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Research Study on a Former Khmer Rouge Prison M-13

by Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum

M-13, located in Kampong Speu province, was one of the most important prisons of the early Khmer Rouge. It was used to punish, torture, and kill many innocent Cambodians from 1971 to 1975. Understanding what happened at M-13 is an important part of understanding the evolution the Khmer Rouge ideology and its development of imprisonment and torture even before the regime seized full power over the country in April 1975. M-13 has already been documented by previous studies but details on its functioning and operation are still limited.

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M-13 was used by the Khmer Rouge as the main prison from 1971 until April 1975 before it was transferred to S-21 when the regime took over the Phnom Penh capital. The research study of the M-13 allows us to understand the early stage of the Khmer Rouge ideology before it came to power.

With the support from Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung Cambodia in the mission of peacekeeping and the endorsement of the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum has conducted field research on M-13. The project duration was between September and November 2020 when 16 M-13 survivors and former M-13 officers were interviewed in detail over the past situation at that time. The research findings give us various inputs to identify the Khmer Rouge’s original ideology.

 

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Chanbormey Long

Chanbormey Long

Programmmanagerin

chanbormey.long@kas.de +855 87 880 997

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