A verdict was never reached in Ieng Sary's human rights abuses
case. His story reveals the limitations of international tribunals.
MALAI,
Cambodia-- It was the sort of send-off his own regime would never have
permitted: an elaborate Buddhist funeral that ended with prayers,
reminiscences, and the crackle of fireworks in an inky night sky.
Ieng Sary, one of the last surviving leaders of Cambodia's murderous
Khmer Rouge regime,
died of a heart attack on March 14, at the age of 87. For a week
afterward, hundreds of white-clad mourners turned out in this former
communist stronghold
to pay their last respects to a man they remembered as a comrade and
patriot--a man who thought only of his nation.
To everyone else, Ieng Sary enjoys the dubious distinction of being
the only person to be tried for genocide on two occasions: first in
1979, shortly after
the Khmer Rouge fell from power, and then more recently at a
UN-backed tribunal in the Cambodian capital Phnom Penh. By dying in the
dock, he escaped
justice for his role in the Khmer Rouge regime, which ruled Cambodia
from 1975 to 1979. Led by "Brother Number One" Pol Pot, the Khmer Rouge
conducted a
hellish communist experiment--a "super great leap forward"
that killed an estimated
1.7 million Cambodians and sowed a green land with hundreds of mass
graves.
But that's not how Sary is remembered in this forgotten corner of
the country, a stronghold of the Khmer Rouge until the mid-1990s. On the
day of his
funeral, monks chanted as wartime comrades and sun-cured farmers
arrived at Sary's country villa to pay their respects. Wreaths of
flowers surrounded his
gold casket, which sat alongside a jasmine-fringed photo of the
former leader. Later the casket was moved into an elaborate two-story
crematorium festooned
with blinking lights. During a 10-minute eulogy, Sary's daughter Hun
Vanny made just one reference to his involvement with the Khmer Rouge, a
period when
"he sacrificed his life by leaving his wife and family, moving from
place to place."
"Cambodians talk about the purity of water, purity of gold, purity
of silver," she said of her father. "None of these can compare with the
purity of
heart."
Also paying a final farewell was Sary's frail widow and fellow
defendant Ieng Thirith, who was led to the base of crematorium before
being bungled into a
van and driven away. Thirith served as the Social Affairs Minister
under the Khmer Rouge and was also on trial until her release in
September, when the
court ruled she was unfit to stand trial due to dementia. As Sary's
body burned and fireworks flowered overhead, old comrades reminisced
about a boss who
fought to free his country from foreign domination. "Ieng Sary,
Khieu Samphan and Pol Pot were not communist people--they were
liberators," said 58-year-old
Chan Sary, a former Khmer Rouge soldier who lost a leg to a landmine
in 1990. "At the top they didn't know the hardships," he added, leaning
on his crutch.
This is not the story historians usually tell. When the Khmer Rouge
took power in April 1975, toppling a U.S.-backed republic, they treated
Cambodia's
people as an expendable raw material with which they planned to
forge a rural utopia of unsurpassed purity, an agrarian dream-state
whose name would "be
written in golden letters in world history." Money was abolished,
the cities were emptied, and the entire population put to work on vast
rural communes.
Sary was one of the six members of the Standing Committee of the
Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK)--the nerve-center of the regime.
Appointed foreign
minister of "Democratic Kampuchea" -- as the new regime euphemized
itself -- Sary issued calls for sympathetic Cambodian intellectuals to
return to
reconstruct a land destroyed by five years of civil war. Of the
1,000 or so who returned, most were jailed, executed, or perished from
starvation or
disease.
Many years later Sary would deny any involvement in Khmer Rouge
atrocities, but experts have little doubt there was enough evidence to
convict him. In
2001, Steve Heder, a leading historian of the period, concluded in a
paper co-authored with the legal scholar Brian D. Tittemore that arrest
and execution
orders routinely crossed Ieng Sary's desk. They concluded there was
"significant evidence of Ieng Sary's individual responsibility for CPK
crimes, for
repeatedly and publicly encouraging arrests and executions within
his Foreign Ministry and throughout Democratic Kampuchea."
Ieng Sary was the most slippery of the Khmer Rouge leaders--a master
dissimulator who easily shed old revolutionary convictions and adopted
new guises. He
was "a devious manipulative man, crafty rather than clever," wrote
Philip Short in his book Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare. "He
concealed
insincerity beneath a calculated ability to make himself agreeable."
Unlike his austere comrades, Sary was also a revolutionary with a taste
for the finer
things, such as lobster thermidor, cognac, and French perfume, which
he enjoyed during years of starvation and civil war. "When he dropped
his normally
radiant smile, [it was clear] how dark and harsh his face could become,"wrote James Pringle, a former Reuters correspondent who first met Sary in China in 1971. "I would hate to have faced him across an interrogation table."
After the Khmer Rouge was overthrown by a Vietnamese invasion in
January 1979, Sary and his colleagues fled to the Thai border, where
they re-established
themselves in jungle bases and, with Chinese and Western support,
waged war on the new Vietnam-backed government that had replaced them.
Sary, now in
charge of the movement's finances, installed himself in Pailin, a
dusty boomtown surrounded by rich gem and timber deposits. By the 1990s
he had grown rich
-- much richer than his austere revolutionary colleagues. Khieu
Samphan and Nuon Chea, the two remaining defendants at Cambodia's war
crimes court, did not
profit from their careers. Pol Pot died, defeated and penniless, in
1998.
In August 1996, Sary defected to the government in return for a
royal amnesty that quashed a death penalty handed down by a Phnom Penh
tribunal in 1979.
Sary and his wife lived a comfortable life in a shady villa in
central Phnom Penh, jetting off to Thailand regularly for medical
treatment. Justice finally
caught up with the pair in November 2007, when they were arrested
and charged with crimes against humanity. It was a heady moment: Nearly
30 years after
the Khmer Rouge fell from power, there was a hope that at last
justice would be done.
But Ieng Sary's death mid-trial is a major setback for Cambodia's
war crimes court, known officially as the Extraordinary Chambers in the
Courts of
Cambodia. After six years and more than $150 million, the tribunal
has secured just one conviction--that of Comrade Duch, a former school
teacher who was
sentenced to life in prison for his role in running S-21, a grisly
security center where he oversaw the interrogation and torture of as
many as 15,000
people.
The two remaining defendants in the court's second case, known as
Case 002, are also frail and in uncertain health: 86-year-old Nuon Chea,
the Khmer
Rouge's chief ideologue and "Brother Number Two" to Pol Pot, has been in
and out of hospital and was reported earlier this year to be "approaching death." Khieu
Samphan, the regime's former head of state, is 81. Peter Maguire, the author of Facing Death in Cambodia,
compared Sary's death to that of the
Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic, who died in 2006 while on trial
at The Hague, and argued that both tribunals allowed themselves to
become mired in legal
minutiae. "This is typical of the UN's post-Cold War war-crimes
trials," he said. "Like the Milosevic case, there is no urgency."
The court has also been dogged by allegations of political
interference in connection with two possible future cases, Case 003 and
Case 004, involving five
more senior regime figures. Cambodia's Prime Minister Hun Sen,
himself a former mid-ranking Khmer Rouge commander who defected to
Vietnam in 1977, has
ruled Cambodia in various coalitions since 1985, and retains a
strong grip over the domestic courts. In October 2010 he told visiting
UN Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon that more trials at the ECCC--a hybrid court composed of
local and international judges--would not be "allowed." Because of
these two
impediments, the Open Society Justice Initiative (OSJI), a
court-monitoring group, said last week that "it remains doubtful that
the ECCC will successfully
complete its current caseload and make a positive contribution to
ending impunity and increasing respect for the rule of law in Cambodia."
But the problem runs deeper. In some ways Sary's death has
heightened the contradictions of a tribunal process that has always
struggled to reconcile the
irreconcilable: to map the abstractions of international criminal
law onto the social and political realities of contemporary Cambodia--a
post-conflict
country with virtually no history of independent courts. This gulf
was illustrated shortly after Sary's death, when the London-based human
rights group
Amnesty International issued a statement urging the expedition of
the trials. "Ieng Sary should not be presumed guilty of the crimes
alleged," it said, "as
the proceedings against him were not completed and there has been no
verdict." In legal terms this was exactly correct, but how just or
moral was it? The
ECCC was explicitly established with the victims in mind, and was
the first tribunal of its kind to invite participation from civil
parties representing
those who suffered under the Khmer Rouge. How much solace were
victims expected to take in the fact that the legal procedures had been
followed, and that a
man whose crimes are well attested by the historical record had gone
to his grave--as many will no doubt interpret it--"not guilty?"
It showed, above all, that Cambodia remains a long way from The
Hague. Sary's death, like Milosevic's before it, demonstrates that one
of the saving ideas
of our times--the hope that international criminal tribunals can
punish atrocities, deter warlords and provide closure for
victims--remains burdened by
serious limitations. "Cambodia is a complex, mostly Buddhist
country," said Maguire. "The idea that Western outsiders can transplant
Western modes of
conflict resolution is incredibly naïve."
And yet, this may be the closest Cambodia gets to accountability for
the horrors perpetuated by the Khmer Rouge. Youk Chhang, the director
of the
Documentation Center of Cambodia, which researches Khmer Rouge
history, said that now that the court was in motion it had no option but
to continue its
work. "The court must move on," he said. "The UN and the Cambodian
government made a promise to punish the perpetrators of genocide. The
victims deserve
closure. The victims deserve to see the process completed."
Ieng Sary's victims will have to make do with the verdict of history -- but that may well prove the more enduring.
Sebastian Strangio is an Australian journalist based in Phnom Penh, Cambodia. His reporting from across Asia has appeared in Slate, Foreign Policy, The Economist, and other publications.
No comments:
Post a Comment