A Change of Guard

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Tuesday, 20 November 2007

Khieu Samphan Charged With War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity


Photos: Jacques Verges (top), and (below) Khieu Samphan Samphan (L) and his lawyer Say Bory (R).

ECCC charges Khieu Samphan


Ex-Khmer Rouge president charged MONDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 2007Al Jazeera



The former president of the Khmer Rouge has been charged with war crimes and crimes against humanity, a court spokesman said.Charges against Khieu Samphan were filed on Monday after nearly 10 hours of talks between his lawyers and tribunal judges.Samphan is now the fifth member of the former government to be brought before a UN-backed tribunal. He has also been formally detained.Reach Sambath, a tribunal spokesman, said: "The co-investigating judges have detained him for a period of one year.""Khieu Samphan's lawyers have already said they will appeal his detention."He also said that Jacques Verges, a French lawyer, will defend the 76-year-old former head of state.Samphan was previously arrested days after he was admitted to a hospital in Phnom Penh, the Cambodian capital.He was reportedly being treated for a stroke.War crimes charges Samphan's detention had been expected, following the arrest last week of Ieng Sary, the Khmer Rouge's ex-foreign minister, and his wife Ieng Thirith, the government's social affairs minister.They were both charged with crimes against humanity, while Ieng Sary was also charged with war crimes.The first trials under the tribunal are expected to begin next year.Up to two million Cambodians are thought to have died through starvation, overwork or execution during the government's 1975-79 rule.But senior members of the Khmer Rouge have not faced trial.Contested history Khieu Samphan denied the government's policies in a new book published days before his arrest.Reflection on Cambodian History from Ancient Times to the Era of Democratic Kampuchea defends the government and labels Pol Pot, its leader, as a patriot.While acknowledging that people had died, Samphan said deliberate mass killings never took place."There was no policy of starving the people. There was no policy of mass killings," he wrote."The regime always thought about the people's well-being."Researchers admit that there is not as much evidence against Samphan as against other leaders, but they say that he was aware of the Khmer Rouge's execution policies and did nothing to stop them.However, Verges, his lawyer, famous for defending Klaus Barbie, a Nazi war criminal and Ramirez Sánchez, a former left-wing fighter, known as "Carlos the Jackal", claims that his client was not one of the government's policymakers."The Khmer Rouge leadership did not resort to persuasion but to coercion, and, eventually, crimes against human beings. Khieu Samphan never took a direct part in these crimes," Verges said in the preface to Samphan's memoirs, published in 2004.

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