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Three locations used by Cambodia’s brutal Khmer Rouge regime as torture and execution sites 50 years ago have been added by ...
Three former torture and execution sites used by Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge regime have been inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage ...
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The Manila Times on MSN3 Cambodia genocide sites added to Unesco registerThree notorious Cambodian torture and execution sites used by the Khmer Rouge regime to perpetrate genocide 50 years ago were ...
Cambodia held ceremonies across the country on Sunday to celebrate UNESCO's recognition of three former Khmer Rouge sites as ...
The World Heritage listing raises timely questions, such as whether we might see nominations for sites from Australia’s own ...
Despite the deaths of at least 1.7 million people under their brutal regime, only five top leaders of Cambodia's Khmer Rouge have ever been charged. The U.N.-backed tribunal was formed decades ...
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The Khmer Rouge killed as many as 2 million Cambodians in the 70s. Decades later, a tribunal was set up to help find justice. 15 years later, it's ending having found just three people guilty.
The Khmer Rouge commander known as "Comrade Duch," who oversaw the mass murder of at least 14,000 Cambodians at the notorious Tuol Sleng prison, died Sept. 2.
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Al Jazeera on MSNSites of Khmer Rouge execution, torture in Cambodia added to UNESCO listAdded to the World Heritage list are two prisons: Tuol Sleng and M-13, as well as the execution site Choeung Ek. Three ...
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Agence France-Presse on MSNThree Cambodia genocide sites added to UNESCO registerThree notorious Cambodian torture and execution sites used by the Khmer Rouge regime to perpetrate genocide 50 years ago were ...
The Cambodian government says that the three sites “bear irrefutable evidence of events amounting to one of the most serious ...
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