STILLED LIVES: Photographs of the Cambodian Genocide, Wynne Cougill with Pang Pivoine, Ra Chhayran, and Sim Sopheak (2004)
This book contains photographs and essays on the lives of 51 men and women, who joined the Khmer Rouge during the 1960s and 1970s. They were what the Khmer Rouge called “base people”: those from the peasant class who generally were treated less harshly than the “new people” (city dwellers and those associated with the […]
THE KHMER ROUGE DIVISION 703: From Victory to Self-destruction, Huy Vannak (2003)
One of the most favored of the Khmer Rouge’s nine military divisions, Division 703 was composed of 5,000 to 6,000 peasants, primarily from Kandal province. At the end of 1975, its soldiers with “clean” backgrounds were given positions at Tuol Sleng (the central-level prison also known as S-21) or its branch office S-21D (Prey Sar […]
OUKOUBAH: Justice for the Cham Muslims under Democratic Kampuchea Regime, Ysa Osman (2002)
This monograph explores the genocide of the Cham ethnic group, making a case that the Cham, who are Muslims, were killed a rate that was nearly double to triple that of the general Cambodian population during the Democratic Kampuchea regime. It provides evidence showing that the Cham comprised 10% of Cambodia’s population prior to 1975 […]
VICTIMS AND PERPETRATORS: The Testimony of Young Khmer Rouge Cadres, Ea Meng-Try and Sim Sorya (2001)
In Democratic Kampuchea’s Region 31, the Khmer Rouge recruited children to serve as guards, “catchers,” and animal husbandry workers in Tuol Sleng Prison (S-21). This monograph explores how these and other Cambodian youth were forced to become Khmer Rouge cadres, how they were indoctrinated in the ideology of Democratic Kampuchea, how they were affected, and […]