
denied this development by the existing Cambodian conflict,” says Surin.
“Certainly, there is a sense of Cambodia fatigue in the international
community. Cambodians should realize that.”
Source: Blog SEPTEMBER 28, 2012.
Không có nhận xét nào:
Đăng nhận xét