
Chief Ideologist, 'Brother Number Two'
"Everything I did, I did for my country."
Born on July 7, 1926, in Prey Veng province, Nuon Chea was the Khmer Rouge's chief ideologist and 'Brother Number Two' — second only to Pol Pot in the movement's hierarchy. He studied law in Bangkok before joining the Indochinese Communist Party in 1950 and dedicating his life to the revolutionary cause. While Pol Pot was the charismatic face of the movement, Nuon Chea was its ideological engine — he designed the political education programs, the class enemy categories, and the internal security apparatus that became S-21. He was responsible for the systematic execution of perceived class enemies and for the purges that swept through the Khmer Rouge's own ranks. After the fall of Democratic Kampuchea, Nuon Chea remained on the Thai border with the Khmer Rouge until surrendering to the Cambodian government in 1998. He was arrested in 2007 and faced trial at the ECCC on charges of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. In November 2018, he and co-defendant Khieu Samphan were convicted of genocide against Vietnamese and Cham Muslim minorities and sentenced to life imprisonment — the first genocide conviction at the tribunal. Nuon Chea died on August 4, 2019, in Phnom Penh while serving his life sentence, age 93. He maintained until the end that his actions were necessary to protect Cambodia.
Did you know?
April 17, 1975 · 2,000 total casualties
The fall of Phnom Penh ends the Cambodian Civil War and marks the beginning of one of the 20th century's worst genocides. Within hours of entering the city, the Khmer Rouge orders the total evacuation of the capital.
April 17–20, 1975 · 20,000 total casualties
The largest forced urban evacuation in history. Never before had an army emptied an entire capital in a matter of days. It was the opening act of an ideology that viewed cities as corrupt, money as poison, and the entire pre-revolutionary population as class enemies to be re-educated or eliminated.
1975–1977 · 500,000 total casualties
The collectivization campaign was the engine of mass death. Unlike Nazi concentration camps with their industrial killing apparatus, the Khmer Rouge killed through the mundane machinery of bureaucratic agriculture — ration books, work quotas, forced relocations. Death came from engineered starvation, disease, and exhaustion, administered by teenagers who had never known another world.
1977–1978 · 100,000 total casualties
The Eastern Zone purges reveal the self-devouring logic of revolutionary paranoia. By eliminating his most experienced commanders for suspected disloyalty, Pol Pot destroyed the military capacity that might have resisted the Vietnamese invasion — while simultaneously creating the refugee pool that would supply Vietnam's liberation army.
1975–1979 · 17,000 total casualties
S-21 is the most documented site of Khmer Rouge atrocity because the regime's own bureaucratic obsession with record-keeping left behind thousands of photographs, confession documents, and prisoner lists. These records became the primary evidence for the ECCC tribunal. The systematic photography of prisoners — ordered so Angkar could verify deaths — created an archive of faces that still haunts Cambodia.
July 7, 1926
🌅 Birth
Born in Prey Veng province, Cambodia
1946–1950
📚 Education
Studied law in Bangkok; joined Indochinese Communist Party
April 1975
📍 Posting
Became Standing Committee chairman; chief architect of Year Zero ideology
1979–1998
🕊️ Postwar
Continued as Khmer Rouge leader on Thai border
November 16, 2018
🕊️ Postwar
Convicted of genocide by ECCC; sentenced to life imprisonment
August 4, 2019
✝️ Death
Died in custody at age 93 while serving life sentence