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Nuon
Chea Stands by His Role in KR Regime
PAILIN
- As Nuon Ghea nears the
end of
his life and reflects on the
more than
50 years he spent
struggling
for independence and
guiding
the Khmer Rouge, he
can't
even call l us home his own.
His wooden house belongs to the daughter of former Khmer
Rouge Deputy Premier Ieng Sary and the land he lives on is
owned by Pailin Governor Y Chhien, a former Khmer Rouge
commander. "But I'm not disappointed even though I'm
poor because I fulfilled my duty to my nation and to
Buddhism," Nuon Chea said. "The struggle was a
success, but it is for die people, not for me. I took a
small part in it for the nation."
The
ailing 74-year-old spoke to journalists for two hours on
June 1 in his first interview in two
decades.
He says he feels sorry for the more than 1 mullion CamÂbodians
who died under the Khmer Rouge regime, but he denies any
knowledge of the bruÂtality and killings that marked
those years.
And though he knows that the Khmer Rouge is despised by
many and there is a push to bring him to trial, Nuon Chea
said he still feels proud that he participated in a moment
that liberated Cambodia
"Remember that it was done by Khmers for
Khmers," he said. "Khmers got up against the forÂeign
invaders."
Nuon
Chea, known as Brother No 2, was considered to be Pol
Pot's right-hand man and one of the most enigmatic of the
Khmer Rouge leaders. The regime's political ideologue, its
philosoÂphies of abolishing money and the need for almost
total secrecy are largely credited to him.
"There were many things I had to deal with during the
struggle," he said. "It was not easy, but life
and death is apart of everything. I had problems with my
heart beÂcause I had to think a lot. I had to think about
policies for the peoÂple, the armed forces, the eneÂmies."
After the Khmer Rouge imÂploded and PolPot died in April
1998, Nuon Chea and Khmer Rouge nominal leader Khieu
Samphan defected to the governÂment in December 1998.
They came to Phnom Penh as guests of Prime Minister Hun
Sen; it was Nuon Chews first time in the capital since he
fled from Vietnamese troops in January 1979.
After the Khmer Rouge imÂploded and PolPot died in April
1998, Nuon Chea and Khmer Rouge nominal leader Khieu
Samphan defected to the governÂment in December 1998.
They came to Phnom Penh as guests of Prime Minister Hun
Sen; it was Nuon Chews first time in the capiÂtal since
he fled from Vietnamese troops in January 1979.
Nuon
Chea said people often ask him why he didn't defect earÂlier,
as Ieng Sary did in 1996, when thousands of cadre joined
the government and crippled the Khmer rouge.
"May
is that when fighting,
leader
must go first," he said.
"And
when you retreat, the leader
must be
the last. Our group was
the last,
and we decided to integrate for unity and national recon
ciliation."
Though
Nuon Chea said he would appear in court if called for a
Khmer Rouge tribunal, he said a trial would disrupt the
fragile peace that Cambodia has enjoyed recently.
"If
we think about the small things, we will have problems and
disputes," he said. "And then our country can't
be prosperous. "He also added that "I love jusÂtice,
but it does not exist in this world."
These
days, Nuon Chea spends his time playing with his 3-year-old
grandson, tending his farm and listening to the radio, inÂcluding
programs in Vietnamese, which he learned when he was
trained by Vietnamese commuÂnists. But he is slowed by
poor health. He had a mild heart attack at the end of May
and has had problems with his blood pressure since 1961.
He also lacks full use of his left hand after suffering a
stroke.
"The
last of my life is here," Nuon Chea said, looking
around his home. "Now I just want to be quiet."
As
he worries about his health, he also is concerned about
Kung Norodom Sihanouk, who is a few years older than Nuon
Chea. He has heard reports of the King
the
prospects of lasting reconciliaÂtion. "I hope the
King lives for a long time to unite Cambodia," Nuon
Chea said. "I want all CamÂbodians to be healthy,
have land and education. They are the reasons why I joined
the struggle."
Nuon
Chea was 20 when he joined the movement in Thailand, where
he was studying. He joined the Communist Party in Thailand
and, when he returned to Cambodia in 1950, he continÂued
his work with the CambodÂian leftists. Since then, he has
seen the world go through many changes, and he says now is
the time for globalization. He wants all countries to be
friends on an equal level and not encroach on each other's
territories, especially the Vietnamese, Chinese, Thais and
Laotians.
"I
am not a nationalist a national a patriot; a patriot is
very will
But that
doesn't mean I will let
you
invade me. I have the right to
protect
myself" Nuon Chea compares CamboÂdia to a sick
person, and he says it will take a long time for the
country to get better. He also disÂagrees with the Khmer
Rouge's xenophobic beliefs. Instead, he says, Cambodia
needs foreign assistance. "How can a sick perÂson
get up and be like [US boxer] Mike Tyson?"
At
the same time, he bemoans the deteriorating morality of
today's society, and said he wants to change people's
values.
"Today,
the property covers the people and personal interest is
high, so morals are going down," he said. "When
I was eduÂcated, I mostly learned about morality, and
when I trained othÂers, I taught them morality.
"Knowledge
has to take moraliÂty as its basis. If you have only
knowledge and leave out moraliÂty, then your knowledge is
useÂless."
When
asked about how he views himself, Nuon Chez points to a
picture of a Buddha, which refers to his time as a monk in
Thailand before he joined the communist movement. Then he
points to a picture below it of r dragon fighting a tiger,
which refers to his time in the independence movement.
"If
you area monk, you are ; monk forever," Nuon Chea said.
"And if you struggle
forever.
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