• Book Collection
  • Monograph
  • Translation
  • Booklet
  • Magazine
  • Poster
  • Brochure
  • Book Collection
  • Monograph
  • Translation
  • Booklet
  • Magazine
  • Poster
  • Brochure

Home/ Monograph/ post

THE KHMER ROUGE DIVISION 703: From Victory to Self-destruction, Huy Vannak (2003)

  • Monograph
  • Published On August 25, 2003

One of the most favored of the Khmer Rouge’s nine military divisions, Division 703 was composed of 5,000 to 6,000 peasants, primarily from Kandal province. At the end of 1975, its soldiers with “clean” backgrounds were given positions at Tuol Sleng (the central-level prison also known as S-21) or its branch office S-21D (Prey Sar prison) and various government offices. At least 567 of these men were later branded as “enemies” of the regime and executed at S-21.

This monograph examines the careers of 40 soldiers who worked in Division 703. Most of those who survived the 1979 defeat of the Khmer Rouge returned to their villages in the early 1980s, often after spending time in prison as a result of their involvement with the regime.

Funding provided by the United States Department of State, Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor.

SURVIVOR: The triumph of an ordinary man in the Khmer Rouge Genocide CHUM MEY with Documentation Center of Cambodia, Translation by Sim Sorya and Kimsroy Sokvisal (2012)

CAMBODIA’S HIDDEN SCARES: Trauma Psychology in the Wake of the Khmer Rouge, Edited by Beth Van Schaack, Daryn Reicherter & Youk Chhang Managing Editor: Autumn Talbot (2011)

THE HIJAB OF CAMBODIA: Memories of Cham Muslim Women after the Khmer Rouge, So Farina (2011)

BOU MENG: A SURVIVOR FROM KHMER ROUGE PRISON S-21, Justice for the Future, Not Just for the Victims, Huy Vannak (2010)

« Previous Page1 … Page3 Page4 Page5 Next »
Documentation Center of Cambodia

Maison 11, Street 256
Sangkat Chakto Mukh, Khan Daun Penh
Phnom Penh, 120207, Cambodia

t: +855 (0) 92 234 707
e: truthpheana.s@dccam.org
e: dccam@online.com.kh
© Copyright 2025

Sponsor

This website was funded by a grant (Documentation and Democracy) from the United States Department of State. The opinions, findings and conclusions stated herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the United States Department of State.

If you have problem to access, please contact: Morm Sophat, Information Technology Coordinator
t: +855 (0) 16 27 27 22
e: truthsophat.m@dccam.org

Working Hours: Monday through Friday 07:30 am to 05:00 pm local time (“Normal Business Hours”), excluding weekends and national holidays.

This website is designed and built by Slalom Consulting.

Website’s Archives
Return To Top

About the front-page profile image:
Bou Samnang: A New Promise and Hope for Cambodia.