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Key Points
- It’s been 50 years since the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot, took control of Cambodia in 1975, following a five-year civil war.
- Australia accepted several thousand Cambodian refugees from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s.
- As SBS marks its 50th anniversary, some say the broadcaster’s in-language programs helped them feel at home in Australia.
Under its leader, Pol Pot, more than two million Cambodians are estimated to have been killed between 1975 and 1979 as the communist regime tried to create a so-called ‘classless’ society.

Drawings by Phiny Ung’s late husband Bun Heang. Credit: SBS
It has been estimated that the Khmer Rouge murdered almost a quarter of the population through mass executions, torture, starvation and forced labour.
“There’s no comfort in the loss, but the one thing that eased me a little bit, is that I’m not the only one.”

Phiny Ung and her late husband Bun Heang after arriving in Australia with their baby daughter. Credit: Phiny Ung
Forced to flee Cambodia, Ung arrived in Australia with her husband and young daughter in 1980 and was later able to sponsor her mother and remaining siblings to join them in their new home.
“When I arrived, I just felt safe and free, those are the two words that I can come up with, I don’t feel under threat with anything at all, at least I am human, I am treated as human,” she said.

Phiny Ung today. Credit: SBS
Australia accepted several thousand Cambodian refugees from the late 1970s to the mid-1980s.
According to the 2021 Census, there are currently just over 39,000 Cambodian-born people living in Australia.
Five siblings, father killed
“They said if you want to survive, you must leave the village, your family is not safe,” Douglas said.

Seda Douglas (right) with her mother, Touch Liv. Credit: SBS
Douglas’s five siblings and her father were killed by the Pol Pot regime.
Liv said: “When my five children died. I did not even see their faces for the last time. I was in the forest, did the farming in Boeung Sdor, in the bushes.”
I did not see my husband, I did not see my children until they died, I still could not see them for the last time.
Touch Liv
“I don’t normally celebrate my birthday but I celebrate the day that I arrived in Australia because I was given an opportunity to restart my life and I did it well,” Douglas said.

The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh. It’s estimated as many as two million people were murdered or died from starvation under the Pol Pot dictatorship. Credit: Pascal Deloche/Getty Images
SBS Khmer launched
“We wanted to hear what’s going on in Australia, the government, but mainly we were concerned about what’s going on in Cambodia because we left the country by force not by choice,” she said.

A portrait of Phiny Ung by her late husband, Bun Heang. Credit: SBS
For Ung, the anniversary is painful, but a portrait, painted by her late-husband while the pair were still in Cambodia, holds a special memory.
“He just found three or four colours in the sea of rubbish that he can mix and match. I sat for him a few hours a day,” she said.
“It’s so much of a souvenir … it’s the love in our relationship, husband and wife.”