Although newspapers, television, radio, Internet, and other media are easy to access in Phnom Penh and some of Cambodia’s other cities, few members of the country’s approximately 1,621 communes (particularly those in rural areas) have the means to obtain information on the forthcoming Khmer Rouge tribunal. This is especially true of many of Democratic Kampuchea’s survivors, who are often poor and whose educations were interrupted by the regime.
Seeing justice done is perhaps the most critical element of the healing process for the survivors. The nearly two million lives lost during the regime can never be brought back, nor can the chance to enjoy the fruits of a society that might have prospered had the Khmer Rouge not come to power – but the tribunals will give survivors an opportunity to know that the world acknowledges their sufferings and that the regime’s leaders must account for their actions.
This project will help ensure the involvement of the regime’s victims in the tribunal by bringing representatives of communes throughout Cambodia to attend a portion of a trial. During the first year of the project, approximately 200 people (in groups of about 30) from representative communes will travel to Phnom Penh and attend a trial for one week. This process would be repeated for each of the ensuing trials, allowing about 1,200 people to attend a trial during the three-year tribunal.