TPO ANNUAL REPORTS

 

 

 

 Victims of Torture (VOT) Project: Helping the Victims of the Khmer Rouge


Annual Report

October 2003 through September 2004

 

 

Our hypothesis is that by creating a climate allowing victims of torture to come forward, it will be possible to address their physical and emotional needs, as well as the needs of their families.

 

 

Executive Summary

 

A range of affective conditions, including trauma, are the legacy of recent political conflicts, twenty years of civil war, the massive atrocities committed during the Khmer Rouge years, and the grave social and economic problems faced by thousands of Cambodians on a daily basis. This report describes the first-year achievements, challenges, and impacts of the Victims of Torture (VOT) Project, which was designed to address the trauma experienced by victims of the Khmer Rouge.

 

Results to Date. Since the project began in October 2003, the VOT team has interviewed 144 people in three provinces.[*] Using the Cambodian version of the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ), we have identified 49 people (about a third of those interviewed) as victims of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). The vast majority of those suffering from PTSD lost loved ones during the Democratic Kampuchea regime. All of these victims were referred to TPO for counseling and treatment.

 

Table 1. First-Year Project Results: Interviews and PSTD Victims

Province/

District

Subdistrict/Villages

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kandal/

Kandal Steung

Prek Rokar /5

Trea/4

Anlong Romeat/1 Tien/1

Rolaos/1

15

29

6

17

Takeo/

Tramkak

Leay Bo/4

Kus/5

Ang Ta Sam/1

Tramkak/2

Cheang Tong/1 Samrong/11

20

40

6

15

Kampot/

Chhouk (Koh Sla)

Trapang Plang/3 

Ta Ken/5

34

6

3

2

Total

 

69

75

15

34

144

49

 

A breakdown of the number of interviews, cassettes and pages transcribed to date is given below by province:

 

Table 2. First-Year Project Results: Cassettes and Transcriptions by Province

Province

Interviews

Cassettes Recorded

Pages Transcribed

Kandal

44

77

1,243

Takeo

 60

113

1,483

Kampot

40

71

849

Total

 144

261

3,575

 

Among the 3,575 pages transcribed, we have completed the transcription of 108 interviews and 189 cassettes. Currently, we are transcribing 72 cassettes from the remaining 36 interviews, which were conducted in August and September of this year. During the project, our volunteers will translate the interviews into English for research purposes.

 

Preliminary Findings: Two main findings have emerged to date regarding those interviewed, but caution must be exercised when drawing conclusions owing to the small sample size. They relate to whether the person experiencing trauma was a victim or perpetrator, or a man or woman. TPO will analyze these two findings more carefully as the project proceeds.

 

Soldier vs. Victim Trauma. Forty-five former Khmer Rouge soldiers/cadres have been interviewed to date (1 in Takeo, 5 in Kandal, and 39 in Kampot). Five of them are women. We found in general that there is a smaller incidence of PTSD among this population than among victims. There are a number of possible explanations for this:

 

  • Fear of speaking out: When the regime was toppled in 1979, many villagers took revenge and killed Khmer Rouge. This, coupled with rumors that lower-level Khmer Rouge would be tried at the upcoming tribunal, may have made the former soldiers hesitant to discuss the regime (an article in the October 23-24 issue of The Cambodia Daily quoted an advisor to the government’s task force, however, as saying, “It’s important to reassure people that…the establishment of the Extraordinary Chambers does not mean that people will be combing the villages looking for people with a past associated with the Khmer Rouge.” Others may have been reluctant because of the guilt they carry over their past actions.
     

  • Less traumatic experiences: It can be posited that soldiers are less traumatized because they suffered less than other members of the population during Democratic Kampuchea. For example, most of them had enough food to eat on the front lines, lost their loved ones less frequently, were not forced to labor under extreme conditions, and were seldom beaten or tortured.
     

  • Military culture: Owing to their strong ideology and discipline, former soldiers may simply be better at denying their trauma than members of the general population, or not perceive themselves as being traumatized. Their culture was one of blind obedience and many believe that their jobs were simply to follow orders, and they feel little or no remorse about doing so.

 

Women. Women show a higher incidence of PTSD: about twice that of men. Forty-five percent (34 out of 75) of the women interviewed were identified as PTSD victims, as opposed to 22% (15 out of 69) of the men interviewed. Possible explanations include the relatively greater willingness of women to admit, and talk about, the traumas they experienced.

 

Despite their acknowledgements, however, many women PTSD sufferers had a difficult time discussing their specific traumas. Many did not want to recall their past experiences because they felt no one could help them (some were more forthcoming once the VOT team explained the benefits of the help the project could give them) or because they re-lived the trauma when speaking about it. Others remained mute because they still feared retribution (in Kandal, victims often live nearby the people they suspect killed their loved ones, or beat, tortured, or sexually abused the women).

 

Challenges and Impacts: The main challenges identified for the project to date include the initial reluctance of Koh Sla villagers to cooperate with project staff (a majority of these villagers are former Khmer Rouge soldiers) and the ability of TPO staff to meet the large anticipated demand for its counseling and treatment services. We have initiated a number of activities in Koh Sla to gain its residents’ trust and are working with TPO to find ways for it to counsel more project clients.

 

 

Overview of the Project

 

To document the experiences of individuals traumatized during the Khmer Rouge regime and to find effective ways of helping the victims cope with their trauma, the Documentation Center of Cambodia (DC-Cam) requested funding from the U.S Agency for International Development on June 20, 2003. On July 10, 2003, DC-Cam revised its proposal for the project to include the services of the Transcultural Psychosocial Organization (TPO). The proposal was subsequently accepted and the project funded.

 

Our original proposal stipulated that work be conducted in either Takeo or Kandal province, both of which contain a large proportion of victims of the Khmer Rouge. Of historical importance, both provinces were under the control of Ta Mok (the head of the Southwest Zone during Democratic Kampuchea and a candidate for prosecution under the Khmer Rouge tribunal). This, plus the significant numbers of mass graves and prisons these two provinces, provides strong evidence of large-scale human rights abuses, including torture.

 

However, we subsequently added the pilot area of Koh Sla in Chhouk district of Kampot province to the project. The majority of survivors in this region were Khmer Rouge soldiers. There are two reasons why we chose Koh Sla for VOT fieldwork. First, it is located in the West Zone, a highly controlled area under the Khmer Rouge regime. Second, the addition of this area broadened the project’s target population to helping Khmer Rouge soldiers (TPO and DC-Cam consider the former soldiers to be victims of the Khmer Rouge, as do the soldiers themselves).

 

 

Identifying Trauma Victims

 

Our approach to communities in Takeo and Kandal is similar. Although the majority of their populations are victims, potential project clients have been more difficult to locate than originally anticipated. To locate potential clients, DC-Cam initially relied on Khmer Rouge biographies, but discovered that many of the individuals for which we possessed biographies had returned to their homes in other provinces after the regime. We thus asked local authorities and individuals to refer former prisoners and other victims to our team. While biographies were the main method of locating potential VOT clients in Koh Sla, finding individuals there who were willing to speak openly and honestly with project staff has been problematic because of their adherence to ideology and do not understand social integration issues. (A booklet recently published by the government “says only the highest echelons of Khmer Rouge leadership will be tried, exonerating the legions of former middle- to low-ranking members of Democratic Kampuchea.” Cambodia Daily, October 23-24, 2004, p. 3.)

 

 

The two-year VOT project involves counseling for people who suffered abuse under the Democratic Kampuchea regime (both victims and perpetrators) and are traumatized today. In addition, TPO is providing technical support to project staff during client identification and interviews. Our primary roles are to assist the TPO in its identification of traumatized people for care and to work with the children of those traumatized individuals to assist them in coping with difficulties that may result from their parents’ suffering.

 

Prior to the counseling, TPO has been assessing each proposed client’s mental health status, level of functioning, and level of distress using standardized questionnaires such as Short Form-12 (SF12), Mental Health Inventory-5 (MHI-5), General Health Questionnaires (GHQ), and WHO-Disability Assessment Schedule 12 (WHO-DAS-12). Actual counseling will begin in January 2005 and continue through December of that year.

 

We have been considering another activity for the project’s second year: informal TPO orientations for patients, family members, and neighbors. We have discovered that such activities are important in working toward healing the trauma experienced by many victims and perpetrators who lived during Democratic Kampuchea.

 

Achievements and Progress

 

The VOT project's overall activities can be divided into five main areas: 1) staff training, 2) field interviews, 3) documentation, 4) reporting and evaluation, and 5) counseling and treatment. Before discussing each of these areas, the following paragraphs provide a brief chronology of project activities from October 2003 through September 2004.

  

First Quarter (October to December 2003). We completed project logistics arrangements and technical coordination, and formulated plans for the life of the project. This included identifying target areas (Takeo and Kandal, where the majority of inhabitants are victims, and Kampot province, where most are former Khmer Rouge soldiers). With TPO staff members, we drafted questionnaires, set training schedules for basic psychological interviews, and identified intensive training courses overseas, as well as certified psychological experts for staff on-the-job-training and report analysis. We also worked on budgeting TPO's consultancy services for the project. 

 

Second Quarter (January to March 2004). DC-Cam and TPO held planning sessions and developed interview questionnaires. The questionnaires cover an indrocution to interviewing, questions for obtaining an individual’s history, questions for assessing a person’s emotional functioning based mostly on The Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ) – Cambodain Version for Identifying Post Traumatic Stress Disorders (PTSD), and questions to solicit opinions on Khmer Rouge tribunal and experiences in coping with trauma-related issues.[†] In addition, TPO professionals presented three training modules to DC-Cam staff on such topics as an introduction to mental health and mental health problems, psychological problems, stress and stress management, concepts of trauma, and loss/adjustment; TPO also prepared materials to accompany the training sessions.

 

During this quarter, we made two five-day fieldtrips to Kandal Steung district (Kandal province) and Tramkak district (Takeo province). There, we identified and interviewed 13  prospective TPO patients; the 4 people we identified as suffering from PTSD were referred to TPO. We also transcribed 9 interviews (each interview is about 50 pages in length). Based on the number of interviews completed, we estimated that we could conduct 2 interviews each day, and so planned to interview about 238 people with 119 days in 2004.

 

Table 3. Second-Quarter Results: Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Interviews Conducted

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kandal/Kandal Steung

--

6

 

2

Takeo/Tramkak

6

1

1

1

Total

6

7

1

3

13

4

 

Third Quarter (April to June 2004). We completed the last module of TPO training, which began in January 2004. The module addressed communications: basic counseling skills and standardized questionnaires. We also completed a VOT fieldtrip research manual. Consulting Harvard materials and with comments from our TPO partners, our questionnaire includes an introduction to DC-Cam and the VOT project, methods for eliciting personal background, and a set of questions on trauma events, as well as views on justice and reconciliation.

 

In May, we conducted 11 interviews in Kampot and Kandal provinces over 19 days (10 days in Kampot and 9 in Kandal). None of those interviewed in Kampot were identified as PTSD victims. However, we identified 6 PTSD victims in Kandal, who were then referred to TPO. In June, we conducted 18 interviews in Takeo and Kampot over 13 days (8 in Takeo and 5 in Kampot). We identified 8 PTSD victims in Takeo and 1 woman in Kampot; all 9 were referred to TPO for counseling and treatment.
 

Table 4. Third-Quarter Results: Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Interviews Conducted

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kampot/Chhouk (Koh Sla)

5

2

--

1

Kandal/Kandal Steung

4

4

3

3

Takeo/ Tramkak

4

10

2

6

Total

29

15

  

Fourth Quarter (July to September 2004). We had 6 fieldtrips (2 trips in July to Kandal and Takeo provinces, 2 in August to Kampot and Kandal provinces, and 2 in September in Takeo and Kampot provinces) over 34 days (10 in Kandal, 12 in Takeo and 12 in Kampot). As a result, we interviewed 102 people. All 30 of the men and women so identified were referred to TPO for counseling and treatment.

 

Table 5. Fourth-Quarter Results: Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Interviews Conducted

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kandal/Kandal Steung

11

19

3

12

Takeo/Tramkak

10

29

3

8

Kampot/Chhouk (Koh Sla)

29

4

3

1

Total

50

52

9

21

102

30

 

During this period, TPO staff went to the field on several occasions to support DC-Cam staff in the initial interviews, and worked with DC-Cam on the selection of respondents in need of psychological intervention. In August, our team met to determine the number, location, and types of activities the project would conduct in 2005. While TPO had initially agreed to provide counseling to 15 PTSD sufferers, in light of the number identified (49), it was agreed that TPO would increase the number of people counseled, with support from DC-Cam. Because the PTSD victims are widely dispersed geographically, project staff determined that more information on the expected target areas and outputs, as well as careful planning, were needed in order to accommodate the provision of additional counseling and allow for an efficient allocation of TPO resources. A revised project plan is thus anticipated for the fourth quarter of the project.

 

As a result of these discussions, TPO decided to visit Koh Sla in order to determine the situation in the area and speak with key members of the community about their experiences during Democratic Kampuchea, the difficulties they are experiencing now, and the area’s resources and activities. TPO identified two areas of conflict in Koh Sla: the ownership of land and tensions between former perpetrators and victims (for example, victims tend to talk a great deal about the past, while perpetrators do not).

 

The project team decided to defer activities in this area because of the small number of PTSD sufferers identified and the amount of time required to travel to the area from Phnom Penh (3.5 hours one way). However, VOT will continue to look for PTSD victims in this area. TPO proposed instead to target its interventions in Kandal and Takeo provinces; this proposal will be discussed next quarter.
 

1.         Project Staff Training

           

Training for DC-Cam Staff Members. TPO provided trained DC-Cam staff in four blocks between January and April (roughly January 5-8, February 3-5, and March 29-April 1). Trainees were pre- and post-tested to measure their progress. See the TPO report on training on our homepage: http://www.dccam.org/Projects/VOT/psychological_education_report.pdf. 

 

Technical Support to VOT Project Staff Members during Interview and Identification. To ensure the reliability of our psychological ratings of victims and to help DC-Cam staff in data collection, TPO counsellors went to the field four times (2 days each time) to provide support and advise DC-Cam staff on issues surrounding psychosocial problems. After an interview was completed, DC-Cam worked with TPO to identify people who were thought to have trauma; they were then referred to TPO counsellors for intervention. This phase was roughly completed at the end of 2004. For more information, see the submission of TPO’s first and second progress reports at http://www.dccam.org/Projects/VOT/TPO_Project.htm.

 

2.         Field Interviews

 

February. We conducted two field trips. We visited Kandal province from February 9-13 and Takeo from February 23-27. There, we interviewed 13 victims and identified 4 of them as having PTSD.

 

Table 6. February Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Village/Subdistrict/

Interviews

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kandal/
Kandal Steung

Dam Traing/Anlong Romeat/1

Boeng Ka-ek/Prek Rokar /2

Koh Khnor/Prek Rokar /2

Chambokk Trop/Prek Rokar /1

--

--

--

--

1

2

2

1

--

2

Takeo/

Tramkak

Trapang Ta Sok/Kus/1

Pong Toek Khang Tbuoung/Kus/1

Krang Ta Chann/Kus/1

Trapang Thmor/Kus/2

Prey Romdeng/Ang Ta Sam/1

Thnung Roleun/Lay Bo/1

1

1

1

2

1

 

 

 

 

 

 

1

1

1

Total

 

6

7

1

3

  

May. We conducted 2 trips over 19 days (Kampot from May 4-13 and Kandal from May 24-June 1). Of the 11 victims interviewed, 6 were identified as suffering from PTSD.

 

Table 7. May Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Village/Subdistrict/

Interviews

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kampot/
Chhouk

Koh Sla/Trapang Plang/1

Monorsok/Ta Ken/1

Trapang Run/Tak Ken/1

--

1

1

1

--

--

--

--

Kandal/

Kandal Steung

Trapang Sva/Trea/2

Koh Khnor/Prek Rokar/2

Boeng Khyang/Prek Rokar/2

Boeng Kha-ek/Prek Rokar/1

Prek Rokar/Prek Rokar/1

2

1

--

1

--

--

1

2

1

--

3

3

Total

 

6

5

3

3

  

June. VOT conducted 2 fieldtrips over 13 days (Takeo from June 7-14 and Kampot from June 21-25). Of the 18 people interviewed, 9 were identified as suffering from PTSD.

 

Table 8.  June Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Village/Subdistrict/

Interviews

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Takeo/

Tramkak

Thnung Rolaeng/Lay Bo

4

10

2

6

Kampot

Chhouk

Koh Sla/Trapang Plang

3

1

--

1

Total

 

7

11

2

7

 

July. Two fieldtrips were conducted over 10 days (Kandal from July 5-9 and Takeo from July 19-23). Of the 20 people interviewed, 5 were identified as PTSD victims.

 

Table 9. July Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Village/Subdistrict/

Interviews

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kandal/

Kandal Steung

Daun Vong/Trea/1

Trapaing Sva/Trea/4

Moat Boeng/Trea/3

Thmey/Tien/1

Chamkar Mkak/RoLoas/1

--

4

1

--

--

1

--

2

1

1

--

3

Takeo/

Tramkak

Trapaing Chhouck/Lay-Bo/4

Prey Kouy/Lay-Bo/4

Trapaing Pring/Lay Bo/2

--

--

--

4

4

2

--

2

Total

 

5

15

 

5

  

August. We conducted 2 fieldtrips over 12 days (Kampot from August 2-8 and Kandal from August 16-20). Two VOT teams interviewed 41 people and identified 14 of them as PTSD victims.

 

Table 10. August Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Village/Subdistrict/

Interviews

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Kampot/

Chhouk

Koh Sla/Trapaing Plang/3

Sre Leav/Trapaing Plang/9

Trapaing Run/Ta Ken/4

Srakar Neak/Trapaing Plang/2

Khpob/Trapaing Run

Sre Veal/Trapaing Plang/1

3

8

4

1

2

1

--

1

--

1

--

--

2

--

Kandal/

Kandal Steung

Kapp Leav/Trea/8

Koh Khnor/Prek Rokar/12

3

3

5

9

3

9

Total

 

25

16

5

9

  

September. We conducted 2 fieldtrips over 12 days (Kandal from September 2-8 and Kampot from September 15-19). Two VOT teams interviewed 41 people, 11 of whom were identified PTSD victims.

 

Table 11. September Interviews and PTSD Victims

Province/

District

Village/Subdistrict/

Interviews

Interviews

PTSD Victims Identified

Men

Women

Men

Women

Takeo/

Tramkak

Krabei Prey, Samrong/2

Prasaut Thmey/Samrong/2

Prey Korky/Samrong/2

Chan Teab/Samrong/4

Pong Toek/Samrong/1

Kraing Banteay/Samrong/1

Ta Smann/Samrong/6

Ta Som/Samrong/1

Sre Kvao/Cheang Torng/1

Kus Thmey/Kus/3

Trapaing Rompak/Tramkak/2

Prey Ta Dok/Samrong/1

Ta Pen/Samrong/1

Trapaing Keh/Tramkak/1

Sambuo/Samrong/1

 

1

--

1

2

--

--

1

1

--

2

--

1

1

--

--

1

2

1

2

1

1

5

--

1

1

2

--

--

1

1

3

6

Kampot

Chhouk

Trapaing Run/Ta Ken/1

Khborb/Ta Ken/1

Trapaing Khedi/Ta Ken/10

--

--

10

1

1

--

1

1

Total

 

20

21

4

7

  

3.         Documentation (Transcription, Filling, and Data Entry/VOT Library)

 

Transcription. In the project’s first year, we have transcribed 3,575 pages (encompassing 189 audio cassettes from the 108 interviews transcribe to date).

 

Table 12. First-Year Cassettes and Transcriptions by District

Month

Province

District

Interviews

Cassettes

Pages Transcribed

February

Kandal

Kandal Steung

6

11

165

 

Takeo

Tramkak

7

15

319

Sub Total

13

26

484

May

Kampot

Chhouk

3

5

103

 

Kandal

Kandal Steung

8

13

275

Sub Total

11

18

378

June

Takeo

Tramkak

14

23

486

 

Kampot

Chhuok

4

7

116

Sub Total

18

30

602

July

Kandal

Kandal Steung

10

16

311

 

Takeo

Tramkak

10

17

314

Sub Total

20

33

625

August

Kampot

Chhouk

21

34

630

 

Kandal

Kandal Steung

20

37

492

Sub Total

41

71

1,122

September

Takeo

Tramkak

29

58

364

 

Kampot

Chhouk

12

25

--

Sub Total

41

83

364

Grand Total

144

261

3,575

Filing. We filed the following documents in the past year:

 

Table 13. First-Year Filing Activities

Month

Trauma Questionnaires

Cassettes

Photos

Transcriptions

Victims

with PTSD Listed

February

13

26

40

13

4 (3 women, 1 man)

Two women PTSD victims were identified in Kandal Steung district of Kandal province, and 1 woman and 1 man in Tramkak district of Takeo province.

May

10

18

20

11

6 (3 women, 3 men)

Four of the PTSD victims identified live in Kandal Steung district of Kandal province and two in Tramkak district of Takeo province.

June

18

30

45

18

9 (7 women, 2 men)

Eight PTSD victims (6 women and 2 men) were identified in Tramkak district of Takeo province and 1 woman in Chhouk district of Kampot province.

July

20

33

20

20

5 (all women)

Three of the women PTSD victims live in Kandal Steung district of Kandal province and two Tramkak district of Takeo province.

August

40

64

40

37

14 (9 women, 5 men)

Among these PTSD victims, 2 men live in Koh Sla, and 9 women and 3 men in Kandal Steung district of Kandal province.

September

41

18

24

9

9 (6 women, 3 men)

Seven of the PTSD victims identified (5 women and 2 men) live in Tramkak district of Takeo province, and 1 woman and 1 man live in Koh Sla, Chhouk district of Kampot province.

  

Data Entry/VOT Library. Transcription was time consuming due to the great number of cassettes recorded. We thus had little time for data entry before the interviews were transcribed. We attempted to enter 25 records into our project library/database using Microsoft Access.. However, we encountered a number of difficulties, such as the inability to print out data separately, and decided it was necessary to first determine what kinds of information would be useful to enter. After much discussion in September, we agreed to create a manual for the VOT project's data entries. We will then post our data entries on DC-Cam's homepage at www.dccam.org.

 

Table 14. Composition of the VOT Database/Library

 

For All Interviews

For PTSD Victims

ID number

Name

Gender

Age

Place of birth

Place of interview

Interviewer’s name

Number of cassettes

Number of transcript pages

Occupation before DK

Occupation during DK

Current occupation

Type of trauma (lost loved one(s), former KR prisoner, former KR cadre, former KR soldier, disabled)

Symptoms

 

4.         Reports and Evaluations

 

Reports. Earlier this year, we planned to write monthly reports for the VOT project. Unfortunately, we failed to do this because our VOT staff members were tied up with interview transcription. However, we have prepared separate reports for each of the project’s first three quarters. 

 

Evaluations. From our experience during the project’s first three quarters and after receiving training from TPO, DC-Cam’s VOT staff are better able to understand stress, trauma and psychosocial problems. Thus, we have been able to identify traumatized individuals more accurately and easily.

 

We are also formulating ideas to help our interviewees cope with their emotional reactions over the course of our work. In addition, we have become more sensitive to trauma issues during our interviews, making us better able to find ways of supporting and helping people we encounter with PTSD. 

 

5.         TPO Trauma Counseling

 

Three TPO therapists will take part in each counselling visit conducted in 2005. There will be 2 visits a month with one overnight during each visit over the 12-month period. We anticipate that TPO therapists will provide individual and group trauma counselling and other types of interventions such as group therapy. There will also be an opportunity to provide group activities for children of the traumatized patients; we will develop ideas for this next quarter.

 

Using the skills they have gained from TPO and standardized questionnaires, DC-Cam staff members identify clients for TPO. After individuals suffering from PTSD are identified but prior to counseling (September to December 2004), TPO will assess their mental health status, levels of functioning, and distress using standardized questionnaires (see above). Counseling will begin in January 2005. Each client's history will be recorded and kept in confidential files by TPO therapists. At the end of the project, TPO will conduct an evaluation and write up the results in a report.

 

 

Challenges and Constraints, and Impacts

 

Challenges and Constraints. While we made some good progresses on our VOT project between October 2003 and September 2004, some challenges and constraints remain. These largely relate to the initially slow pace of interviews, working in Koh Sla and the number of individuals who need counseling, which exceeds TPO’s resources.

 

Interviews. Initially, our teams calculated that we could conduct 238 interviews during 2004 (we have completed 144 to date). However, it took far more time to conducted interviews in Koh Sla than anticipated. This was because of the distance required to travel among houses (sometimes houses are 10 km away from each other over poor road and cars cannot travel over them, forcing project staff to walk for an hour each way through land that has not been cleared of mines), owing to villagers’ mistrust of our team’s intentions (for example, in May 2004, we were able to conduct only 1 interview over a 19-day period). The same was true in the other two provinces, but to a lesser extent.

 

For 2005, VOT staff members will continue to interview victims in the field. We plan to spend about 93 days in the field (including 18 days to make up interviews that were delayed last year). We now plan to complete 186 interviews for the project by August 2005.

 

Working in Koh Sla. Koh Sla is home to many Khmer Rouge defectors, widows, landmine victims, and people who are illiterate. We found that working with this community on issues related to Democratic Kampuchea is very different from working in the project’s other two provinces, where the majority of residents are victims of the regime.

 

On our first trip to Koh Sla, we learned that both DC-Cam and the VOT project are new to its residents, and that the challenges identified might delay the project or limit its effectiveness. On May 7, 2004 the VOT team discussed the issues identified with DC-Cam’s director, Youk Chhang, who came to Koh Sla. As a result, we decided that it was necessary to build trust in the community before the VOT project could begin at Koh Sla. We then modified our action plan for the project and designed a strategy to build good relations between Koh Sla villagers and the VOT team. Local authorities were apprised of our proposed plans and agreed to them. For more information, see the report, “First Trip to Koh Sla Community in Kampot Province” on our homepage at http://www.dccam.org  

 

Demand for Counseling. As noted earlier, among the 49 people identified as having PTSD, TPO felt that they could adequately counsel only about 15 because it lacks sufficient staff to provide more treatment. After discussions with TPO on September 23 and 28, our two organizations agreed to provide counseling and treatment to at least 28 PTSD victims, by counseling some family members in groups and choosing counseling candidates who are situated close together. Likely candidates for counseling thus include the 17 victims (12 women and 5 men) living in Prek Rokar sub-district (Kandal province) and the 11 (9 women and 2 men) in Leay Bo sub-district (Takeo province). We are trying to find positive ways to care for the remaining PTSD victims and support as much as possible in the year ahead. 

 

Impacts. Compared to our initial field interviews, we are now observing that trust has gradually been built among former Khmer Rouge soldiers and VOT staff members through a number of VOT-initiated activities. These include erecting signs to Koh Sla to make it more accessible to visiting family members and others, distributing DC-Cam's monthly magazine, and creating a Kampot provincial radio program. In addition, we have spent significant time on social visits with Koh Sla villagers, further increasing their trust in us.

 

Kampot Radio (FM93.25MHz) Broadcast Schedule

 

Time

Coverage

Start Date

7:00-7:30 a.m./p.m. Daily

First They Killed My Father

Searching for the Truth

Anne Frank’s Diary

June 2004

August 2004

August 2004

 

Most of the PTSD victims we identified have acknowledged their problems and that they need help from TPO. This is especially true of the victims we identified in Lay Bo and Prek Rokar sub-districts. Some of them have already begun to ask us when TPO was coming to support them. They also asked us if we have any anti-depression medications. Their hope is that the sooner TPO comes, the more their emotions will improve and the higher the odds that they can begin to resume normal lives.

 

 

Some Evidence of the VOT Project’s Success

 

Anecdotal evidence suggests that our project is having a positive impact on the individuals it is assisting. For example, in Kandal province, the VOT team visited a former Khmer Rouge cadre, Srun Srien, who had been tortured during the regime and imprisoned at Prey Sar security office, where he was shackled for three years. Srun reported that he had not slept through a single night since 1979, as he was troubled by nightmares. After being visited by the VOT team, who gave him medicine and counseling, he was able to sleep uninterrupted for the first time in 25 years. Since the intervention, several of his neighbors have come forward to ask for help from the project.

 

DC-Cam staff located the biography of a former Khmer Rouge cadre (Sau Chal) in Takeo province and visited his village. We interviewed his daughter (Sau Phally), who knew why her father was arrested in 1976, but not what had happened to him. After the interview, we located her father’s confession and found that he was executed at Kraing Ta Chan security center. After telling Sau Phally, she visited the prison and made offerings to her dead father’s spirit, asking that it return to his home so she could pray to him there.  She invited the VOT team for lunch at her house to show her gratitude for relieving her of a psychological burden.

 

  

Conclusion

 

It is very important that the memories of Khmer Rouge crimes be documented and held by an appropriate custodian. In this light, the VOT project can help people reconstruct their memories and all the proper documentation of history. If successful, the VOT project may lead to the design of a national strategy to assist the regime’s victims in coping with the memories surfaced by the tribunal. After the project ends, we hope that all the traumatized persons we identified will continue to be counseled and provided treatment.

 

Prepared by Sophearith CHOUNG

truthsophearith@dccam.org

 


[*] Although we began preliminary work on the VOT in October, funds for the project were not released until late January 2004. This resulted in some delays in the interview process.

[†] The HTQ was developed by the Indochinese Psychiatry Clinic at the Brighton Marine Public Health Center, Department of Psychiatry, St. Elizabeth's Hospital and The Harvard Program in Refugee Trauma, Department of Health Policy and Management, Harvard School of Public Health.This questionnaire has been approved by TPO-Cambodia.

 

l

Psychological Education Reports

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TPO Projects Reports

 
     

Team Leader: Sophearith Chuong, truthsophearith@dccam.org