- Published: 19 Mar 2013
- Bangkok Post
- Writer: AFP News agency
PHNOM PENH - Cambodia's strongman premier Hun
Sen on Tuesday denied accusations by rights campaigners that his
government has obstructed progress in a landmark Khmer Rouge war crimes
trial.
The Extraordinary Chamber in the Courts of Cambodia is shown in Phnom
Penh during a hearing of former Khmer Rouge leader "Brother Number Two"
Nuon Chea, October 19, 2011. Cambodia's strongman premier Hun Sen on
Tuesday denied accusations by rights campaigners that his government has
obstructed progress in a landmark Khmer Rouge war crimes trial.
"The power is in the hands of the court. Whether the process is slow
or fast is up to the court, not me," Hun Sen said in a speech on a
national radio, urging the UN-backed tribunal to move more quickly.
His remarks follow calls from donors, rights groups, the UN and the
United States to speed up the trial of the remaining two defendants
accused of genocide, after the death of a third suspect last week.
New York-based Human Rights Watch last week accused Hun Sen -- a
former Khmer Rouge cadre who defected and became premier in 1985 -- of
trying to delay the trial.
It said the premier "has done everything in his power to stymie the tribunal's work."
The government has installed Cambodian court staff who have
obstructed investigations and has failed to require its own members to
give evidence, it said.
Fears that the top leadership of the hardline communist regime will
escape justice have grown following the death last Thursday of regime
co-founder Ieng Sary at the age of 87.
The two remaining defendants, "Brother Number Two" Nuon Chea and
former head of state Khieu Samphan - who both deny charges of war
crimes, genocide and crimes against humanity - are in their 80s and also
have health problems.
The tribunal has been frequently short of funding since it was set up
in 2006 to find justice for the deaths of up to two million people.
- EDITORIAL: Death and life of the Khmer Rouge
The trial of the top regime leaders was suspended earlier this month
after some local staff went on strike due to a row over unpaid wages.
The court said on Monday that the dispute had been settled.
Led by "Brother Number One" Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer
Rouge wiped out nearly a quarter of Cambodia's population through
starvation, overwork or execution in a bid to create an agrarian utopia
during its 1975-79 rule.
The court has so far achieved just one conviction, sentencing former
prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, to life in jail for
overseeing the deaths of about 15,000 people.
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