Skip to content

{ Category Archives } Stuff

Indochina and the Federation Idea: The Comintern, War and the Roots of Terror in Democratic Kampuchea

Part One
The above picture, as terribly upsetting as it is, with the innocent newborn child incapable of comprehending, nor perhaps being instinctively aware of the mortal danger in which its mother finds herself, is just one of the many mugshots taken for the files of the Democratic Kampuchean security service, the Santebal. [...]

Casting the first stone: the ‘palace coup’ of August 1945

By the middle of 1945, it was becoming clear to anyone who cared to pay attention that Imperial Japan was doomed. With it, the status of those Khmer nationalists who had colluded with the Japanese in disarming the Vichy French administration became increasingly uncertain. Son Ngoc Thanh, who had returned from Japan early in 1945 [...]

Piglets and sloganeering in Kompong Speu

Another new post from another new author. As the Democratic Kampuchea side of things is already well covered here, I’m hoping to add some information onĀ  the margins – the political context, the Sangkum, what came before and what developed afterwards, in an effort to look at the forces in opposition to which Democratic Kampuchea [...]

New Post: Tong Reasathea

The offer to contribute to this blog dedicated to the history of Khmer Communism and the culmination of some of its tendencies in the state of Democratic Kampuchea, came to me unexpectedly, but it is probably something that I almost readily agreed upon, due to feelings of competence to do so. [...]

Between Town and Country

Here’s some more film footage below, taken from a French documentary on Democratic Kampuchea. I’m unsure as to its content though, regarding the footage used. Identifying what is exactly official government footage and that which was filmed during the visit made by Yugoslav journalists, including Nikola Vitorovic, in 1978. You see, I [...]

National Anthem of Democratic Kampuchea

Dap Prampi Mesa Chokchey
Glorious April 17
(Non-versified translation)
Bright red blood, which covers the towns and plains
Of Kampuchea, our motherland,
Sublime blood of workers and peasants,
Sublime blood of revolutionary men and women fighters!
The blood changes into unrelenting hatred
And resolute struggle,
For on April 17, under the flag of revolution
It frees us from slavery!
Long live, long live glorious April [...]

Encirclement of Phnom Penh

The slow death of a shrinking republic.
From the 15th of August 1973 forward, both foreign and Khmer observers witnessed the growing war between the Khmer themselves, that is between the FANK of the Khmer Republic and the forces of the Khmer Communists. The land, the high seas, the rivers and lakes, the skies clear [...]

Revising History

One of us must kill thirty Vietnamese … So far, we have succeeded in implementing this slogan of one against thirty … We need only two million troops to crush the fifty million Vietnamese, and we would still have six million people left.

Radio Phnom Penh broadcast, 10 May 1978
Well, the DK government’s confidence was severely [...]

Tedium in Death: Kampuchea and Mao’s Funeral

This is just a bit of filler until new and hopefully better posts appear in this New Year. Being the nerd that I am, I own several old copies of publications which some might say border on the kitsch, although unintentionally. Below are snippets taken from the second of three September 1976 editions [...]

Going Quite Well, So Far

This, readers (and there are quite a few), will be the last post until we’re into the new year, and so far I think I’ve got enough encouragement to carry on with this small project, or historical hobby, in my spare time. I think it was a reviewer of Ben Kiernan’s comprehensive world study [...]