Hamill returns to Cambodia for Duch verdict
13 July
Media Release
Hamill returns to Cambodia
for Duch verdict
Kiwi rower Rob Hamill will return to Cambodia at the end of July to hear the verdict in the trial of Comrade Duch, the Khmer Rouge commander of Tuol Sleng prison where Rob’s brother, Kerry, was tortured and killed in late 1978.
Rob’s presence at the Extraordinary
Chamber of the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) for the verdict on
the 26th July comes almost a year after he testified there
as a ‘Civil Party’ representative. Speaking as one of
many that suffered losses at the hands of the Khmer Rouge,
Rob gave testimony exactly 31 years after Kerry and
Englishman John Dewhirst were snatched from their
storm-blown yacht. A third sailor Canadian Stuart Glass was
killed on the spot. Kerry and John were tortured for up to
two months at ‘Tuol Sleng’ (also known as ‘S21’) and
forced to falsely confess they were CIA spies, before being
executed on the orders of Pol Pot. 14,000 Cambodians met a
similar fate at the prison. Rob’s statement, like that of
the other Civil Parties, was intended to influence the
sentencing of Duch.
Rob believes that the sentencing is
crucial to Cambodia’s recovery as a nation: "There is a
saying in Cambodia, ‘Transform the River of Blood into a
River of Reconciliation’. Nearly two million Cambodians
were killed during the Khmer Rouge regime between 1975 and
1979," said Hamill. "I only hope that this verdict brings
some sense of justice to those who have suffered so much and
waited so long."
Rob’s story is the subject of
‘Brother Number One’, a film produced by Annie Goldson,
James Bellamy and Rob for BNO Productions/Pan Pacific Films.
The documentary is intended for theatrical and broadcast
release in New Zealand and worldwide, and is funded by NZ on
Air, TV3, and the NZ Film Commission. Annie, an Associate
Professor at the University of Auckland who has received
multiple awards for her earlier films, is also directing,
with Academy Award-winner Peter Gilbert and Kiwi Jake Bryant
sharing the cinematographer credit. See