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Documetary film, Khmer Rouge Footage Film and short film

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Title: Tribunal 1-2-3

Record No: V00042

Producer: Unknown

Director:

The Minnesota Lawyers International Human Rights Committee and Minnesota Advocates for Cambodia, hold a mock tribunal of the International Court of Justice against the Coalition government of Democratic Kampuchea, in 1990 in St. Paul, MN in which survivors of the regime, experts such as Ben Kiernan, and clinical psychologist Eric Hagley, who had been working with Cambodian refugees in Minnesota take the stand. The ICJ in this mock trial found: 1. The Coalition government of Democratic Kampuchea has committed “acts of genocide” against the Cham, Vietnamese, Chinese and Thai populations; against the Buddhist monkshood and against its own nation groups, the Khmer people of Cambodia. Those acts of genocide include, but are not limited to the following: a. Mass killings through massacres, extermination centers and arbitrary killings; b. Infliction of bodily and mental harm through torture and ill treatment, physical exhaustion, induced starvation, untreated disease and mental cruelty; c. And deliberately inflicted conditions of life including social dispersions, forced marriages, forced labor, induced starvation and untreated disease. 2. That the government of Democratic Kampuchea breached its obligations under the general, customary international law not to commit or tolerate crimes against humanity including but not limited to mass arbitrary killings and systematic torture. 3. That the government of Democratic Kampuchea is in continuing violation of its international legal obligations for failing to punish those persons who committed acts of genocide and otherwise violated international law. Based on the foregoing, the court ordered that the government of Democratic Kampuchea institute proceedings in a domestic tribunal to bring to justice those responsible for the above listed acts of genocide and violations of international law. Parts of the mock trial preceding what is recorded on 42(1). Witnesses and survivor testimonies for the mock trial are recorded on this disc. Parts of the mock trial preceding what is recorded on 42(1) and 42(2). Opening statements are made by the prosecution and the defense and Ben Kiernan of Yale University takes the stand to testify. A few survivors of the regime also testify.

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Title: KAMPUCHEA It’s People, Land and Culture 4/1989

Record No: V00151

Producer: David Hawk

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University

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Title: Cambodia: The Bloodiest Domino

Record No: V00129

Producer: Julio Jeldres (source)

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University

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Title: Les Derniers Jours Du colonel Savath

Record No: V00279

Producer:

Director:

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Title: Khmer Oral History “Youth Yan”

Record No: V00010

Producer: Unknown

Director:

Youth Yan was a high school student in Battambang when the Khmer Rouge came to power in 1975. He spent a year in a Khmer Rouge concentration camp, where he was beaten and made to carry out forced labor. Yan’s youngest brother was shot to death by Khmer Rouge soldiers. A part of the Khmer Archives Project, carried out by the Minnesota Project– International Lawyers Committee, this interview was recorded in 1992. Youth Yan speaks about the period from 1975 to the fall of the Khmer Rouge in 1979. In 1979, Yan crossed the border and entered a refugee camp in Thailand. He moved from camp to camp for a few years, before coming to the United States, where he was eventually recognized as a refugee, and finally received American citizenship. At the time that this interview was recorded, Yan was working as a paralegal in St. Paul, Minnesota, and his mother, two sisters and brother were still in a refugee camp in Thailand, who he was hoping to bring to the United States in the near future.

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Title: My Home Village

Record No: V00030

Producer: Apsara TV 11

Director:

The film opens with a prayer ceremony in honor of those who died during the Khmer Rouge regime. Interviews with the people of Takeo who survived the regime is the main focus of the film. There are a number of questions related to Pol Pot that are answered as well.

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Title: Sidney Schanberg on “Mclauglin” 11/17/89

Record No: V00148

Producer: David Hawk

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University

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Title: បំបួសលោកសង្ឃខ្មែរនៅសហរដ្ឋអាមេរិក

Record No: V00184

Producer: Unknown

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University

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Title: Blues Documentary Luong ung

Record No: V00271

Producer:

Director:

From Bradley Bessire (Broken)

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Title: The Khmer Rouge Rice FIELDS

Record No: V00176

Producer: DC-Cam

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University

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Title: POL POT The Journey to The Killing Fields

Record No: V00196

Producer: Jane Johnston

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University

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Title: Children for Sale

Record No: V00273

Producer: NBC TV

Director:

Human trafficking

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Title: Avoir 50 Ans en l’ An 2000

Record No: V00046

Producer: Rithy Panh

Director:

This film is about a Cambodian woman, and dancer Van Chan. At the fall of Pol Pot’s regime, her husband was appointed chief of district of Barai and she became assistant director for culture and information. Hardly had happiness begun when her husband was killed by the Red Khmers/ Khmer Rouge. Today, she is a teacher of traditional dance and is the only support of her family.

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Title: Rbvtiþsa®sþGacERbeTArksmrPUmirbbb:ul Bt smøab;RbCaCn 150muInnak;

Record No: V00199

Producer: NHK

Director:

Being described by Rutgers University