The Khmer Rouge’s chief torturer and jailer in Cambodia in the 1970s expresses "excruciating remorse" in the final stages of his trial before the U.N.-backed "Killing Fields" tribunal.
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Many Cambodians believe the area around Tuol Sleng prison is still haunted by the ghosts of 15,000 people tortured before being executed at killing fields outside Phnom Penh. Duration: 01:59.
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Anne-Marie Green reports that Kaing Guek Eav was the chief torturer of the Khmer Rouge and has gone on trial in the country’s first genocide case
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South Korea’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission is finally lifting the veil of secrecy over the massacres of tens of thousands of civilians half a century ago.
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Killing fields survivor returns to save lives April 18: After being forced to leave his family in Cambodia in 1975, NBC video editor Peter Chhun has returned on a lifesaving mission. A Making a Difference report from NBC's George Lewis.
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Anne-Marie Green reports that Kaing Guek Eav was the chief torturer of the Kymer Rouge and has gone on trial in the country’s first genocide case
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Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge war crimes court on Monday began final arguments in the trial of Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, bringing the regime's prison chief closer to justice for the "Killing Fields" atrocities 30 years ago.
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