In 2008, as Khieu Samphan made his first appearance before Cambodia’s genocide tribunal, Mr. Vergès, representing his old friend, created a tumultuous scene and stormed out after erupting at a panel of judges because documents for the pretrial hearing had not been translated into French.
Jacques Vergès, Defender of War Criminals and Terrorists, Dies at 88
Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
The New York Times / International Herald Tribune | 16 August 2013
Jacques Vergès, the French lawyer who embraced anticolonial causes and
the role of devil’s advocate on a world stage to defend war criminals,
terrorists, dictators and other notorious villains of the 20th century,
died on Thursday in Paris. He was 88.
The cause of death was a heart attack at around 8 p.m. as he was
preparing to dine with friends, according to his publisher, Éditions
Pierre-Guillaume de Roux. He died in the Parisian house where the
Enlightenment philosopher Voltaire once lived, the publisher said in a
statement.
“The ideal place for the last theatrical act that was the death of this
born actor who, like Voltaire, cultivated the art of permanent revolt
and volte-face,” the statement said, reflecting the lawyer’s reputation
for asking disturbing questions on behalf of notorious clients.
Is a killer a terrorist or a patriot? Can laws be used to judge good and
evil? For more than 50 years, Mr. Vergès raised such questions in
defense of clients who claimed to be acting for political causes,
although they were charged with genocide, crimes against humanity,
bombings, hijackings and the murder of innocents.
They included the Nazi war criminal Klaus Barbie; the terrorist Ilich
Ramírez Sánchez, a k a Carlos the Jackal, and Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge
head of state, Khieu Samphan. Mr. Vergès also sought to defend former
presidents Saddam Hussein of Iraq, who was executed for crimes against
humanity, and Slobodan Milosevic of Serbia, who represented himself in a
war-crimes trial but died before a verdict.
“He’s a slippery man,” the director Barbet Schroeder, who made “Terror’s Advocate,”
a 2007 documentary on Mr. Vergès and terrorism as a political weapon,
told The New York Times in 2007. “You can never touch him. He loves the
mystery. The reason is that there are certain things he cannot talk
about. He would be in deep trouble if the truth came out.”
In a career that paralleled the postwar disintegration of colonial
empires in Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Mr. Vergès rose to
prominence in the late 1950s defending Algerians accused of terrorist
bombings. Instead of contesting the evidence of French prosecutors in
court, he insisted that the defendants were resistance fighters in a
just war of liberation and challenged the legal and moral legitimacy of
the trials.
While most of his clients were convicted, the trials drew international
attention to Mr. Vergès, and long after Algerian independence in 1962
his tactics served as a blueprint for his cases, which became public
platforms to indict France and other Western nations for what he called
crimes of racist colonialism and the exploitation of third world
peoples.
In the late 1960s, Mr. Vergès broadened his horizons, defending
Palestinians charged with attacks on El Al aircraft in Athens and
Zurich. He later represented members of the Red Army Faction in Germany,
whose bombings he called the work of “soldiers in a noble cause.”
Mr. Vergès’s most famous case was his defense of Klaus Barbie, the
wartime Gestapo leader known as “the Butcher of Lyons” for his role in
the torture, execution and deportation to death camps of thousands of
French citizens. After years in hiding, during which he is believed to
have assisted Western intelligence services, Barbie was extradited from
Bolivia to France in 1983.
At his war-crimes trial in 1987, Barbie walked out, refusing to hear
testimony of his horrors. Mr. Vergès virtually ignored the charges, and
attacked Israel, France and other nations for committing “crimes against
humanity” that he called “more serious” than those ascribed to Barbie.
Critics said he trivialized genocide to defend a monster. Barbie was
convicted and sentenced to life in prison, where he died in 1991.
“I practice the ‘defense de la rupture,’ ” Mr. Vergès told The New York
Times during his work on the Barbie case, meaning a tactic of
confrontation with the judicial system rather than one that works within
it. “My law is to be against all laws. My morality is to be against all
morality.”
Jacques Vergès and his twin brother, Paul, were born on March 5, 1925,
in Ubon Ratchathani, Siam, now Thailand. Their Vietnamese mother died
when they were three and their father, Raymond Vergès, a French
diplomat, raised them on the Indian Ocean island of Réunion. Paul became
a founder of the Réunion Communist Party and a member of the European
Parliament.
In 1942, with his father’s encouragement, Jacques sailed to England,
joined Charles de Gaulle’s Free French Forces and fought in the
Resistance. After the war, he studied law at the University of Paris,
joined the Communist Party and in 1949 became a leader of an
anticolonial student movement. His student friends included Khieu
Samphan and Saloth Sar, the future Pol Pot. In the early 1950s Mr.
Vergès led a Communist youth organization in Prague.
Returning to Paris, he became a lawyer in 1955, and gained fame
defending Algerian guerrilla fighters. In a notorious case, Djamila
Bouhired was convicted in 1957 of killing 11 people in an Algiers
bombing and sentenced to death. As she awaited the guillotine, it was
revealed that she had been tortured during questioning. Mr. Vergès
campaigned for a reprieve. Many world leaders, including the Soviet
leader, Nikita Khrushchev, demanded her release. Her execution was
postponed, and in 1962 she was released.
In 1965, Mr. Vergès and Ms. Bouhired were married. They had two children, Meriem and Liess.
The couple founded a popular magazine, Révolution, in 1968. In 1970, Mr.
Vergès disappeared. His whereabouts remained a mystery, although he was
rumored to be in Cambodia with Pol Pot and in the Middle East with
Palestinian groups. He reappeared in Paris in 1978 and resumed his law
practice.
His ties to Carlos the Jackal were murky, but probably dated to 1982,
when he defended Magdalena Kopp, the terrorist’s girlfriend and
accomplice (and later his wife), who was caught with explosives in
Paris. Wanted for many terrorist acts in the name of Palestinian
liberation in the 1970s and ‘80s, Carlos was captured by French agents
in Sudan in 1994 and flown to Paris.
Mr. Vergès called it a kidnapping and represented Carlos in the early
stages of his case, but they had a falling out over tactics. The
Venezuelan-born terrorist hired other lawyers, was convicted in 1997 and
sentenced to life in prison. The verdict and sentence were affirmed in
another trial years later.
After Saddam Hussein was captured in 2003, Mr. Vergès, who had been
hired to defend other ousted Iraqi leaders, offered to represent him.
The family of the deposed Iraqi leader chose another lawyer, and he was
executed in 2006. Mr. Vergès also offered to defend Mr. Milosevic, but
he chose to represent himself in a trial that began in The Hague in
2002. He died in 2006 before the case could be concluded.
In 2008, as Khieu Samphan made his first appearance before Cambodia’s
genocide tribunal, Mr. Vergès, representing his old friend, created a
tumultuous scene and stormed out after erupting at a panel of judges
because documents for the pretrial hearing had not been translated into
French.
He argued that his client had held no real power as Cambodians had died
of starvation, disease, forced labor and massacres during the brutal
Khmer Rouge drive to create a classless society. He insisted that the
power — and responsibility for the Cambodian tragedy — belonged to Pol
Pot, who died in 1998.
6 comments:
Another DEVIL goes to hell to join HIS FRIEND POL POT
good riddance!
Another one bites the dust!!!
Yes, died of hear attack, because he had not paid what his ancestor owed Khmer! Yes, they take some Khmer refugees in their country for Khmer to continue paying them gratitude!
សន្ទុសនៃការទាមទារកយុត្តិធ៌ម ត្រូវតែចេញជារូបរៀង ឲ្យបានច្បាស់លាស់ ដោយមិនអាចបង្អង់បានទៀតទេ!
មិនត្រូវអូសបន្លាយពេលវេលា ឲ្យម្ចាស់ឆ្នោតអស់សង្ឃឹមបានឡើយ!
វិប្បត្តិនៃការរៀបចំការបោះឆ្នោត ត្រូវតែមានតំណោះស្រាយដោយ យុត្តិធ៌ម!
ខ្មែរ ត្រូវតែរួបរួមគ្នា ហើយ ប្រកាន់ជំហរ របស់ខ្លួនឲ្យបាន! មិនត្រូវរេម្ដងទៅនេះម្ដងទៅនោះបានជាដាច់ខាត! មើលចុះ បរទេសកំពុងតែមើលមកឃើញ សម្បត្តិដ៏ស្ដុកស្ដំរបស់យើង បើយើងបែកបាក់គ្នា នុះយើងមិនអាចការពារវាបានទេ! តែក៏ត្រូវជ្រើសរើសរួបរួមជាមួយក្រុមដែលអាចផ្ដល់ផលប្រយោជន៍អោយខ្មែរដែរទើបបាន!
គ្មានអ្នកណាគេជួយយើងបាន បើយើងមិនច្បាស់លាស់ខ្លួនឯង! មិនត្រូវចាញ់ល្បិចកល់ញស់ញង់ សូមពិចារណាឲ្យបានល្អិតល្អន់ ត្រូវតែតស៊ូរ ហើយអត់ធ្មត់ បើពុំដូច្នោះទេ
It a great blasting news,
We had been under the KHMER ROUGE 's Iron Grips for almost four years but these devils like NUON CHEA, KHIEU SAMPHAN , TA MOK , KAING GUECH EAV, IENG SARY and his wife KHIEU THIRITH have been behind the cell since 2007 .
SIHAOUK reborn as ZOMBIE along with IENG SARY , TA MOK, SONN SEN and POL POT .
The Remains in jails need a new lawyer to replace JACQUES VERGES.
A Survivor of our Own Khmer Killing Fields
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