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He said he did not have full knowledge of every matter but he would do his best to ascertain the truth to the fullest extent possible. In 2001, he wrote an open letter with an apology for the widespread killings and atrocities under the Khmer Rouge but claimed that he had no hand in them. "For those compatriots who lost their loved ones during that period, I apologize," he wrote. "My mistake was that I was too naive and was out of touch with the real situation." He said he never expected the Khmer Rouge rule to "lead to killings." Again, in a 2004 memoir, he claimed that he was not aware of the killings carried out by the Khmer Rouge, saying his role was largely ceremonial. Although head of state, his responsibility was simply that of an "office employee," said Khieu Samphan. He said he was subject to "ideological education instructed by peasant-cadres." He described as the "hallucination of a sick mind," statements by some scholars suggesting he was implicated in several arrests carried out during the Khmer Rouge's bloody internal purges. "My work had nothing to do with affairs of ... the military, and the Khmer Rouge leaders had no need to seek my opinion about the sweeping up (of the regime's enemies) or about the arrest of this or that cadre at all. Nor did they see the necessity for me to participate in those affairs with them," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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