Phnom Penh

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  • Опубліковано 20 лют 2021
  • Waiting for our Vietnamese visa, we stayed in the capital of Cambodia for 2 days learning some of its history. Forty years ago, Pol Pot’s brutal regime in Cambodia fell from power - but it left behind lasting scars. The Khmer Rouge, a hardline-communist command, terrorized the Southeast Asian country from 1975 to 1979, killing between 1.7 million to 3 million people. In the regime’s pursuit of a classless agrarian society, many were sent to labor camps, prisons and killing fields across the nation, where they died of torture, disease and starvation.
    Four decades on, Cambodia, a developing nation of about 16 million people, is still grappling with its past - not just the tragedy beyond conception that was official Khmer Rouge rule, but also the civil war that followed and continued through the early 1990s.
    In November, a U.N. tribunal delivered a historic ruling, convicting two of the regime’s last surviving leaders of genocide. That significant verdict underscored the lingering legacy of the genocidal regime on Cambodian society today.
    Four decades on, Cambodia, a developing nation of about 16 million people, is still grappling with its past - not just the tragedy beyond conception that was official Khmer Rouge rule, but also the civil war that followed and continued through the early 1990s. In November, a U.N. tribunal delivered a historic ruling, convicting two of the regime’s last surviving leaders of genocide. That significant verdict underscored the lingering legacy of the genocidal regime on Cambodian society today.

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