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One of his most haunting discoveries was a logbook from a cooperative in Kampong Cham. On a single page, the local chief had recorded the names of 47 people "transferred." In the margin, a tiny code—barely visible—indicated that all 47 were taken to a sandbar and killed with hoe handles. Chheng found the sandbar. Forensic teams found the teeth. To spend a day with Ly Chheng is to understand the psychological weight of his work. He does not cry. He does not raise his voice. He has developed the affect of a coroner: clinical, precise, detached. But the detachment is a survival mechanism.
Phnom Penh — In a quiet, climate-controlled room on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, the past is not a metaphor. It is a number. It is a name. It is a photograph of a face that no longer exists outside of a black-and-white frame.
But Ly Chheng is not an academic looking in from the outside. He is a survivor. And the files he processes are not anonymous data points; they are the echoes of neighbors, classmates, and family members he watched vanish into the killing fields of . The Boy Who Watched the Sky Fall Born in 1962 in Battambang province—Cambodia’s rice bowl, later to become one of the regime’s most brutal zones—Chheng was 13 years old when the Khmer Rouge marched into Phnom Penh on April 17, 1975. Like the fictional character Haing S. Ngor would later portray in The Killing Fields , Chheng’s childhood ended with a knock on the door.