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ArtikelNever too late.  
Oleh: [s.n]
Jenis: Article from Bulletin/Magazine
Dalam koleksi: Time Magazine vol. 170 no. 13 (Oct. 2007), page 09.
Topik: Cambodia; Pol Pot; Genocidal rampage; Khmer Rouge regime
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    • Nomor Panggil: T7
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Isi artikelPol Pot's second in command may finally be brought to trial in Cambodia. For the architects of Cambodia's Killing Fields, justice has long been delayed. A U.N-backed tribunal was established last year to try those accused of orchestrating the genocidal rampage that killed up to 2 million between 1975 and 1979. But after years of bereaucratic snags and political foot-dragging, the number of suspects left to prosecute is dwindling. Pol Pot, the leader of the Khmer Rouge regime, died in his sleep at age 73 in 1998. Ta Mok, the feared Khmer Rouge military comander, sucumbed at 81 in a Phnom Penh hospital last year. But justice is not yet denied. Shortly after dawn on Sept. 19, Cambodian police special forces and military police surrounded a small wooden home on the outskirts of Pailin town in the country's northwest and arrested Nuon Chea, the Khmer Rouge's infamous "Brother Number Two" Pol Pot's deputy. After years of delay, the number of suspects left to prosecute is dwindling.
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