Cambodia's long road to justice.3/30/2009 9:39:47 AM It is said that in life there are only two certainties andndash; death and taxes. But Cambodia could add a third andndash; the road to Pailin is always difficult. Stretching 83 back-breaking kilometres west from Cambodia's second city of Battambang it seems the road has always been in a potholed pot·hole n. 1. A hole or pit, especially one in a road surface. Also called chuckhole. 2. A deep round hole worn in rock by loose stones whirling in strong rapids or waterfalls. 3. Western U.S. state of disrepair. A decade ago it was pitted with deep craters from years of fierce fighting between Khmer Rouge Khmer Rouge (kəmĕr` r zh), name given to native Cambodian Communists. Khmer Rouge soldiers, aided by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops, began a large-scale insurgency against forces and the Cambodian armed forces.
Both sides of the track littered with danger signs warning of landmines. The journey took a mind-rattling five hours. In the intervening years it has been repaired, the ruts from rainy season damage rolled flat, the travel time quickened, only for the wheels of countless heavy trucks bearing timber and other goods to tear it apart once more. Now the road is in upheaval again - this time for the better - as Chinese money pays for it to be completely rebuilt, with sturdy new bridges and drainage channels A drainage channel is a way to drain surface water. They can be made of several material:
The reconstruction of Route 57 to Pailin reflects Cambodia andrsquo;s own struggle to reconcile with its bloody history and that of its former Khmer Rouge leaders, many of whom made Pailin their home. In late 1998 Nuon Chea Nuon Chea, also known as Long Bunruot, (born Lau Ben Kon[1], July 7, 1926,[2] village of Voat Kor, Battambang Province), is a retired Cambodian communist politician and former chief ideologist of Khmer Rouge, and is of Chinese ancestry. , the Khmer Rouge's Brother Number Two, and the former Head of State Khieu Samphan Khieu Samphan (born July 27 1931) was the president of the state presidium of Democratic Kampuchea (Cambodia) from 1976 until 1979. As such, he served as the country's head of state and was one of the most powerful officials in the Khmer Rouge movement, though Pol Pot was the had just come out of Pailin andrsquo;s jungles to meet Cambodia's prime minister, signalling a final end to years of hostilities between the last remaining Khmer Rouge guerrillas and the government. Pol Pot Pol Pot, 1925–98, Cambodian political leader, originally named Saloth Sar. Paris-educated, and a Khmer Communist leader from 1960, he led Khmer Rouge guerrillas against the government of Lon Nol after 1970. , the Khmer Rouge's former leader, had died earlier the same year while held under house arrest by his former military commander, Ta Mok Ta Mok, which means "Grandfather Mok" in Khmer, was the nom de guerre of Chhit Choeun (c. 1926 – 21 July 2006), a senior figure in the leadership of the Khmer Rouge. , a man known to many as "the Butcher". Change in the air A decade later, Pailin is still the dusty frontier town it has always been, with ramshackle buildings, a bustling market and a few dubious-looking restaurants. But change is in the air. A new Honda motorbike dealership is doing brisk trade, a Suzuki store is opening soon. Lockups compete to sell the latest mobile phone and all along the road from Pailin to the Thai border 15 kilometres away, construction is under way. Down at the border there are duty free shops selling wines, cigarettes and liquor. Bright lights flash from the casinos attracting gamers from the other side of the international crossing. The teak teak, tall deciduous tree (Tectona grandis) of the family Verbenaceae (verbena family), native to India and Malaysia but now widely cultivated in other tropical areas. forests and thick bamboo groves that used to surround the town have disappeared, replaced by hectares of flat land given over to farming. The gem mining that once funded the Khmer Rouge war effort has also gone, as have the people scrabbling behind earthmovers hoping to find a ruby or sapphire chip they could sell for a few riel or baht baht n. pl. bahts or baht See Table at currency. [Thai b t.]Noun 1. . The forested track I first walked tentatively down with a TV crew to try to confront Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan in early 1999 is now unrecognisable. Only the concrete post that supported a bamboo pole barring the path to the leaders andrsquo; homes remains to mark the way. At the time there was a guard post manned by a Khmer Rouge soldier with an AK47. As we approached he furiously dialled his war-time field telephone. Minutes later another soldier appeared brandishing a rocket launcher and a rack of five grenades. We were being warned. Two cars with blacked-out windows appeared and sped past heading for the Thai border. Perhaps Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan were inside, but we did not hang around to find out. It would be another eight years and four more trips to Pailin before I came face to face with Nuon Chea, when the ageing former Brother Number Two finally agreed to talk to Al Jazeera This article is about the TV network and channel. For other uses, see Jazira. Al Jazeera (Arabic: الجزيرة, al-ğazīrä in June 2007. It was one of the last interviews he did before being detained de·tain tr.v. de·tained, de·tain·ing, de·tains 1. To keep from proceeding; delay or retard. 2. To keep in custody or temporary confinement: by the Extraordinary Chambers In 2006, an international tribunal began its work in Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh. Its purpose is the trial of senior members of the former Khmer Rouge regime. Proceedings are expected to begin in 2007. in the Courts of Cambodia or ECCC ECCC Electronic Colloquium on Computational Complexity ECCC East Central Community College ECCC Electronic Commerce Council of Canada ECCC Eastern Collegiate Cycling Conference ECCC European Communities Chemistry Council ECCC Essex County Cricket Club andndash; the hybrid United Nations-Cambodian body that will try the former Khmer Rouge leaders. The journey to Pailin from Battambang then took just two hours, but the ECCC still took Nuon Chea south by helicopter. He left behind many other former Khmer Rouge members, among them Kong Duong a pleasant, smiling man, who is now Pailin's chief information officer. He is also the former boss of Pailin radio andndash; a station which ironically used to broadcast the songs of a popular female singer who was herself murdered by the Khmer Rouge. Kong Duong says he only joined the Khmer Rouge in 1979, after the invading Vietnamese army forced the group from power. He fled into the jungles to fight for the country andrsquo;s liberation. But he is no fan today of the Maoist extremism which the Khmer Rouge used so ruthlessly to all but destroy Cambodia's people. Now in his new role as Pailin's information officer he is helping to transform the town. "Pailin has moved on," he insists. New work ethic work ethic n. A set of values based on the moral virtues of hard work and diligence. work ethic Noun a belief in the moral value of work "The development of capitalism is a good thing. When we lived under communism the aim was equality, no-one wanted to compete. People were poor then because there was no competition. Capitalism is good for development because people work hard and compete." One of those signing up to Pailin's new capitalist work ethic is Kiet Boren, a casino worker from Battambang who came to Pailin 10 years ago, seeing the opportunity to make money in a 'new province'. Kiet Boren is just one of the thousands of migrants who have helped boost Pailin andrsquo;s population three-fold in the last 10 years. He says he plans to use the money he's making to start up his own business in the future. Like many people here he knows about the Khmer Rouge trials only just beginning in Phnom Penh Phnom Penh (nŏm pĕn, pənŏm`) or Phnum Penh (pən m`), city (1994 est. pop. after years of delays, but he does not
spend much time thinking about it.
Kong Duong agrees. "I don andrsquo;t think the priority for people here is justice or the Khmer Rouge trial," he says. "Their priority is daily life, and whether they can sell their cassava cassava (kəsä`və) or manioc (măn`ēŏk), name for many species of the genus Manihot of the family Euphorbiaceae (spurge family). at the market, or earn enough money to send their kids to school." The new road to Pailin is due to be finished towards the end of next year, which may just coincide with the start of the second Khmer Rouge trial, predicted to include all five surviving leaders. Just like the physical road, after years of delays Cambodia's long road to justice is finally nearing completion. Aljazeera.net 2003 - 2009 Provided by Syndigate.info an Albawaba.com company |
|
||||||||||||

zh)
t.]
m`)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion