New Momentum for Cambodia's Khmer Rouge Trial?
Written by Richard S. Ehrlich
Asia Sentinel
Friday, 17 August 2012
The long-stalled attempt to indict up to 15 additional top former
Khmer Rouge cadres for alleged war crimes could gain some traction when a
new American investigating judge is added to a UN-backed court in
Cambodia in September, a US official said this week.
The Nuremberg-style trial, which has droned on since 2009, is currently
prosecuting only five of the late Pol Pot's senior leaders who abetted
him in a murderous reign that caused the deaths of an estimated 1.7
million innocent Cambodians and resulted in the ruination of the
country, from which it is still recovering 33 years later.
The 15 additional suspects who could be brought before the court are
"former military commanders and former provincial chiefs, or leaders,"
who were among Pol Pot's 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime, Ambassador David
Scheffer, the United Nations Secretary-General's Special Expert on the
U.N. Assistance to the Khmer Rouge Trials, said in an interview.
The 15 are all retired and currently being investigated for "war crimes
and crimes against humanity," Scheffer said in a brief interview during a
Bangkok stopover. Scheffer, who is also a law professor and director of
the Center for International Human Rights at Northwestern University,
declined to name them "because they are not officially designated."
Bringing them to trial at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of
Cambodia will be a challenge. The UN-backed court has faced problems
trying to determine the guilt of four other elderly men and one woman
for the deaths during Pol Pot's back-to-the-jungle "killing fields"
regime. In addition, the tribunal has run into interference from the
Cambodian government, which is on record opposing any new investigations
of Khmer Rouge suspects.
Nonetheless, "The personal jurisdiction of this court was not intended
to be relegated to only [those] five individuals," Scheffer told
reporters during an earlier news conference Wednesday.
The five include Kaing Guek Eav -- known as Duch -- plus Nuon Chea,
Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary and his wife, Ieng Thirith. They are the only
Cambodians who have been taken to the court.
"The figure that was finally understood in terms of the [tribunals']
negotiators that I knew of -- namely the United States and the United
Nations negotiators -- was a figure of between 10 to 15 [suspects], that
would be sort of max for this court," Scheffer said. Those additional
suspects "are not yet indicted, so they are not defendants yet, they are
just suspects, but they are under investigation."
The court's investigation of those 10 to 15 suspects has already "led to
much controversy, it led to turmoil with the international
investigating judges."
To solve the crisis, a "new investigating judge" was recently appointed
to "keep at it." The new judge, Mark Harmon, is an American who had "an
18-year career as a top prosecutor of the Yugoslav tribunal," Scheffer
said.
"Prior to that that, he was a prosecutor in the United States," and is
scheduled to arrive in Cambodia in September "as the new international
co-investigating judge."
Harmon and the other judges will determine how to proceed against the
additional suspects, who are grouped in "Cases Three and Four."
"If there are disputes, it will be in the hands of the pre-trial
chamber. And we'll let the court work its will," Scheffer said.
Duch confessed during Case Number One and was sentenced to life
imprisonment in February for commanding the S-21 Tuol Sleng torture
chamber in Phnom Penh, which sent 12,000 to 16,000 people to their
death.
The ongoing Case Number Two includes Pol Pot's dreaded ideologue Nuon
Chea, alongside Khieu Samphan, who became the regime's head of state in
1976, plus former Khmer Rouge Foreign Minister Ieng Sary.
Ieng Sary's wife, Ieng Thirith, was social affairs minister during Pol
Pot's reign, but she is currently being assessed for possible dementia
to determine if she can stand trial.
Case Number Two is complex because it has three phases.
"We have the evacuation of people from the cities in 1975...and all the
crimes against humanity that are related to that," Scheffer said. "We
have phase two, which is basically the detention camps and everything
that happened in those camps. We have phase three, which is the genocide
[committed] against the Cham, the Muslim population of Cambodia. How
many years does it take to prosecute all three phases, of Case Two,
against these three men?"
To fund the court, Washington paid US$11.2 million from 2009 to June
2012, and has "already committed US$5 million for the 2013 cycle,"
totaling more than US$16 million, Scheffer said.
Up until 2012, Japan had been the biggest donor. But after suffering an
earthquake, tsunami and nuclear contamination in 2011, Tokyo did not
match its previous contributions and dropped to second place behind
Washington in funding the court this year, he said.
No one knows when the trials will end.
"It's very risky for me to sit here and say, 'Oh you know, maybe there
will be six more years of operation, maybe seven, maybe eight. I don't
know."
(Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist. His websites are http://www.asia-correspondent.110mb.com and http://www.flickr.com/photos/animists/sets)
6 comments:
Chea Sim looks like a pig got plenties foods to eat..
Heng Samrin looks likeYoek cong and killed/betrayed his own death ancestor for wealth & power.
Pol Rouen looks like a canibalism and dumbfuck.
Ballhead guy look like Vietminh behind killingfield....
Calm down he killed my families too,he'll goes to joint his comrades Ho chi Minh and Pol pot soon...Cancer is killing this Sdach komrook slowly painfully...
Yobal Khmer.
asia sentinel, does not know much about khmer,,,
LOL! These were ALL traitors to Cambodia. They claimed that they saved our lives but in reality they were fully involved in killing our families of 1.7 millions peoples. ONLY after Pol Pot orders them to be arrest and kill for been Viet Cong's agents that these peoples in those pictures decided to overthrow the KR regime. They were indirectly saved most of us but at what pricem, these CPP hand over many miles of land borders to Youn and many islands and surrounding sea areas.
US and UN are dreaming if they think the Vietminh Hun Sen will allow the real perpetrators to be trailed for the genocide.
Of course, the real question is, will the Vietminh Hun Sen sell out his comrades as he had done with Comrade Vietminh Ieng Sary. Whome Hun Sen promised to protect, until he saw the lum sum of cash the UN had to offer.
$150 millions to trial one person is worth the billions of dollar the US have over the regions.
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