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=== Transcript ===
=== Transcript ===
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"Murder of a Gentle Land" is the well documented story of what has happened
to Cambodia since the Communist take over. The authors, both experienced
journalists, toured refugee camps in Thailand, monitored Cambodian radio and
press reports, interviewed hundreds and hundreds of Cambodian refugees and
then cross-checked the stories they heard to establish their veracity.


The crime is unquestionably premeditated, cold-blooded murder of possibly
one-third of the entire population of Cambodia. And, the method of killing
covered the entire spectrum of man's inhumanity to man back through the ages;
starvation, thirst, beating, butchery by blade and, of course, shooting. The
victims ranged from the tiniest of babes to the aged and infirm. The murderers
are the Communist rulers of what remains of Cambodia.
Since that broadcast, the authors have submitted testimony to the human
rights subcommittee of the House International Relations Committee. John Barron
appended a letter from Anthony Paul to his testimony. Paul had just returned
from another several hundred mile trip through the refugee camps. He wrote,
"I had expected some evidence of slackening of terror in Cambodia. It is true
that fewer refugees are escaping from that country into Thailand -- the present
rate being about 100 per month -- but the stories they bring suggest the killings
have not yet stopped".
The author's testimony didn't get much press attention, but one Washington
journal, HUMAN EVENTS, reported the continuing story of barbarity and bloodshed
including the account of a British correspondent who has toured the refugee
camps. Ian Ward of the London DAILY TELEGRAPH says, -- QUOTE -- "Daily acts of
unspeakable barbarism continue to be perpetuated in the name of this once gentle
country's Communist revolution". -- UNQUOTE. He confirms the victims number
more than two million so far.
Mr. Paul told of a 27-year-old philosophy student named Main Hom who told
him the slightest form of irregular behavior was punished with often brutal and
immediate execution. He related the case of a 20-year old girl seized and carried
off, her arms tied behind her back. Her crime? Reading an English language
textbook. Two days later, he came upon her about 15 feet off a jungle path.
She had been buried up to her neck. She was still alive, her head and mouth
moving but no words or sound came from her. He could only hurry by. Later he
learned she had died.
Barron's testimony was that a tragedy of terrible proportions has befallen
the people of Cambodia and will continue so long as the legislatures of the·
world remain silent.
Human Events reports that one Congressman on the committee -- a former
anti-war liberal -- was appalled by what he heard. Calling it one of the most
monstrous crimes of the century , he said -- QUOTE -- "The question is, what
can we do about it? We have to bring this criminal regime to its senses". -- UNQUOTE.
Am I wrong or wasn't this the type of thing the United Nations was established
to eliminate? But whether the U.N. protests or not -- and the odds are against
it -- wouldn't we feel better if our own Government expressed its repugnance
and, in a voice heard round the world, proclaimed that Cambodia's present rulers
are unfit to associate with the world family of nations?
This is Ronald Reagan.
Thanks for listening.
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Latest revision as of 16:54, 15 January 2026

- Main Page \ Reagan Radio Commentaries \ 1977

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Cambodia[edit]

Transcript[edit]

"Murder of a Gentle Land" is the well documented story of what has happened to Cambodia since the Communist take over. The authors, both experienced journalists, toured refugee camps in Thailand, monitored Cambodian radio and press reports, interviewed hundreds and hundreds of Cambodian refugees and then cross-checked the stories they heard to establish their veracity.

The crime is unquestionably premeditated, cold-blooded murder of possibly one-third of the entire population of Cambodia. And, the method of killing covered the entire spectrum of man's inhumanity to man back through the ages; starvation, thirst, beating, butchery by blade and, of course, shooting. The victims ranged from the tiniest of babes to the aged and infirm. The murderers are the Communist rulers of what remains of Cambodia.

Since that broadcast, the authors have submitted testimony to the human rights subcommittee of the House International Relations Committee. John Barron appended a letter from Anthony Paul to his testimony. Paul had just returned from another several hundred mile trip through the refugee camps. He wrote, "I had expected some evidence of slackening of terror in Cambodia. It is true that fewer refugees are escaping from that country into Thailand -- the present rate being about 100 per month -- but the stories they bring suggest the killings have not yet stopped".

The author's testimony didn't get much press attention, but one Washington journal, HUMAN EVENTS, reported the continuing story of barbarity and bloodshed including the account of a British correspondent who has toured the refugee camps. Ian Ward of the London DAILY TELEGRAPH says, -- QUOTE -- "Daily acts of unspeakable barbarism continue to be perpetuated in the name of this once gentle country's Communist revolution". -- UNQUOTE. He confirms the victims number more than two million so far.

Mr. Paul told of a 27-year-old philosophy student named Main Hom who told him the slightest form of irregular behavior was punished with often brutal and immediate execution. He related the case of a 20-year old girl seized and carried off, her arms tied behind her back. Her crime? Reading an English language textbook. Two days later, he came upon her about 15 feet off a jungle path. She had been buried up to her neck. She was still alive, her head and mouth moving but no words or sound came from her. He could only hurry by. Later he learned she had died.

Barron's testimony was that a tragedy of terrible proportions has befallen the people of Cambodia and will continue so long as the legislatures of the· world remain silent.

Human Events reports that one Congressman on the committee -- a former anti-war liberal -- was appalled by what he heard. Calling it one of the most monstrous crimes of the century , he said -- QUOTE -- "The question is, what can we do about it? We have to bring this criminal regime to its senses". -- UNQUOTE.

Am I wrong or wasn't this the type of thing the United Nations was established to eliminate? But whether the U.N. protests or not -- and the odds are against it -- wouldn't we feel better if our own Government expressed its repugnance and, in a voice heard round the world, proclaimed that Cambodia's present rulers are unfit to associate with the world family of nations?

This is Ronald Reagan.

Thanks for listening.

 

Details[edit]

Batch Number76-16-B4
Production Date07/06/1977
Book/PageRPtV-175
Audio
Youtube?No

Added Notes[edit]