By Tim Johnston in Phnom Penh
Financial Times (UK)
More than 30 years after Cambodia’s murderous Khmer Rouge was driven from power, one of its prominent officials stood in the dock on Monday to answer for his crimes.
Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, his nom de guerre , ran the regime’s notorious torture centre, Tuol Sleng in Phnom Penh, where an estimated 16,000 men, women and children died between 1975 and 1979.
Charged with crimes against humanity, murder and torture, he is the only prominent member of the Khmer Rouge regime to express remorse for its attempt to create an agrarian utopia. The communist clique’s political experiment led to the deaths of up to 1.7m people – a quarter of the population – through murder, overwork, disease and starvation.
Duch’s case is being heard by a unique Cambodian/international hybrid court based loosely on French civil law, with five judges – three Cambodian, two international – and local and international prosecutors and defenders. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of life in jail.
Prosecutors read out the indictment on Monday, the dry legal language doing little to bleach the horror from the catalogue of inhumanity.
“There were autopsies carried out on live persons, there was medical experimentation and people were bled to death; these were all crimes against humanity admitted by Duch,” the prosecutors said.
Duch said little beyond confirming his identity but he has confessed to many of the crimes.
He sat facing his judges in the purpose-built court on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, a slight figure wearing a white shirt and dark trousers, looking more like the mathematics teacher he once was than the ruthless killer whose punctilious documentary record of his brutality now forms a large part of the case against him.
Hundreds of Cambodian and foreign spectators gathered behind a glass screen at his back to witness an event described as “momentous” by Theary Seng, whose parents were murdered by the regime and who now runs the Centre for Social Development, a pressure group.
“I’m still processing it, but it is just an amazing sensation after having talked and written so much about it, after having waited personally for 30 years for this court to take place,” said Ms Seng, who spent three years in a Khmer Rouge detention centre as a child and still remembers her mother being taken away for execution.
“Every Cambodian can be considered a victim, no one was immune,” she said.
The process of bringing Khmer Rouge leaders to trial – expected to cost $150m (€114m, £106m) – has been deeply problematic, mainly because the Cambodian government, led by Hun Sen, prime minister, a former commander in the Khmer Rouge before he defected to Vietnam, is said to have interfered repeatedly.
“Hun Sen has thrown obstacle after obstacle in the way of fair trials, an independent tribunal and speedy justice,” said Brad Adams, the Asia Director for Human Rights Watch. “We don’t have an independent court. We have a politicised Cambodian judiciary matched with a minority group of UN-appointed people.”
Pol Pot, the man who inspired the Khmer Rouge reign of terror, died in 1998, apparently of natural causes. But four other key members of the regime have been indicted.
They include Nuon Chea, the movement’s deputy leader, who was also known as “Brother number two”.
Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, his nom de guerre , ran the regime’s notorious torture centre, Tuol Sleng in Phnom Penh, where an estimated 16,000 men, women and children died between 1975 and 1979.
Charged with crimes against humanity, murder and torture, he is the only prominent member of the Khmer Rouge regime to express remorse for its attempt to create an agrarian utopia. The communist clique’s political experiment led to the deaths of up to 1.7m people – a quarter of the population – through murder, overwork, disease and starvation.
Duch’s case is being heard by a unique Cambodian/international hybrid court based loosely on French civil law, with five judges – three Cambodian, two international – and local and international prosecutors and defenders. If convicted, he faces a maximum sentence of life in jail.
Prosecutors read out the indictment on Monday, the dry legal language doing little to bleach the horror from the catalogue of inhumanity.
“There were autopsies carried out on live persons, there was medical experimentation and people were bled to death; these were all crimes against humanity admitted by Duch,” the prosecutors said.
Duch said little beyond confirming his identity but he has confessed to many of the crimes.
He sat facing his judges in the purpose-built court on the outskirts of Phnom Penh, a slight figure wearing a white shirt and dark trousers, looking more like the mathematics teacher he once was than the ruthless killer whose punctilious documentary record of his brutality now forms a large part of the case against him.
Hundreds of Cambodian and foreign spectators gathered behind a glass screen at his back to witness an event described as “momentous” by Theary Seng, whose parents were murdered by the regime and who now runs the Centre for Social Development, a pressure group.
“I’m still processing it, but it is just an amazing sensation after having talked and written so much about it, after having waited personally for 30 years for this court to take place,” said Ms Seng, who spent three years in a Khmer Rouge detention centre as a child and still remembers her mother being taken away for execution.
“Every Cambodian can be considered a victim, no one was immune,” she said.
The process of bringing Khmer Rouge leaders to trial – expected to cost $150m (€114m, £106m) – has been deeply problematic, mainly because the Cambodian government, led by Hun Sen, prime minister, a former commander in the Khmer Rouge before he defected to Vietnam, is said to have interfered repeatedly.
“Hun Sen has thrown obstacle after obstacle in the way of fair trials, an independent tribunal and speedy justice,” said Brad Adams, the Asia Director for Human Rights Watch. “We don’t have an independent court. We have a politicised Cambodian judiciary matched with a minority group of UN-appointed people.”
Pol Pot, the man who inspired the Khmer Rouge reign of terror, died in 1998, apparently of natural causes. But four other key members of the regime have been indicted.
They include Nuon Chea, the movement’s deputy leader, who was also known as “Brother number two”.
2 comments:
This is a time for humankind to join the French people and remember and never again forget what they had observed in their Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of August 1789:
“IGNORANCE, FORGETFULNESS, OR CONTEMPT OF THE RIGHTS OF MAN ARE THE SOLE CAUSES OF PUBLIC MISERIES AND THE CORRUPTION OF GOVERNMENTS.”
“L’IGNORANCE, L’OUBLI OU LE MÉPRIS DES DROITS DE L’HOMME SONT LES SEULES CAUSES DES MALHEURS PUBLICS ET DE LA CORRUPTION DES GOUVERNEMENTS.”
LAO Mong Hay, Hong Kong
If you voted for CPP (Cambodian People's Party):
Also known as:
Communist Party of Kampuchea
Khmer Revolution Party
Khmer Rouge Party
Khmer Krorhorm Party - គណបក្សខ្មែរក្រហម
You're support the killing of 1.7 million innocent Khmer peoples from 1975 to 1979 in Cambodia.
You're support the killing at least sixteen innocent men, women and children on March 30, 1997 Grenade Attack in Cambodia.
You're support assassination of journalists in Cambodia.
You're support political assassination and killing in Cambodia.
You're support attempted assassination and murder of leader of the free trade union in Cambodia.
You're support corruptions in Cambodia.
You're support murder of Piseth Pilika (Hun Sen's affaire).
You're support Hun Sen Regime burn poor people's house down to the ground and leave them homeless.
Hun Sen, Chea Sim and Heng Samrin was a former Khmer Rouge commanders.
Now, Hun Sen, Chea Sim and Heng Samrin are Khmer Rouge leaders, since their leader (Pol Pot) is dead.
From 1975 to 1979, these Khmer Rouge commanders responsible for killing 1.7 million innocent Khmer peoples in Cambodia.
From 1980 to present, these Khmer Rouge leaders responsible for killing innocent men, women and children on March 30, 1997, assassinated journalists, political assassination and killing, murder of Piseth Pilika (Hun Sen's affaire) and attempted assassinate and murder of leader of the free trade union in Cambodia.
When is the ECCC going to bring these three criminals to U.N. Khmer Rouge Tribunal?
Khmer Rouge Regime is a genocide organization.
Hun Sen Regime is a terrorist organization.
Hun Sen Bodyguards is a terrorist organization.
Hun Sen Death Squad is a terrorist organization.
Cambodian People's Party is a terrorist organization.
I have declare the current Cambodian government which is lead by the Cambodian People's Party as a terrorist organization.
Whoever associate with the current Cambodian government are associate with a terrorist organization.
Khmer Rouge Regime had committed:
Torture
Execution
Massacre
Atrocities
War Crimes
Crimes Against Humanity
Starvations
Overwork to Death
Slavery
Rapes
Abuses
Assault and Battery
Cambodian People's Party Hun Sen Regime had committed:
Assassination
Murder
Killing
Grenade Attack
Terrorism
Drive by Shooting
Intimidation
Death Threat
Threatening
Human Rights Abuses
Human Trafficking
Drugs Trafficking
Under Age Child Sex
Mass Evictions
Land Grabbing
Corruptions
Illegal Firearms
Illegal Logging
Acid Attacks
Injustice
Steal Votes
Violate the Constitution
These are the Trade Marks of Hun Sen's Khmer Rouge Regime.
Under Hun Sen Regime, no criminals that has been committed murder and all other crimes within Hun Sen's government have ever been brought to justice.
THE MARCH 30, 1997 GRENADE ATTACK IN CAMBODIA
March 30, 1997
http://www.cambodiapolitic.org/doc_30_march_1997/30_march_97.htm
FBI investigation
http://www.cambodiapolitic.org/doc_30_march_1997/suspect.htm
U.S. Senate Investigation
http://www.cambodiapolitic.org/doc_30_march_1997/march_30_97_report.pdf
PISETH PILIKA ASSASSINATION
http://www.cambodiapolitic.org/New%20Piset%20Pilika/new_page_1.htm
CHEA VICHEA ASSASSINATION
http://www.cambodiapolitic.org/Chea%20Vichea%20Photos/index.htm
STATEMENT OF HENG PEOV
http://ia311543.us.archive.org/1/items/HengPoevStatementofHengPoev/Statement_of_Heng_Peov.pdf
I have a question for Hun Sen's government.
Since Hun Sen's government likes to assassinate innocent peoples.
Does Hun Sen's government have any plan to assassinate the U.N. Khmer Rouge Tribunal judges?
Information change without notice as it become available.
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