A Change of Guard

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Wednesday, 2 September 2009

More Khmer Rouge leaders could face trial now

Chum Mey, left, one three survivors from the Khmer Rouge's main prison waits to enter the the U.N.-backed genocide tribunal Monday, Feb. 4, 2008, in Phnom Penh. (THE ASSOCIATED PRESS/David Longstreath)

Chum Mey, left, one three survivors from the Khmer Rouge's main prison waits to enter the the U.N.-backed genocide tribunal Monday, Feb. 4, 2008, in Phnom Penh. (AP / David Longstreath)

Updated Wed. Sep. 2 2009

The Associated Press

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia -- More former Khmer Rouge leaders could face charges before a U.N.-backed tribunal after the court agreed Wednesday that investigations can be opened into additional suspects.

The decision could put the tribunal on a collision course with Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has repeatedly said prosecutions should be confined to the five suspects already charged and suggested that he would end UN participation in the trials if the number was expanded.

A long-awaited first trial against the Khmer Rouge's chief jailer opened in March for war crimes and crimes against humanity. A joint trial with four other senior officials, currently in detention, is expected in the next year or two.

The tribunal is seeking justice for the estimated 1.7 million people who died in Cambodia from execution, overwork, disease and malnutrition as a result of the communist regime's radical policies while in power from 1975-79.

Cambodia and the United Nations created the tribunal last year under an agreement they reached in 2003. It is an unprecedented hybrid that brings together domestic and foreign judges and prosecutors who operate under the Cambodian judicial system, which is often criticized as weak, corrupt and susceptible to political manipulation.

Lars Olsen, the tribunal's spokesman for legal issues, said Wednesday's announcement was a first step in a long process and does not necessarily mean more suspects will face trial.

What it did was resolve, at least for now, a major internal disagreement between Cambodian and international co-prosecutors over whether to expand the trials. The international co-prosecutor can now ask investigating judges to open investigations into additional suspects.

"It is important to say this does not automatically mean there will be more prosecutions," Olsen said. "It means (the international prosecutor) is no longer barred by the disagreement with Cambodian colleagues."

The dispute was one of many that has delayed and complicated proceedings at the tribunal.

Critics allege that Hun Sen has sought to limit the tribunal's scope because other potential defendants are now his political allies. Hun Sen served as a former Khmer Rouge officer and many of his major political allies are also former members of the group.

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