Cambodia's UN-backed Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal gave its final verdict on Thursday, upholding the genocide conviction against former head of state Khieu Samphan.
The 91-year-old, who served as the communist regime's head of state, was also convicted of multiple crimes against humanity and sentenced to life imprisonment for the offence.
Here's what we know about the Khmer Rouge:
- Who were they? -
The ultra-Maoist Khmer Rouge ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979 under the leadership of "Brother Number One" Pol Pot -- a charismatic intellectual who had studied in France.
The movement started in the northeastern jungles of the kingdom, where Pol Pot recruited supporters and waged guerrilla warfare against the repressive governments of Cambodia of the time.
On April 17, 1975, Khmer Rouge troops marched into Phnom Penh, toppling the US-backed dictatorship of General Lon Nol -- who had staged a coup against Prince Norodom Sihanouk.
Declaring it "Year Zero", Pol Pot aimed to reset -- or "cleanse" -- Cambodian culture in order to build an agrarian utopia.
Millions of Phnom Penh residents were ordered to leave their homes and trek to the countryside, forced to work in labour camps.
During its almost four-year grip on the country, more than two million Cambodians -- nearly a quarter of the kingdom's population -- died from mass executions, starvation and overwork.
- What did they do? -
The Khmer Rouge demanded unquestioning loyalty to "Angkar" -- which translates to "the organisation" in Khmer -- and ties to anyone deemed "impure" were dangerous.
Intellectuals, former civil servants and members of the police and armed forces often fell into the "impure" category, while ethnic minorities -- including Vietnamese and Cham Muslims -- were also systematically targeted.
Strong familial bonds were also considered a betrayal to "Angkar", and relatives were encouraged to report on each other.
Tens of thousands of men and women were also forced to marry and consummate the unions -- under threat of death -- in order to boost the population.
Towards the end of the regime, the Khmer Rouge devoured its own ranks with repeated purges, driven by paranoia from the leadership that the revolution's enemies were hidden within.
- Who supported them? -
The regime's biggest backer was China, which pledged a billion dollars in aid to Pol Pot, Sebastian Strangio, author of "In the Dragon's Shadow" and "Hun Sen's Cambodia", has told AFP.
The US also indirectly helped bolster the ranks of the Khmer Rouge, as carpet-bombings in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos bred resentment among locals against the Western superpower.
After the Khmer Rouge was ousted by Vietnamese-backed troops in 1979 it received some backing from the United States, which saw it as a check on communist Hanoi.
- What was the role of PM Hun Sen? -
Currently Asia's longest-serving leader, Hun Sen rose through the ranks of the Khmer Rouge to become battalion commander before fleeing the country for Vietnam in 1977 to escape one of the many internal purges.
Local history books play down the role he played during the Khmer Rouge's rule, but credit him with leading Vietnamese troops into the country to oust Pol Pot on January 7, 1979.
Attempts to investigate the role of other individuals have been restricted by the current government, which contains several former Khmer Rouge members.
Hun Sen has said he wants the UN-backed tribunal to only investigate the regime's top echelon, warning that opening further cases would plunge the country into instability.
- What justice has there been? -
Launched in 2006, the tribunal -- which cost more than $330 million -- convicted just three people.
The regime's chief interrogator Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, was the first to face judgment and his testimony revealed aspects of the secretive regime that were not previously known to the public.
He was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2012.
The other two convicted were Nuon Chea, "Brother Number Two" and chief ideologue of the regime, and Khieu Samphan, the former head of state who served as the Khmer Rouge's public face to the world.
Critics have castigated interference by the government and the pace of proceedings.
But that there was a tribunal at all remains "a victory of sorts", Robert Carmichael, author of "When Clouds Fell From the Sky", chronicling Duch's trial, told AFP.
"A judicial process then, while far from perfect, is better than nothing."