By | Associated Press
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Decades after Cambodia's brutal Khmer Rouge
movement oversaw the deaths of 1.7 million people by starvation,
overwork and execution, the regime's imprisoned top leaders are escaping
justice one by one. How? Old age.
Thursday's death of 87-year-old Ieng Sary,
foreign minister under the Khmer Rouge, is fueling urgent calls among
survivors and rights groups for the country's U.N.-backed tribunal to
expedite proceedings against the increasingly frail and aging leaders of
the radical communist group, which ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979.
Ieng Sary's wife, former Social Affairs Minister Ieng Thirith,
was ruled unfit to stand trial last year because she suffered from a
degenerative mental illness consistent with Alzheimer's disease. Now,
only two people — ex-head of state Khieu Samphan, who is 81, and the movement's former chief ideologist Nuon Chea, who is 86 — remain on trial for their alleged roles in some of the 20th century's most horrific crimes.
There are growing fears that both men could die before a verdict is
rendered. Both are frail with high blood pressure, and have suffered
strokes.
"The defendants are getting old, and the survivors are getting old,"
said Bou Meng, one of the few Cambodians to survive Tuol Sleng prison,
known as S-21, where up to 16,000 people were tortured and killed during
the Khmer Rouge era. "The court needs to speed up its work."
"I have been waiting for justice for nearly 40 years," Bou Meng, who
is 70, told The Associated Press. "I never thought it would take so
long."
When the Khmer Rouge captured Phnom Penh in April 1975, they began
moving an estimated 1 million people — even hospital patients — from the
capital into the countryside in an effort to create a communist
agrarian utopia.
By the time the bizarre experiment ended in 1979 with an invasion by
advancing Vietnamese troops, an estimated 1.7 million people had died in
Cambodia, which had only about 7 million people at the time. Most of
the dead were victims of starvation, medical neglect, slave-like working
conditions and execution under the Maoist regime. Their bodies were
dumped in shallow mass graves that still dot the countryside.
The tribunal, officially known as the Extraordinary Chambers in the
Courts of Cambodia, was tasked with seeking justice for crimes committed
during that era.
The court, which was 10 years in the making, began operations in
2006. But despite some $150 million in funding, it has so far convicted
only one defendant: Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, the commandant
of S-21 prison.
Duch was sentenced in 2010 to 35 years in prison for war crimes and
crimes against humanity. The sentence was reduced to a 19-year term
because of time previously served and other technicalities, a move that
sparked angry criticism from victims who said it was too lenient.
Cambodia has no death penalty.
Several other major Khmer Rouge figures died before the court even existed, including supreme leader Pol Pot in 1998.
Ieng Sary's death was no surprise given his age and ailing health,
said Ou Virak, who heads the Cambodian Center for Human Rights. But
"given the fact that the other two defendants are also in their 80s, it
should act as a wake-up call to all concerned — the Cambodian
government, the U.N., the international donors and the tribunal itself —
that these cases need to be expedited urgently so that justice can be
served."
"The whole future of the tribunal is currently in limbo, and the
possibility that hundreds of millions of dollars will have been wasted
is now a very real threat," Ou Virak said. "Most importantly, though, if
all three die before their guilt or innocence can be determined, then
the Cambodian people will quite understandably feel robbed of justice."
The tribunal has been dogged by other problems, including funding
shortages from international donors. Earlier this month, Cambodian
translators angry that they had gone without pay for three months went
on strike just before the court was to hear testimony from two foreign
experts.
Tribunal spokesman Neth Pheaktra said Thursday the interpreters will
all return to work this week after the court administrator promised that
they will get paid. But he added that the translators have threatened
to strike again if they are not paid by month's end.
In recent years, the tribunal has also been hit by infighting and
angry resignations by foreign judges over whether to try more Khmer
Rouge defendants on war crimes charges. Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has
ruled Cambodia since 1985, has warned that no more trials will be
allowed. Many former members of the Khmer Rouge, including Hun Sen
himself, hold important positions in the current government.
The trial against Ieng Sary, his wife and the last two accused senior
Khmer Rouge leaders alive began jointly in 2011. All have denied guilt
for their roles during the radical communist movement's rule.
Lars Olsen, another tribunal spokesman, said on Thursday that "we are
disappointed that we could not complete the proceeding against Ieng
Sary." But he said the case against Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan will
continue and will not be affected by the death.
Youk Chhang, director of the Documentation Center of Cambodia, an
independent group gathering evidence of the Khmer Rouge crimes for the
tribunal, said Ieng Sary's death "carries little value for the regime's
victims, who patiently wait to see justice done."
Ieng Sary died early Thursday under the care of doctors at a Phnom
Penh hospital, where he was admitted earlier this month suffering from
weakness and fatigue. He suffered fatal cardiac failure, said one of the
prosecutors in his case, Chea Leang, who added that under Cambodian
law, all charges against him will now officially be dropped.
Yim Sopheak, a 47-year-old street vendor who said the Khmer Rouge
regime had executed her parents, said Ieng Sary "deserved to die in
prison, not in a hospital. He should have died in the same way as he
executed my parents and other people."
Yi Chea, a 72-year-old flower seller who says her husband and other
relatives were also killed during Khmer Rouge rule, said she was happy
Ieng Sary was gone. But, she added that "he did not deserve to die
naturally like this."
Tribunal hearings resume on March 25, said Neth Pheaktra. Foreign medical experts are due to testify on the health status of Nuon Chea, to determine whether the ailing ex-leader is fit to stand trial.
___
Pitman reported from Bangkok.
No comments:
Post a Comment