Showing posts with label KR soldiers on trial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KR soldiers on trial. Show all posts

Saturday, October 04, 2008

Pol Pot ordered murder of British mine-clearer, court told

Trial hears Khmer Rouge leader had blanket policy to murder foreigners on grounds they supported the government

Friday October 03 2008

Ian MacKinnon in Phnom Penh
The Guardian (UK)


A British mine-clearing expert who was murdered in Cambodia and his remains burned to hide the evidence was killed on the orders of the Khmer Rouge leader, Pol Pot, a court heard today.

The trial of five former Khmer Rouge cadres accused of the kidnap and murder of Christopher Howes, 37, more than 12 years ago, heard that the communist leader had a blanket policy to murder foreigners on the grounds that they supported the Cambodian government.

Howes was shot within days of his capture while leading a mine-clearance team north of Siem Reap - home to the Angkor Wat temple complex - after his abductors lulled him into a false sense of security by laying out a sleeping mattress for the night and giving him fruit.

His interpreter, Huon Houth, who was among the 30-strong team from British-based Mines Advisory Group (MAG), was murdered a day earlier when his captors deemed him "no longer necessary" because one of the alleged killers spoke English.

The disappearance of the former British army engineer from Backwell, near Bristol, and Hourth remained a mystery for more than two years as Cambodia's civil war ground on in its death throes.

Investigations by a Scotland Yard team working with the Cambodian police eventually unravelled Howes' fate, declaring he was murdered after forensic tests on bone fragments found in a fire.

The evidence collected from witness statements in the two years after Howes' disappearance was presented at the Phnom Penh court today by former Metropolitan police anti-terrorism officer, Mike Dickson, now an advisor to the UN-backed Khmer Rouge genocide tribunal.

The men in the dock had lived freely in the Khmer Rouge stronghold of Anlong Veng until their arrest a year ago despite suspicions of their involvement in the killings. A deal to end the civil war in 1998 pardoned many Khmer Rouge cadres.

One of the accused, Khem Ngoun, 59, the former chief-of-staff of the one-legged Khmer Rouge army commander, Ta Mok, was a brigadier-general in the Cambodian army until his arrest.

Along with the others, Loch Mao, 54, a Khmer Rouge officer who became a civil servant, Cheath Chet, 34, Puth Lim, 58, and Sin Dorn, 52, the frail Ngoun faces life imprisonment for murder and illegal detention when the investigating judge, Iv Kimsry, delivers his verdict in 10 days' time.

In a marathon session the court heard today of the chilling last days of Howes and Hourth after their abduction on March 26 1996. Some of the de-mining team escaped almost immediately while all the others were released after Howes declined to abandon his staff to fetch ransom money.

Howes and Hourth were taken towards Anlong Veng. But in an interview with the British detectives, Khieu Sampan, the Khmer Rouge's nominal head of state, said that Hourth was killed in Kul village after Ngoun said the interpreter was unnecessary.

Howes was held in a school where Ngoun interrogated him, before he was taken out into the countryside to a road near the house of Mok, who passed the order to "solve the problem" and kill him.

Howes was taken in a white Toyota pickup truck driven by Lim, accompanied by four guards including Ngoun, Mao, and two others, Khem Tem and Soeun Rim, who subsequently died. In a statement to police before his death, Rim said Mao killed Howes with two bullets from an AK-59 rifle provided by Ngoun.

Both Ngoun and Mao changed earlier statements they made and maintained only Rim, who died in 2004, fired the fatal shots. Mao is adamant his weapon jammed and he could not fire.

All the accused argued they acted on orders of the Khmer Rouge's brutal "brother number one" and that failure to do so would have meant certain death.

But Lou McGrath, MAG chief executive who was present at the hearing, dismissed the defence.

"It's good to see this trial," he said. "But I think the defence that if you don't kill others you will be killed yourself is what leads to genocide. It's no excuse and I hope the judge decides that they will feel the full weight of the law."

Friday, October 03, 2008

Five former KRouge claim innocence in trial for killing Briton

Friday, October 03, 2008

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — Five former Khmer Rouge fighters told a Cambodian court Friday they were innocent of the 1996 kidnapping and killing of a British mine clearer and his translator.

The former guerrillas appeared in blue prison uniforms at Phnom Penh Municipal Court to answer charges of premeditated murder and illegal confinement, and could face life in prison if convicted.

They stand accused of shooting Christopher Howes and translator Huon Huot a few days after seizing the pair and other members of their mine clearance team near the famed Angkor Wat temples in northwest Cambodia.

All five suspects -- Khem Ngun, Puth Lim, Sin Dorn, Loch Mao, and Cheap Chet -- were arrested over the past year, nearly a decade after a joint investigation into the incident by British and Cambodian police.

Khem Ngun, who served under notorious Khmer Rouge commander Ta Mok, was allegedly the one who ordered the fighters under his control to shoot Howes and Huon Huot.

But Khem Ngun claimed the order to kill the prisoners came from deceased Khmer Rouge commander Khem Tem and was carried out by a soldier named Rin.

"Another Khmer Rouge soldier close to Ta Mok ordered the shooting of Howes in the head, and then I turned my face away and felt shock," Khem Ngun told the court.

Khem Ngun was serving as a major general in the Cambodian military when he was arrested in November last year. The other suspects had become civil servants.

At the time of the killings, the communist Khmer Rouge were battling government troops in the final years of Cambodia's drawn-out civil war.

Howes, 37, refused a chance to leave his kidnapped team of 20 mine clearers from the Britain-based Mines Advisory Group to retrieve a ransom.

While the rest of the team was eventually released, Howes and Huon Huot were taken deeper into rebel-held territory and killed.

Their remains were found in 1998, the same year Cambodia's civil war ended when the Khmer Rouge movement disintegrated.

The verdict would be announced October 14, said presiding judge Iu Kim Sri.

Cambodia is littered with millions of land mines and other unexploded ordnance from nearly three decades of conflict.

Ex-Khmer Rouge soldiers tried for murder of Briton

Khem Ngun, center, a former Khmer Rouge soldier, is escorted by police out of the Phnom Penh Municipal Court Phnom Penh, Cambodia, Friday, Oct. 3, 2008. Five former Khmer Rouge soldiers went on trial Friday for their alleged involvement in the killing of a British mine-clearing expert and his Cambodian colleague 12 years ago. (AP Photo/Heng Sinith)

Friday, October 3, 2008
By KER MUNTHIT

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Five former Khmer Rouge soldiers accused of killing a British mine-clearing expert and his Cambodian colleague 12 years ago testified Friday that two other soldiers — now believed dead — were instead responsible for the murders.

Their testimony came on the opening day of the trial for the murder of Christopher Howes, who was abducted in March 1996 by the Khmer Rouge along with Cambodian co-workers while clearing mines near Angkor Wat, the famed 12th century temple complex in the country's northwest.

The defendants gave vivid accounts of the execution of Howes, which prosecutor Hing Bun Chea told the court came after his killers offered him a final meal of apples and durian, a tropical fruit known for its pungent aroma.

They said a Khmer Rouge commander named Khem Tem ordered a guerrilla soldier named Rim to shoot Howes in the head.

"Howes fell backward. It was one single shot," said defendant Loch Mao. "Khem Tem then ordered me to fire more shots. I walked up with the intention of firing a shot into his chest, but Khem Ngun (another commander) yelled 'that's enough, he is already dead.'"

Rim and Khem Tem are not defendants. Rim was killed by a land mine in 2004, according to his wife, and Cambodian press accounts have said that Khem Tem died in a road accident in neighboring Thailand.

Howes, who was 37 at the time and a former soldier, won praise while a prisoner for persuading the band of guerrillas to free his colleagues while he and his Cambodian interpreter, Houn Hourth, remained for ransom.

Their fate was a mystery for more than two years, until a team of detectives from Scotland Yard said in May 1998 they had firm evidence the two were taken to the Khmer Rouge stronghold of Anlong Veng and killed soon afterward.

All five defendants appeared in a Phnom Penh court in blue prison uniforms. Among them was Khem Ngun, who other witnesses claim gave the order to kill the two men.

The suspects have been charged with premeditated murder and illegal confinement of persons, crimes punishable by life imprisonment.

Khem Ngun defected to the government in 1998 and was awarded the rank of major general in the Cambodian army. At the time, the Cambodian government was unwilling to arrest him, apparently for fear of losing the trust of Khmer Rouge guerrillas who were then in the process of defecting.

Khem Ngun and two other suspects were arrested last November, while the last two suspects, including his former driver, were arrested in May.

At the time of the first arrests, Howes' father, Roy, who lives in Backwell in southwestern England, said his family would never recover from Christopher's murder.

"These people have wrecked my family," his father said. "The pain is permanently with us."

Ex-Khmer Rouge soldiers tried for murder of Briton

Friday, October 3, 2008
The Associated Press

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia: Five former Khmer Rouge soldiers went on trial Friday for their alleged involvement in the killing of a British mine-clearing expert and his Cambodian colleague 12 years ago.

Christopher Howes was abducted in March 1996 by the Khmer Rouge along with a group of his Cambodian co-workers while clearing mines near Angkor Wat, the famed 12th century temple complex in the country's northwest.

Howes, who was 37 at the time and a former soldier, persuaded the band of guerrillas to free his colleagues while he and his Cambodian interpreter, Houn Hourth, remained for ransom.

Their fate was a mystery for more than two years, until a team of detectives at Britain's Scotland Yard said in May 1998 they had firm evidence the two were taken to the Khmer Rouge stronghold of Anlong Veng and killed soon after the abduction.

All five defendants appeared in a Phnom Penh court in blue prison uniforms. Among them was Khem Ngun, a former guerrilla commander who witnesses claim gave the order to kill the two men.

The suspects have been charged with premeditated murder and illegal confinement of persons, crimes punishable by life imprisonment.

Khem Ngun defected to the government in 1998 and was awarded the rank of major general in the Cambodian army. At the time, the Cambodian government was unwilling to arrest him, apparently for fear of losing the trust of Khmer Rouge guerrillas who were then in the process of defecting.

Khem Ngun and two other suspects were arrested last November, while the last two suspects, including his former driver, were arrested in May.

At the time of the first arrests, Howes' father, Roy, who lives in Backwell in southwest England, said his family would never recover from Christopher's murder.

"These people have wrecked my family," his father said. "The pain is permanently with us."