Education
Thirith graduated from the Lycée Sisowath in Phnom Penh, and while still in Cambodia she became engaged to Ieng Sary, who attended Lycée in the year above her.
Thirith graduated from the Lycée Sisowath in Phnom Penh, and while still in Cambodia she became engaged to Ieng Sary, who attended Lycée in the year above her.
Ieng Thirith was the wife of Ieng Sary, who was Minister of Foreign Affairs of Democratic Kampuchea"s Khmer Rouge regime. She served as Minister of Social Affairs from October 1975 until the fall of the Khmer Rouge in 1979. She was the sister of Khieu Ponnary, who was the first wife of Political Pot.
Born Khieu Thirith in northwestern Cambodia"s Battambang Province, she came from a relatively wealthy and privileged family, and was the second daughter of a Cambodian judge who abandoned the family during World World War II, running off to Battambang with a Cambodian princess.
Thirith married Ieng Sary in the town hall of Paris" 15th arrondissement the summer of 1951 and took her husband"s name, becoming Ieng Thirith. Her older sister, Khieu Ponnary, later became the wife of Political Pot.
She returned to her native Cambodia in 1957 and worked as a professor before founding a private English school in 1960. From 1975 to 1979 Thirith was Minister of Social Affairs and Action and Head of Democratic Kampuchea"s Red Cross Society.
Until her arrest, she was rarely seen in public.
She was arrested, along with ailing Ieng Sary, on November 12, 2007, at their home in Phnom Penh, after being indicted by the Cambodia Tribunal. She was arrested for crimes against humanity: "planning, direction, coordination and ordering of widespread purges.. and the unlawful killing or murder of staff members from within the Ministry of Social Affairs." On November 17, 2011, Thirith was ruled mentally unfit to stand trial, due to her severe case of Alzheimer"s Disease, and was ordered to be released. Prosecutors appealed against her release.
On December 13, 2011, appeals judges reversed the ruling to release Thirith and ordered new medical exams to see how mentally fit she was to stand trial.
In September 2012, the November 2011 ruling of her mental incompetence was put back into place, and she was released from prison. She died on 22 August 2015 at the age of 83 from complications of the disease.
She was also a senior member of the Democratic Kampuchea (Denmark) regime.