On Thursday 26 March, at 8:30 a.m.,
the Victims Support Section (VSS) of the Extraordinary Chambers in the
Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) together with the Ministry of Culture
and Fine Arts of the Royal Government of Cambodia will inaugurate a
Memorial to Victims of the Democratic Kampuchea Regime at Tuol Sleng
Genocide Museum in Phnom
Penh.
The Ceremony, to be presided over by
H.E. Dr. Sok An, Deputy Prime Minister, Minister in Charge of the
Office of the Council of Ministers, and Chairman of the Cambodian Royal
Government Task Force on the Khmer Rouge Trials; and
H.E. Joachim Baron von Marschall, German Ambassador to Cambodia,
will be held in the presence of survivors of the S-21 Security Center
and Civil Parties before the ECCC, representatives from Victims
Association and other related stakeholders. The Memorial
is dedicated to and erected in memory of all victims of the Democratic
Kampuchea regime, especially to the at least 12,272 victims who were
unlawfully detained at S-21 prison, a Phnom Penh security center during
the Democratic Kampuchea regime from 1975 to
1979, where they were subjected to inhumane conditions, forced labour
and torture, and eventually
killed at the execution site of Choeung Ek, or the labour camp of Prey Sar (S-24).
The
Memorial (built on an area of 400 square meters, with 6 meters in
height) was designed and erected by the Ministry of Culture and Fine
Arts (General Department of
Cultural Heritage), in close cooperation with the Victims Support
Section of the ECCC, and other stakeholders with financial support from German Ministry
of Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ)/GIZ.
The
construction of the Memorial at Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum is a part of
the Victim’s Support Section's mandate to develop non-judicial programs
and measures addressing
the broader interests of victims.


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