Cambodian students re-enact bloody Khmer Rouge crimes

Cambodian students from Royal University of Fine Arts perform at the annual Remembrance Day in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. (AP)
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  • A quarter of Cambodia鈥檚 population died of starvation, forced labor or torture or were slaughtered in mass killings under Pol Pot鈥檚 Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979

PHNOM PENH: Cambodian students wearing all black and wielding bamboo clubs and wooden rifles staged a dramatic re-enactment on Tuesday of a genocide that killed two million people in the 1970s.
A quarter of Cambodia鈥檚 population died of starvation, forced labor or torture or were slaughtered in mass killings under Pol Pot鈥檚 Khmer Rouge between 1975 and 1979.
The Khmer Rouge atrocities are commemorated at museums and sites including Choeung Ek, a notorious former 鈥淜illing Field鈥� in Phnom Penh, where an annual Day of Remembrance event is held.
Hundreds gathered at Choeung Ek, where about 15,000 people died between 1975 and 1979, holding prayers in front of a display of victims鈥� skulls.
Students brandishing mock weapons then acted out slitting victims鈥� throats, shooting or clubbing them in a re-enactment of Khmer Rouge attacks on civilians.
Some attendees cried at the confrontingly vivid re-enactment.
鈥淢y tears fell when I watched the performance,鈥� attendee and survivor Chruok Sam, 70, told AFP.
He lost 12 family members under the Khmer Rouge and said the performance showed 鈥渆xactly the same鈥� as what he had experienced in 1975.
He hoped the re-enactment would help young generations learn more about what he called 鈥渢he most heinous and cruel regime on Earth.鈥�
Another survivor, 63-year-old Em Ry, said she was still scared and had never been able to forget Pol Pot鈥檚 time in power.
She was forced to work all day and only ate a 鈥渟poonful of corn,鈥� she said, and lost several family members including her grandmother.
Prime Minister Hun Manet, who was at the opening of a new cement plant in central Kampong Speu province, urged people not to forget the past.
鈥淲e must move on, but we cannot forget our painful past,鈥� he said.
Cambodia marked the 50th anniversary last month of the Khmer Rouge鈥檚 bloody march into Phnom Penh.
A special tribunal sponsored by the United Nations convicted three key Khmer Rouge figures before ceasing operations in 2022. Other former cadres still live freely.
Pol Pot, nicknamed 鈥淏rother Number One,鈥� died in 1998 before he was brought to trial.