Simply having an opinion in this version of Cambodia may land them in prison, or worse: Cambodia’s killing fields. These are not places you eventually get to walk out of.
Due to the proximity of the S21 prison and the Killing Fields to Cambodia’s capital of Phnom Penh, it’s almost impossible not to visit these two sites when visiting the country. In 1975, a high school was converted into what became known as Security Prison 21, or S21. Under the Khmer Rouge reign of terror, anyone who was educated, had travelled, had a connection to a foreign government, or believed in a free market society was deemed a threat and promptly imprisoned and interrogated; as was everyone they knew.
Because they were interrogated under extreme torture, the prisoners basically said or signed anything to make the pain stop, but by doing so, they often signed their own execution, as the guards no longer had need of them. Soon, no one was safe; the government evacuated the cities, and anyone not deemed a threat was sent to work in dreadful conditions on forced labor farms. This was also a way to escape certain imprisonment, torture and death. Many city dwellers would scuff and scrape their hands and faces and tatter their clothes to try and pass themselves off as peasant farmers.
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