The late N. Sihanouk at a meeting with KR leaders including Pol Pot sitting 3rd from left [obscured] - School of Vice |
The "trial of the
century" is fast becoming the farce in our living memory with most of the
arms and legs of the offending culprit/ party and known accomplices still at
large and most incredulously allowed to actively dictate the trial's
proceedings to their own whims and political advantage. War crimes or other
crimes against humanity [committed by political regimes] tribunals that had taken place in modern
history had tended to deliver some measure of justice to their perished and
living victims by virtue of the power relations pertaining to the status of
both the defendant and the prosecution parties where the accused had only the
full force and applicability of the law to contend with without undue interferences
from the incumbent regime or powerful personalities. In this case, the suspects
[there are many, including Mr Hun Sen himself and former late monarch Sihanouk]
have been at liberty to remain beyond the reach of the court's due process.
Whether Sihanouk himself would have been willing to appear before the ECCC to
give his testimony whilst he was still alive [as he had indicated he would be]
is another question, since like the timely death of Pol Pot in April 1998 it
would appear that other players in the Cambodian drama have been prepared and
determined to keep their respective incriminating involvement well out of the
court's spot light and beyond the radar of informed public opinion. Indeed,
this notion of informed opinion is one of the principal reasons for setting up
the KRT in the first place with education and publicity through the media
being, in theory, the raison d'tre of the whole project.
From the beginning some
observers have warned of the hybrid court's ill-fated course of action in terms
of its ability to deliver on its own professed aims and ambitions. The decision
to have the court located in Phnom Penh rather than outside of Cambodia is in
itself one critical factor that compromises the working and independence of the
court with the Phnom Penh regime constantly obstructing and pressurising the
judges to pander to its own wishes and agenda. That this is being
self-evidently so is borne out by the countless resignations of foreign judges to
have been appointed over the years, whilst the faces of the regime's anointed
Cambodian judges remain something of a constant feature of the whole farce. One
can well imagine what this odious regime is capable of. But what the UN and the
world community through its donor governments are doing with respect to not
only the ECCC but the entire unwholesome political life of Cambodia is quite
reprehensible in my humble view. And to add further insult to injury the
country's long serving dictator is now calling for more financial aid to keep
the KRT afloat? Wouldn't the money [wherever it comes from] be better off spent
rescuing thousands [perhaps, hundreds of thousands] of ordinary Cambodians
drowning in the current floods? - School of
Vice
***
PPP Fri, 11 October 2013
Vong Sokheng
With just days until closing arguments at the Khmer Rouge
tribunal are slated to begin, Prime Minister Hun Sen made a direct request to
US Secretary of State John Kerry for increased funding to the cash-strapped
court, a Ministry of Foreign Affairs official said yesterday.
Speaking to reporters at Phnom Penh International Airport,
Secretary of State Kao Kim Hourn said the premier also approached UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and New Zealand Prime Minister John Key with
similar requests in meetings on the sidelines of this month’s ASEAN summit in
Brunei, however received no firm commitments.
“Hun Sen has requested to the US [secretary of state] about
the financial support for the Khmer Rouge tribunal, and the US [secretary of
state] said he would consider this request,” Kim Hourn said.
Meanwhile, national-side staffers at the court have gone
without pay again this month, this time directly on the heels of an emergency
loan from the UN last month that ended a weeks-long strike by paying most
workers their back salaries for June, July and August.
However, court spokesman Neth Pheaktra expressed optimism
that a solution could be found before workers resort once again to strikes.
“This is an effort for both sides to support the ECCC,”
Pheaktra said of the meeting between Ban and Hun Sen. “We strongly believe that
. . . talks between Samdech Hun Sen and the secretary-general will find a
solution to the financial problems of the national side of the court.”
According to one national side staffer, who spoke on
condition of anonymity, given the lack of results “it is obviously insane to
keep striking time and again”, but staying at the court would be little better.
“If the situation surrounding the pay does not improve in
due course, it is most likely that some interpreters will tender their resignation
and start looking for new, more secure jobs,” he added. “It appears to them
that future job prospects at the court have become less favourable and less
secure.”
1 comment:
Japan its took ten years to recovery from Atomic bomb that devastated her nation in W.W.II, to became a power nation in economy in Asia took her ten years,bu Nambodia spend three decades can not recovery but sank deeper to the bottom of the hell's pit under Hun sen Scamafia teams now Nambodia is called begger state,despite millions dollars donated from the free nation to help her nation.
Scam teams stole all money kept in their pocket.
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