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In opening statements delivered Monday and early Tuesday, the prosecutors described a litany of horrors, recalling how the Khmer Rouge sought to crush not just all its enemies, but seemingly the human spirit. Most of the population was forced to work on giant rural communes and deprived of any sort of private life. Forced marriages took the place of love, and dissenters were dispatched to the so-called
'killing fields.' Nuon Chea, who spoke in time allotted for defense rebuttals of the prosecutors' statements, did little to directly address the allegations of atrocities. He instead gave a political history of the Khmer Rouge and Cambodia, insisting that his role was always a patriotic one. "I had to leave my family behind to liberate my motherland from colonialism and aggression and oppression by the thieves who wish to steal our land and whip Cambodia off the face of the earth," he said. He accused Vietnam of repeatedly seeking to occupy Cambodia, a charge familiar from when the fraternal socialist neighbors first fell out in the 1970s.
[Associated
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