South Korean student in Cambodia was tortured to death, autopsy confirms
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The authorities placing an order at a building inside a compound in Cambodia's Takeo province in October after the death of a South Korean student in the country.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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GYEONGBUK, South Korea – A South Korean university student found dead in Cambodia in the summer was killed by blunt force trauma following beatings and torture, according to an autopsy report released by the South Korean authorities over the weekend.
The final forensic report from South Korea’s National Forensic Service (NFS), shared on Nov 16 by the Gyeongbuk Provincial Police Agency, concluded that the 22-year-old victim died from traumatic shock, with visible injuries consistent with prolonged physical assault.
No drugs were found in his system, countering previous suspicions that narcotics had played a role.
The victim, surnamed Park, was found dead in a car
Cambodian police who recovered the body noted signs of torture
On Oct 20, a joint team of Korean and Cambodian officials carried out an autopsy of the body at a Phnom Penh mortuary.
The NFS reported no evidence of stabbing, organ removal or mutilation, contradicting rumours circulating in South Korean media about possible organ trafficking.
Forensic specialists later completed toxicology and tissue tests in South Korea before confirming the final cause of death.
Although no narcotics were detected, the report included a caveat. If Mr Park had been administered a small amount, or if significant time had passed since ingestion, traces could have disappeared by the time of testing.
This clarification followed the emergence of a video showing Mr Park appearing to be forcibly drugged, which fuelled speculation.
Three Chinese nationals have been indicted in Cambodia for their alleged role in Mr Park’s death.
They were arrested on Oct 10, but two prime suspects, including a Chinese Korean national surnamed Li, remain at large. South Korean investigators say efforts to locate and arrest the remaining suspects are ongoing.
Mr Park’s case has become a flashpoint in South Korea’s reckoning with a growing human trafficking crisis in South-east Asia.
According to South Korean police, 330 overseas kidnapping cases were reported in the first eight months of 2025, up from 220 cases in all of 2024.
Many of these are tied to criminal networks running scam operations in loosely governed economic zones in Cambodia and neighbouring countries. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK

