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... that nearly 2 million Cambodians died by starvation, torture or execution. ... the victims were guilty and deserved torture and death. ... (f) Torture; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Sample


1
Sample
dithpran.org
  • Cambodian Genocide Curriculum
  • Presented by
  • The Dith Pran Holocaust
  • Awareness Project, Inc.

2
Kingdom of Cambodia
dithpran.org
  • Main Language Khmer
  • Main Religion Buddhism (Theravada)
  • Population 14.8 million (UN, 2005)
  • Ethnic group Khmer, Vietnamese and Chinese
    minorities
  • Monetary unit 1 riel 100 sen
  • Climate  tropical humid climate rainy (monsoon)
    season (May to November) and dry season (December
    to April)
  • Capital Phnom Penh
  • Area 181,035 sq km (69,898 sq miles) Water
    2.5
  • Border countries Laos, Thailand, Vietnam
  • Major Exports Garments, Fisheries Products,
    Rubber
  • Major Export Trading Countries United States,
    Germany, UK, Singapore, Japan
  • Major Imports petroleum products, construction
    materials, vehicles and motorcycles, clothing
  • Source www.cambodia.org

3
Pol Pot
dithpran.org
  • Pol Pot was born in Cambodia in 1925. His
    original name was Saloth Sar.
  • In the late 1940s he lived for a time in France
    where he studied and joined the communist party,
    along with other individuals who would be part of
    his genocidal machine Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary,
    and Son Sen.
  • When Pol Pot and the communists went back to
    Cambodia, they helped fight against French
    colonization. In 1953 Cambodia won independence
    from the French. Ten years later, Pol Pot became
    Cambodias top leader of the Workers Party (or
    The Communist Party of Kampuchea).
  • By the mid to late 1960s, Pol Pot and the CPK
    began to wage guerilla warfare against Cambodias
    government from the countryside thus starting
    the Khmer Rouge movement.

4
The Khmer Rouge Emergence
Dithpran.org
  • The name Khmer Rouge means Red Khmer or
    Communist Khmers.
  • In 1970, with U.S. support, Lon Nol overthrow
    Prince Sihanouks government of Cambodia and
    became the countrys president. Sihanouk joined
    forces with the Khmer Rouge to oust Lon Nol.
    Sihanouk asked for assistance from the Vietnamese
    who then trained and armed the Khmer Rouge in the
    countryside.
  • The Khmer Rouge became popular in the countryside
    with their ideologies of workers equality,
    anti-imperialist sentiment, and the
    misinformation that the KR would reinstate Prince
    Sihanouk as head of state.

5
The Khmer Rouge Victory
dithpran.org
  • On April 17th, 1975 the Khmer Rouge, a communist
    guerrilla group led by Pol Pot, took power in
    Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia. They forced
    all city dwellers into the countryside and to
    labor camps. During their rule, it is estimated
    that nearly 2 million Cambodians died by
    starvation, torture or execution. 
  • The Khmer Rouge turned Cambodia to year zero.
    They banned all institutions, including stores,
    banks, hospitals, schools, religion, and the
    family. Everyone was forced to work 12 - 14 hours
    a day, every day. Children were separated from
    their parents to work in mobile groups or as
    soldiers. People were fed one watery bowl of soup
    with a few grains of rice thrown in. Babies,
    children, adults and the elderly were killed
    everywhere. The Khmer Rouge killed people if they
    didnt like them, if didnt work hard enough, if
    they were educated, if they came from different
    ethnic groups, or if they showed sympathy when
    their family members were taken away to be
    killed. All were killed without reason. Everyone
    had to pledge total allegiance to Angka, the
    Khmer Rouge government. It was a campaign based
    on instilling constant fear and keeping their
    victims off balance.

6
Aftermath of Khmer Rouge
dithpran.org
  • After the Vietnamese invaded and liberated the
    Cambodian people from the Khmer Rouge, 600,000
    Cambodians fled to Thai border camps. Ten million
    landmines were left in the ground, one for every
    person in Cambodia. The United Nations installed
    the largest peacekeeping mission in the world in
    Cambodia in 1991 to ensure free and fair
    elections after the withdrawal of the Vietnamese
    troops.
  • Cambodia was turned upside down during the Khmer
    Rouge years and the country has the daunting task
    of healing physically, mentally and economically.
  • To date, no leader of the Khmer Rouge has been
    brought to justice for their crimes against
    humanity.
  • Survivors of the Khmer Rouge regime continue to
    suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder and a
    growing number of stress related illnesses and
    diseases.

7
Pre-genocide Leadership Tactics
dithpran.org
  • Genocide has taken place repeatedly in the world

  • in places such as Armenia, Nazi Germany,
    Cambodia,
  • the Former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and Sudan. A
    reason why genocide happens is the tactics of the
    leadership.
  • Several tactics include
  • 1. Strong ideologies the masses can relate to
  • 2. Charisma of leader (ability to attract people
    to their cause)
  • 3. Capability of brainwashing large numbers of
    people through fear, manipulation, propaganda,
    and other means
  • 4. Military strength.

8
Pre-genocide Leadership Tactics - Examples
dithpran.org
  • 1. Ideologies Pol Pot and the KR spoke of
    workers equality to farmers in rural areas. They
    enhanced the suspicion of city dwellers and the
    educated class by stating these people backed the
    U.S. supported overthrow of Prince Sihanouk. Pol
    Pot and the KR spoke against the U.S. bombing of
    the Cambodian countryside.
  • 2. Pol Pot was considered charismatic and
    persuasive a man of the people.
  • 3. Pol Pot and the KR stated that the
    imperialist Americans and/or the Vietnamese may
    take over Cambodia and the people needed to help
    the cause.
  • 4. Pol Pot and the KR received weapons and
    training from the North Vietnamese.

9
Leadership Tactics During Genocide
dithpran.org
  • There is a similar thread to genocide leadership.
    Similarities include
  • 1. Strong hierarchy of power.
  • 2. Large amount of people willing to carry out
    orders.
  • 3. Separating people according to different
    criteria education, color, ethnicity, social
    status, urban vs. rural dwellers.
  • 4. Dehumanizing people who didnt fall into the
    right criteria.
  • 5. Mass killing of people who didnt fall into
    the right criteria.

10
Leadership Tactics During Genocide - Examples
  • 1. Hierarchy of power Pol Pot had people
    working at every level of the organization, from
    spy to executioner.
  • 2. People to carry out orders There were
    countless Cambodian citizens who tortured and
    killed their fellow countrymen, some even killed
    their own family members.
  • 3. Separating people The educated, ethnic
    Vietnamese Chinese, Cham, and city dwellers
    were suspect.
  • 4. Dehumanization This gave Pol Pot and the KR
    the ability to mass murder because somehow the
    victims were guilty and deserved torture and
    death.
  • 5. Mass killing The KR killed an estimated 1.7
    million Cambodians during their reign.

11
The International Criminal Court
dithpran.org
  • In 2002, the International Criminal Court (ICC)
    was established in The Hague (Netherlands) and
    the Rome Statute provides for the ICC to have
    jurisdiction over genocide, crimes against
    humanity and war crimes.

Source Wikipedia
12
What Is Genocide?
dithpran.org
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
the Crime of Genocide
(Geneva Convention)
13
Crimes Against Humanity
Dithpran.org
  • The ICC definition of crimes against humanity
    includes any of the following acts when committed
    as part of a widespread or systematic attack
    directed against any civilian population, with
    knowledge of the attack
  • a) Murder
  • (b) Extermination
  • (c) Enslavement
  • (d) Deportation or forcible transfer of
    population
  • (e) Imprisonment or other severe deprivation of
    physical liberty in violation of fundamental
    rules of international law
  • (f) Torture
  • (g) Rape, sexual slavery, enforced prostitution,
    forced pregnancy, enforced sterilization, or any
    other form of sexual violence of comparable
    gravity
  • (h) Persecution against any identifiable group or
    collectivity on political, racial, national,
    ethnic, cultural, religious, gender as defined in
    paragraph 3, or other grounds that are
    universally recognized as impermissible under
    international law, in connection with any act
    referred to in this paragraph or any crime within
    the jurisdiction of the Court
  • (i) Enforced disappearance of persons
  • (j) The crime of apartheid
  • (k) Other inhumane acts of a similar character
    intentionally causing great suffering, or serious
    injury to body or to mental or physical health.
  • Source Wikipedia

14
War Crimes
dithpran.org
  • War crimes are "violations of the laws or customs
    of war", including but not limited to "murder,
    the ill-treatment or deportation of civilian
    residents of an occupied territory to slave labor
    camps", "the murder or ill-treatment of prisoners
    of war", the killing of hostages, "the wanton
    destruction of cities, towns and villages, and
    any devastation not justified by military
    necessity" .
  • Source Wikipedia

15
Genocide Questions How We Can Make A Difference
dithpran.org
  • Who was Pol Pot?
  • Who were the Khmer Rouge?
  • Why did the KR become popular before their
    victory?
  • How could Pol Pot and the KR commit genocide?
  • Why is The Killing Fields considered a genocide?
  • What is genocide?
  • What small steps can we take to have tolerance
    for others?
  • What can we do to defend others?
  • How can we not become part of a mob mentality?
  • What can we do to help prevent another genocide?

16
Resources
dithpran.org
  • The Killing Fields
  • Children of Cambodias Killing Fields
  • The Death And Life of Dith Pran
  • Haing Ngor A Cambodian Odyssey
  • Yale Cambodian Genocide Project

17
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