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An expert in conserving garments for museums and collectors finds a new calling in saving the clothes worn by victims of atrocities.
By Zoey Poll
Under his watch at Tuol Sleng prison, Duch, whose real name was Kaing Guek Eav, said, “I considered it evil eating evil.”
By Seth Mydans
The filmmaker Rithy Panh attempts to find where his parents, victims of the Khmer Rouge, are buried.
By Glenn Kenny
In her latest Graphic Content column, Hillary Chute looks at emotionally stirring graphic novels from Cambodia and Japan.
By Hillary Chute
Pol Pot’s deputy, who was known as Brother No. 2, was convicted of directly overseeing the torture and killing of more than 14,000 people in a Cambodian prison.
He was evacuated just before Phnom Penh fell to the Khmer Rouge, clutching the American flag that had flown over the U.S. Embassy.
By Katharine Q. Seelye
An international tribunal dismissed a Dutch lawyer who had defended one of Khmer Rouge leaders. The lawyer’s bar membership lapsed in 2016.
By Julia Wallace
A new group of more than 40 deportees, many of them the children of refugees, will be the largest yet to be ejected by the Trump administration.
By Charles Dunst
I had seen trauma before, but never an entire traumatized nation. All the adults I met were survivors or former killers.
The potential prosecution of Meas Muth, a former naval commander, has symbolized tensions between Cambodian and international judges and prosecutors.