Although they have their differences, Animal Farm and the Cambodian Genocide are two very similar events because the influences of Animal Farm and the Cambodian Genocide had similar ways of ruling their ‘people’. The Cambodian Genocide was an event in history where a group named the Khmer Rouge gained control of Phnom Penh, Cambodia’s capital, and created Labor camps all throughout the countryside where many innocent people died of abuse, starvation, disease, and exhaustion. Firstly, Pol Pot, from
Cambodia’s Killing Fields of the mid to late nineteen-seventies took almost two million lives and left generations scarred and torn, but only recently has the full story come to light (Sambath, 2010). The mass murders took place across a number of farmland sites in Cambodia, formerly known as Kampuchea by the communist party, shortly after the country’s civil war between the Cambodian government, the Kingdom of Cambodia, and the growing communist party, Khmer Rouge, who was allied with Northern
“The Cambodian Genocide refers to the attempt of Khmer Rouge party leader “Pol Pot” to nationalize and centralize the peasant farming society of Cambodia virtually overnight, in accordance with the Chinese Communist agricultural model.” When Sihanouk becomes the head of state, he breaks ties with the US and allows North Vietnamese guerrillas to set up based in Cambodia. In return, the US begins to plot secret bombings against the North Vietnamese on Cambodia soil. In 1970, Sihanouk is overthrown
Through their work, they have been able to hold several high-profile trials, such as the former head of the S-21 prison, Kaing Guek Eav, and senior Khmer Rouge leaders Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan. These trials pave the way for reparations to be paid to support the victims and their families. Justice can also be seen from the landmark case in the US in 2021 when a US court sentenced a former Khmer Rouge official named Kiang Khek Iev to 30