Biographic28,821
Bibliographic93,163
ID: | I00956 | ||||
Name
ααααα
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Loek Sin (Source: I00956, p. 1)
α‘αΉα ααα·α (Source: I00956, p. 1)
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Other Name
αααααα α
αααα
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Loek Sam (Source: I00956, p. 2)
α‘αΉα αα (Source: I00956, p. 2)
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Source of Documents / Information
αααααααα―αααΆα/αααααΆα
|
I00956, p. 1-10 Notes: 95bbkk/1
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Gender
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Male (Source: I00956, p. 2)
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ααα
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αααα»α (Source: I00956, p. 2)
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Nationality
αααααΆαα·
| Khmer (Source: I00956, p. 2) | ||||
ααααα (Source: I00956, p. 2) | |||||
Physical Characteristics
αα»ααααα·ααααααα
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Father Name
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Loek Khoem, Farmer Notes: Joined the revolution (Source: I00956, p. 6)
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αͺαα»αααααα
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α‘αΉα ααΉα, ααααΎαααα α
αΌαααα·αααααα (Source: I00956, p. 6)
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Mother Name
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Hun Yan, Farmer (Source: I00956, p. 6)
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ααααΆαααααα
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α αα»α αααΆα, ααααΎαααα (Source: I00956, p. 6)
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Pre DK Education
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Class 8 (Source: I00956, p. 3)
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αααα·αααααααααα»ααααααααααααα α
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ααααΆααααΈ α¨ (Source: I00956, p. 3)
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Pre DK Education
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HURIDOCS code: .62 Notes: Lower middle-class farmer (Source: I00956, p. 2)
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αααα·ααα·ααααΆαα»ααααααααααααα α
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ααααΎαααα ααααααΆαααα·αααααααΆαααααΆααααααα (Source: I00956, p. 2)
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Birth Place
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Geocode: 05?????? Province: Kampong Speu Notes: {Damnakk Trach Village, O Sub-district, Cheam Sangke District, Kampong Speu Province}(Source: I00956, p. 2)
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ααΈααααααααααΎα
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αααααααααΊ Β«ααΌαα·ααααΆααααααΆα
αα»αα’αΌα αααα»αααΆαααααα ααααααααααααααΊΒ»
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Death Place: |
KR Rank Pre 75-79
αα½ααΆααΈ αα»ααααααααααααα α(1975)
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KR Rank 75-79
αα½ααΆααΈβαααα»ααααααααααααα α(1975-79)
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Medical Man of Company 5
αααααααα’αα»ααααΆααααα α₯ ~αααααΆααααααΆαααα’αα»ααααΆααΌα
αααα»αααα’αα»ααααΆααααα α₯ ~α’αα»αααααΆαααααΆααα’αα»ααααΆααααα α₯ ~αααααΆααααααΆαααα’αα»ααααΆααααα α₯ ~αααααΆααααααΆαααααααααΆααΌα
~α’αα»αααααΆαααααα½ααααααΆαααααΆααΌαα·ααΆα (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Chief of Political Platoon of Company 5 (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Deputy chief of Company 5 (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Chief of Political Company 5 (Source: I9 56, p. 3)~Chief of Political Battalion (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Deputy Chief of Ministry of Zone Military Political Affairs (Source: I00956, p. 3) |
DK Zone 75-79
ααΈααΆααααΌαα·ααΆααααααααααααααααα α(1975-79)
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DK ORG Unit 75-79
α’αααααΆαβαααα»ααααααααααααα α(1975-79)
|
Military (Source: I00956, p. 3)
ααααΆ (Source: I00956, p. 3) |
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DK ORG Unit 75-79
α’αααααΆαβαααα»ααααααααααααα α(1975-79)
|
Military Hospital (Source: I00956, p. 3)
αααααααααΆ (Source: I00956, p. 3) |
Activities
αααααααΆααα»αααααΆα
|
Joined the revolution in Lpeak Sub-district, Kampong Siem District, Kampong Cham Province, 1963 Notes: Introduced by my father and Older uncle, Phim (Source: I00956, p. 3)
α
αΌαααα·αααααααα
αααααΆααααααΆα αααα»ααααααααα ααααααααααα
αΆα, α‘α©α¦α£α α‘α’α₯ - α’αααααΆαα
αΌα αͺαα»α αα·α α’αα»α ααΉα |
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Associates
α’αααααΆααααΆαααααααααααααα
|
Phim, 19630125 Notes: Introducer into the revolution (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Vorng, 19700925 Notes: Nominator into the party (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Chim, 19700925 Notes: Nominator into the party (Sourc e: I00956, p. 3)~Ang, 19700925 Notes: Nominator into the party (Source: I00956, p. 3)
ααΉα, α‘α©α¦α£α α‘α’α₯ - α’αααααΆαα
αΌαααα·αααααα ~αα, α‘α©α§α α α©α’α₯ - α’αααα§αααααααΆαα
αΌαα’αααααΆααααα ~ααΈα, α‘α©α§α α α©α’α₯ - α’αααα§αααααααΆαα
αΌαα’αααααΆααααα ~α’αΆα, α‘α©α§α α α©α’α₯ - α’αααα§αααααααΆαα
αΌαα’αααααΆααααα (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Vorng, 19700925 Notes: Nominator into the party (Source: I00956, p. 3)~Chim, 19700925 Notes: Nominator into the party (Sourc e: I00956, p. 3)~Ang, 19700925 Notes: Nominator into the party (Source: I00956, p. 3) |
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Political Party
ααΆαα
αΌααα½ααααααααααΆα
|
The party, 19700925 I loved the party line and want to build up myself into the party syndicate movement Notes: Joined in branch of Company 5, Zone 203. Nominators: Vorng, Chim, Ang (Source:I00956, p . 3)
α’αααααΆααααα, α‘α©α§α α α©α’α₯ αααα‘αΆααααΌαααΆαααΆαααααααα αα·α ααααααααα½ααα
αααα»αα
αααΆααααααΊαααααΆααΈα - α
αΌααα
ααΆααΆααααααα’αα»ααααΆααααα α₯ ααααΆααΌαα·ααΆα α’α α£ α’αααα§αααααααΆααααα·ααα αα αααα·ααα α’αΆα α.α ααΈα (Source:I00956, p . 3) |
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Relatives
ααΆα
αααΆαα·/αααΆαα·ααααα½ααΆα
|
Loek Se Type: BO Notes: 32 years old (Source: I00956, p. 8)~Sokh San, Farmer Type: FL (Source: I00956, p. 7)~Men Suong, Farmer Type: ML (Source: I00956, p. 7)~Sokh An, Deputy chief of Woman Type: W No tes: Revolutionary name: Sokh Yen. Joined the revolution in 1965 (Source: I00956, p. 4, 5)~Notes: There is one son (Source: I00956, p. 4, 5 )
α‘αΉα αα , αααααα»α α’αΆαα» α£α’ αααααΆ ~αα»α ααΆα, ααααΎαααα , αͺαα»αααααα ~ααα αα½α, ααααΎαααα , ααααΆαααααα ~αα»α α’α, α’αα»αααααΆαααΆααΈ , ααααααα αααααααα·αααα αα»α αααα α
αΌαααα·αααααααα
αααααΆ α‘α©α¦α₯ ~ ααΆαααΌααααα»α α‘ ααΆαα |
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Resistance
αααααααΆααααααΆαα
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Superiors
α’αααααΉαααΆα
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Copyright
αααααΆαα·αααα·ααα
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Β© DC-CAM | |
Β© αααααααααα―αααΆαααααα»ααΆ |
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Biographic28,821
Bibliographic93,163
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1970 to 197515,214
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1990 to 199510,122
1995 to 20001,255
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"Documentation Center of Cambodia's Archives"
This website was funded in part by a grant (Documentation and Democracy) from the United States Department of State. The opinions, findings and conclusions stated herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Department of State and the United States Agency for International Development.
Concept by Ean Panharith and Youk Chhang
Β© 2023 Documentation Center of Cambodia
The Prevention and Punishment of the Crimes of Genocide
By Youk Chhang
The Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide stands alongside the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as one of the key pillars of international human rights law, and for this Human Rights Day in 2022, I want to highlight the critical importance of the responsibility to prevent atrocity crimes, which includes genocide. When atrocity crimes occur, there is an immediate need to stop these atrocious acts, followed by the equally urgent tasks of documenting, investigating, and ultimately prosecuting the perpetrators. However, from 1948 to today, we have not given enough attention to true prevention.
Atrocity crimes do not occur in a vacuum. There is a long chain of events and conditions that precede atrocity crimes. Isolation, segregation, and discrimination frequently, if not always, precede the rationalization of atrocity crimes against a group of people. And before people are discriminated against, they must be dehumanized. The process of dehumanization depends upon rationalizing hatred and distrust, and these processes are precipitated by misinformation, fueled by uninformed biases, stereotypes, and exploitative actors. They are also frequently dependent upon the disintegration, corruption, or lack of development of critical institutions, in particular institutions dedicated to dialogue and education. It is here that we must dedicate our greatest attention.
Since 1948, we have made great strides toward taking actions that interrupt, mitigate, and to a very limited extent, punish the chief perpetrators of atrocity crimes; however, these actions are not preventative but reactive in nature. No atrocities crime trial has ever prevented the next genocide, and no sanctions or punishment can bring back the dead or undo the trauma that extends across multiple generations. Indeed, the trauma of atrocity crimes in the distant past are often the forgotten seeds for the next wave of violence and inhumanity of the future.
If we are to truly adopt strategies that are effective, far reaching, and decisive in preventing atrocity crimes, then our priorities must be re-oriented to the opposite end of the spectrum, where the seeds of the next genocide are cultivated. Our responsibility in complying with foundational human rights documents should be measured not solely by our success at responding, investigating, and prosecuting atrocity crimes, but by our efforts in supporting institutions, initiatives, and actions that have a positive influence in preventing all forms of inhumanity. The most effective strategy at preventing the next genocide is centered on actions and policies that interrupt and reduce the risk of escalation at the earliest stages of inhumanity.
Cambodia recently removed human rights days from public calendars. I think we should reconsider this collective decision. Cambodia has achieved extraordinary success in its genocide education programme, which is the essence of atrocity crimes prevention. And so, to capitalize on this success and Cambodiaβs regional and even global leadership in this area, we should hold an annual dialogue on the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. As the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) closes its doors, there is no better time than now to preserve Cambodiaβs leadership and momentum in realizing the core objectives of the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.
The Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam) is proud of the support it has given to the ECCCβs work, which was fundamental to giving victims an opportunity to participate in the justice process and realize some sense of closure from the Khmer Rouge genocide. DC-Cam is also eager to support an annual conference on the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. As we commemorate this Human Rights Day, we would be mindful to recognize our fundamental human rights documents are not only universal commitments, but also standards for evaluating the kind of world we are leaving for the next generation.
—————
Youk Chhang is Executive Director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia. The Center dedicating to Justice, Memory, and Healing for survivors of the Khmer Rouge genocide.
Photo above: Children at Angkor Wat, 1979. After the collapse of the Khmer Rouge regime on 7 January 1979, hundreds of thousands of children were left orphaned. From 1975 to 1979, the Khmer Rouge led Cambodia into tragedy causing the deaths of over 2 million people. Although two millions were killed, five millions more survived to tell their story. The perpetrators of these crimes also survived. Photo: Documentation Center of Cambodia Archives.
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