Killing fields memorials 'to stay'
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has turned down calls for the
remains of thousands of victims of the Khmer Rouge to be cremated. He
said it was important for the skulls to stay on display as evidence that
millions died during the late 1970s.
One memorial stupa, at Choeung Ek, has become the best-known site of
the so-called Killing Fields. The trials of the surviving former leaders
of the Khmer Rouge are due to start later this year.
Memorials like the glass-sided structure at Choeung Ek's genocide
museum have become a focus of controversy.
Once they were quiet if grim reminders of what happened under Pol
Pot's murderous regime, but now they have become tourist attractions.
More than 100,000 people visited Choeung Ek alone last year.
This has caused discomfort in a Buddhist country which largely
believes that a body has to be cremated for its soul to escape. But the
prime minister says those concerns are outweighed by the need to make
sure that no-one can deny what happened three decades ago.
Hun Sen's remarks come with the long-awaited Khmer Rouge trials still
bogged down in disputes between local and international legal officials.
Meetings next month will attempt to resolve the difficulties involved in
making sure that the special courts provide an international standard of
justice within the Cambodian system.
BBC
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