By Bridget Di Certo
Friday, 18 May 2012
Phnom Penh Post
Prime Minister Hun Sen’s remarks regarding the guilt of Case 002 former
Brother No 2 Nuon Chea “risk being interpreted as an attempt to
improperly influence the judges in charge of the case”, judges at the
Khmer Rouge tribunal said in a decision published yesterday.
The
decision came in response to a request from Nuon Chea’s defence team for
a public condemnation of the premier’s comments and a public warning to
be issued to him.
Earlier this year, Vietnamese news agencies
reported that Hun Sen, a former Khmer Rouge cadre himself, called Nuon
Chea a “killer and genocide [perpetrator]”.
“Everybody knows our
country used to have a genocidal regime, and [now] we and the world have
opened a trial against them,” he said.
Trial Chamber judges at
the tribunal in a decision dated May 11 and published yesterday, said
Hun Sen’s actions were “incompatible” with the rights of the accused.
“It
is therefore clear from the international jurisprudence that any
declaration of an accused person’s guilt by a public official prior to a
verdict being delivered by a court is incompatible with the presumption
of innocence,” the judges wrote.
However, due to legal
technicalities, the judges found Nuon Chea’s defence’s request
inadmissible, as lawyers had already raised the issue orally in court.
The
judges determined they had dealt with this suitably in court and thus
the relief suit by defence lawyers – a public condemnation and public
warning – were not granted.
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