Pol Pot | |
---|---|
ប៉ុល ពត | |
General Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea | |
In office 22 February 1963 – 6 December 1981 | |
Deputy | Nuon Chea |
Preceded by | Tou Samouth (1962) |
Succeeded by | Position abolished (party dissolved) |
Prime Minister of Democratic Kampuchea | |
In office 25 October 1976 – 7 January 1979 | |
President | Khieu Samphan |
Deputy | |
Preceded by | Nuon Chea (acting) |
Succeeded by | Pen Sovan (1981) |
In office 14 April 1976 – 27 September 1976 | |
President | Khieu Samphan |
Deputy | |
Preceded by | Khieu Samphan (acting) |
Succeeded by | Nuon Chea (acting) |
Commander-in-chief of Kampuchea Revolutionary Army | |
In office 1977–1979 | |
General Secretary of the Party of Democratic Kampuchea | |
In office 1981–1985 | |
Preceded by | Himself (as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea) |
Succeeded by | Khieu Samphan |
Personal details | |
Born | Saloth Sâr 25 May 1925 Prek Sbauv, Kampong Thom Province, Cambodia, French Indochina |
Died | 15 April 1998 Choam, Trapeang Prei , Anlong Veng, Oddar Meanchey, Cambodia 14°21′14″N 104°07′17″E / 14.353862°N 104.121282°E | (aged 72)
Resting place | Choam, Trapeang Prei , Anlong Veng, Oddar Meanchey, Cambodia 14°20′34″N 104°03′29″E / 14.342910°N 104.057948°E |
Political party |
|
Other political affiliations | French Communist Party (1950s) |
Spouses | |
Children | Sar Patchata[1] |
Education | EFREI (no degree) |
Signature | |
Military service | |
Allegiance | |
Branch/service | Kampuchea Revolutionary Army |
Years of service | 1963–1997 |
Rank | General |
Battles/wars | |
Pol Pot[a] (born Saloth Sâr;[b] 19 May 1925 – 15 April 1998) was a Cambodian communist revolutionary, politician and dictator who ruled Cambodia as Prime Minister of Democratic Kampuchea between 1976 and 1979. Ideologically a Maoist and a Khmer ethnonationalist, he was a leading member of Cambodia’s communist movement the Khmer Rouge, from 1963 to 1997. He served as General Secretary of the Communist Party of Kampuchea[c] from 1963 to 1981 and his rule converted Cambodia into a one-party communist state. He perpetrated the Cambodian genocide of which from 1975 to 1979 between 1.5 and 2 million people died, approximately a quarter of Cambodia's entire population. His iron rule ended when Vietnam invaded Cambodia in December 1978, occupying the whole country in two weeks, ending the genocide, toppling the Khmer Rouge and establishing a new Cambodian government.
Born to a prosperous farmer in Prek Sbauv, French Cambodia, Pol Pot was educated at some of Cambodia's most elite schools. Arriving in Paris in October 1949 on an academic scholarship, he later joined the French Communist Party in 1951 while studying at École française de radioélectricité. Returning to Cambodia in 1953, he involved himself in the Khmer Viet Minh organisation and its guerrilla war against King Norodom Sihanouk's newly independent government. Following the Khmer Viet Minh's 1954 retreat into North Vietnam, Pol Pot returned to Phnom Penh, working as a teacher while remaining a central member of Cambodia's Marxist–Leninist movement. In 1959, he helped formalise the movement into the Kampuchean Labour Party, which was later renamed the Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK). To avoid state repression, in 1962 he relocated to a jungle encampment and in 1963 became the CPK's leader. In 1968, he relaunched the war against Sihanouk's government. After Lon Nol ousted Sihanouk in a 1970 coup, Pol Pot's forces sided with the deposed leader against the new government, which was bolstered by the United States military. Aided by the Viet Cong militia and North Vietnamese troops, Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge forces advanced and controlled all of Cambodia by 1975.
Pol Pot transformed Cambodia into a one-party state that he called Democratic Kampuchea. Seeking to create an agrarian socialist society that he believed would evolve into a communist one. Year Zero was an idea put into practice by Pol Pot where he believed that all cultures and traditions must be completely destroyed and a new revolutionary culture must replace it starting from scratch. “Year Zero" was announced by the Khmer Rouge on April 17, 1975, where everything before that date must be purged. The Khmer Rouge emptied the cities, frogmarched Cambodians to labor camps and relocated the urban population to collective farms, where mass executions, abuse, torture, malnutrition and disease were rampant. At the Killing Fields more than 1.3 million people were executed and buried in mass graves. Pursuing complete egalitarianism, money, religion, and private property were abolished and all citizens were forced to wear the same black clothing. Repeated purges of the CPK generated growing discontent; by 1978 Cambodian soldiers were mounting a rebellion in the east.
After several years of violent incursions by the Khmer Rouge on Vietnamese territory resulting in massacres, Vietnam invaded Cambodia in December 1978. By January 1979, Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge had been toppled, the surviving Khmer Rouge members retreated to the scattered jungles near the Thai border, from where they continued to fight and raid, but were severely weakened and were hunted down by Vietnamese soldiers until their withdrawal in 1989. In declining health, Pol Pot stepped back from many of his roles in the movement. In 1998, the Khmer Rouge commander Ta Mok placed Pol Pot under house arrest and shortly afterward, Pol Pot died.
Taking power at the height of global communism's impact, Pol Pot proved to be divisive to the international communist movement. Many claimed that he deviated from orthodox Marxism–Leninism, but China and the US supported his government as a bulwark against Soviet influence in Southeast Asia. He was widely denounced internationally for his role in the Cambodian genocide and he was also regarded as a totalitarian dictator who was guilty of crimes against humanity.
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