

OL15858384W Page-progression lr Page_number_confidence 90.28 Pages 362 Ppi 514 Related-external-id urn:isbn:1408804018

Urn:lcp:lostexecutionerj00dunl:epub:7d30ea5b-cb15-4f92-92ba-3f8158b22741 Extramarc University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (PZ) Foldoutcount 0 Identifier lostexecutionerj00dunl Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t0sq9pr6m Isbn 0802714722ĩ780802714725 Lccn 2005056365 Ocr_converted abbyy-to-hocr 1.1.20 Ocr_module_version 0.0.17 Openlibrary_edition Kaing Guek Eav - 'Better to destroy ten innocent people than let one enemy go free' - The burden of Angkor - The good Khmer Rouge - 'The tree grows in the rural areas, but the fruit goes to the towns' - 'Brothers and sisters, go to the jungle and join the guerrillas' - Comrade Duch - A vision of a better world - Democratic Kampuchea - The perfect institution - The interrogators' manual - A city with no people - The photographer - The last joint plan - Feeding the guilty - My enemy's enemy is my friend - Hang Pin - The return of the Khmer Rouge - 'Policies and practices of the recent past' - Salvation - The humanitarian - The confession - The quest for justice - Living with the past - Lessons from an empty schoolhouseĪccess-restricted-item true Addeddate 21:52:07 Boxid IA119709 Boxid_2 CH119622 Camera Canon EOS 5D Mark II City New York Curatenote shipped Donor This result is a vivid reminder that, whether in the killing fields of Cambodia or the deserts of Darfur, if we turn our backs on genocide, we must bear a collective guilt.-From publisher description Guided by witnesses, he teases out the details of Duch's transformation from sensitive schoolchild and dedicated teacher to the revolutionary killer who later slipped quietly back into village life. could turn into one of the worst mass murderers of the twentieth century." Dunlop unfolds the history of Cambodia as a filter for understanding its tragic last forty years.

"I needed to understand how a seemingly ordinary man. Haunted by the image of one of them, Comrade Duch, photographer Nic Dunlop set out to bring him to life, and thereby to account.

Twenty years later, not one member had been held accountable for the genocide. In Cambodia, between 19, two million people died at the hands of the Khmer Rouge. "First published in the United Kingdom in 2005 by Bloomsbury Publishing"-T.p.
