Showing posts with label Marcel Lemonde. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Marcel Lemonde. Show all posts

Monday, December 06, 2010

Inside the ECCC

In a picture taken on February 17, 2009, French investigating judge at Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, Marcel Lemonde (L), talks to journalists during an interview at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Court of Cambodia (ECCC) on February 17, 2009. (Photo by: AFP)
Sunday, 05 December 2010
Emilie Boulenger and James O’Toole
The Phnom Penh Post

Marcel Lemonde stepped down last week from his position as Co-Investigating Judge at the Khmer Rouge tribunal. Along with his Cambodian counterpart You Bunleng, Lemonde was responsible for directing investigation in the tribunal’s first and second cases. After more than four years in the position, Lemonde has been suceeded by German judge Siegfried Blunk and has returned home to France. In written responses to questions submitted by The Post, he discussed his experience at the court and his thoughts on leaving.

What was a typical day for you during the investigation phase?
There would be many meetings. A lot of reading as well. In fact, the day could be very different depending on the tasks of one member of staff or the other. The Office of the Co-Investigating Judges is composed of about 60 people, whose roles are very various and complementary.

While the lawyers were busy, with the help of analysts, examining the evidence, conducting essential legal research to answer the demands of the parties or preparing the text of the Closing Order, investigators were in the field interviewing witnesses or identifying crime sites.

Amongst all this activity, the responsibility of the judges was the ability to distinguish the main issue from the minor and especially to ensure that nobody panicked (as sometimes the risk would arise, given the difficulty of the enterprise).


What do you feel are the greatest successes you had and the greatest challenges you faced?
The simple fact of being able to complete the investigation despite all the obstacles was in itself a huge success. I think one does not always appreciate the tremendous difficulties that we faced.

[Case 002] itself was enormous, extraordinarily complicated and compounded by the structure of the Tribunal, which has a permanent disadvantage since every decision must be discussed, negotiated and formalised jointly; moreover, the context is not always favorable, it is an understatement. If we add to this the need to work in three languages and the fact that the international lawyers from the various sections of the court have different legal backgrounds, we have an idea of the full significance of the result that we achieved.

What was the most personally surprising thing you discovered over the course of the investigation?
I do not know if we can speak of “discovery”, but the reconstruction at Tuol Sleng was particularly memorable. Having [former Tuol Sleng prison chief Kaing Guek Eav] and former detainees, face to face, on the scene where the events had taken place, was very moving. Indeed, I am sorry that this investigative action was not used more widely during the trial.

What is the status of the investigation in cases 003 and 004, and when do you expect these investigations to be
finished?
It is now a question for my successor.

You directed these investigations on your own following a loss of support from You Bunleng, who had initially authorised the investigations. Do you have any idea why You Bunleng withdrew his support? Have you spoken to him about this in any detail beyond what was released publicly in your letters to one another?
Judge You Bunleng publicly explained his position. It is not for me to add anything to his statements, but he may, if he so wishes. As for our exchanges, fortunately, we did not only communicate by official letters! For four and a half years, we discussed matters daily and our few disagreements never had the slightest impact on our personal relationship.

Some observers have floated the possibility of remanding Cases 003 and 004 to national courts as a compromise with the government, which has expressed opposition to these cases. Do you have an opinion on the efficacy of such a move?
In my view, a judicial decision can only be taken by a judge. It will be up to the judges to decide what action to take in the cases before them. This leaves little room for the notion of “compromise”.

Do you feel that the Case 002 defence teams are working to undermine the tribunal?
Obviously I will not comment on the strategy of the defence. However, I can talk about the responsibility that places on commentators. “I have a dream”: I dream that one day we will read positive comments on the extremely difficult work that has been done at this tribunal and we will be reminded that the judgment of the Khmer Rouge leaders constitutes a historic moment, that no one would have imagined 10 years ago.

I have a dream that it will be possible to stop talking about this court in an exclusively negative way, as if the only thing to remember is that there is corruption in Cambodia or that some politician or other makes inflammatory and legally incorrect speeches.

Were you surprised by the allegations from your former staffer Wayne Bastin [who said in an affadavit last year that Lemonde had instructed investigators to find more inculpatory than exculpatory evidence]?
Yes.

Is there anything about this particular staff member that would cause him to attack your work or the work of your office?
I do not intend to comment [on] this lamentable episode, except to say that in a few years, all this will seem pretty insignificant.

Do you think we will ultimately see trials in Cases 003 and 004?
I do not know if we will see trials, but I know that that decision is only up to the judges. The co-investigating judges and, possibly, the judges of the Pre-Trial Chamber, will have to answer a number of issues: Is the procedure regular? Are the suspects part of “those most responsible”? Is there sufficient evidence against them? And so on.

Other considerations must not contaminate these purely judicial questions. The tribunal must obviously be independent and impartial: of course independent of the Government of Cambodia, as we are reminded regularly, but also independent of the media and NGOs, something we hear less often but is equally important and in no way less difficult.

One selling point for the court has been that it will serve as an example to local jurists and local courts. Have you observed this phenomenon yourself, and do you think it will ultimately hold true?
For more than three years, young Cambodian lawyers have worked daily within the court. It seems obvious to me that they learned something. Also the judges, prosecutors, lawyers have used a new way of working for them. This will leave a legacy, no doubt. But, of course, the rule of law is not built in a day and it will take time to perceive the effects of this influence.

What are the difficulties, or possible advantages, in having trials 30 years after the fact?
The disadvantages are obvious: Some actors or key witnesses are dead, others are elderly, do not remember or do not want to remember (because they are afraid of being victims of reprisals or being prosecuted themselves); whole libraries have been written, all are “pre-judgments,” judges must be able to make independent decisions without being beholden to what has been written previously, while at the same time not being ignorant of it.

That being said, experience shows that the passage of time may also have its advantages: It is now possible to tackle some issues which, some years earlier, would have been taboo. In any case, it is clear for the various actors of the court that a particular responsibility weighs on them: They must renounce the sophisticated pleasures of unnecessary debate and do everything to ensure that justice must finally be done as soon as possible.

Are you satisfied with the court’s caseload of, at most, 10 suspects?
I am not aware of such a decision…. More seriously, a judge does not need to be satisfied or dissatisfied with the number of accused. He must simply apply the law, calmly, meaning independently and impartially.

In this case, the law provides that the Tribunal judges the senior leaders and those most responsible, which is therefore necessarily a small number of people, unlike the tribunal for the former Yugoslavia, for example, where they also judge those lower down or less responsible.

What do you think will be the legacy of the tribunal?
There are several levels. First, as to the Khmer Rouge regime, the investigative Case File has brought new knowledge and better understanding of what happened. More generally, the judicial process has initiated debate within Cambodian society.

In terms of influence on the functioning of the Cambodian justice system and strengthening the rule of law, it is too early to draw lessons; we are now trying to sow something, which may be reaped in several years.

Finally, with regard to international justice, this court has been a unique experience, which unfortunately could not come to its appointed end because the actors are unfamiliar with the procedural system they are supposed to apply. In addition, some do not have a strong desire to familiarise themselves with this system.

What do you mean when you say it “could not come to its appointed end”?
When I say that “the experience (not “the court”) unfortunately could not come to its appointed end”, I’m thinking of the internal logic of the procedural system. For example, in the Duch trial, the case file was probably not used as efficiently as it could have been.

Where the trial phase is as lengthy as the investigative phase, it means that the system has not been fully applied. The main justification for a written investigation, which is necessarily rather long, is that it allows for the trial to focus on the core issues and therefore results in a more expeditious trial phase.

Much has been made about the dangers of political interference at the tribunal. Is this something you ever observed in the course of your work, and is it a concern for you as the process moves forward?
I can only speak for myself. I defy anyone to show a single decision that I made, which would not have been my own decision, taken freely, in good conscience. More generally speaking, is there any matter for concern? I often had reason to say that it would obviously have been much simpler to organise a purely international trial abroad, but I always added that it would have made no sense for the Cambodian people, who are clearly those most interested.

The condition for this trial to be useful is that it takes place in Cambodia, with the participation of Cambodians. By accepting to come and work in that Court, the international judges have chosen to do whatever they can to demonstrate that it is possible to organise a fair trial, respecting international standards, here in Cambodia. It is more difficult than to easily admit defeat and declare that this would be impossible, but it’s also much more interesting.

What role do you think the court has played in the lives of Cambodians?
30,000 people attended the hearings. This never happened in any other international tribunal, and it is not nothing. The first consequence is that public debate was initiated in Cambodian society, a debate that had never taken place before and which is essential for the future of this country.

Interview by Emilie Boulenger and James O’toole

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Tribunal Investigating Judge Leaves After Indictments

Marcel Lemonde, co-investigating judge for the Khmer Rouge tribunal, gestures during an interview with the Associated Press at his office in Phnom Penh, Cambodia in 2007. (Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS)

Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Phnom Penh Monday, 27 September 2010

“I have many projects. I have scheduled for a long time to do other things after Cambodia. I will be traveling, writing and I have scheduled as well a personal project. It will not be a passive retirement, you'll see.”
Now that indictments are in for four senior Khmer Rouge leaders, international tribunal investigating judge Marcel Lemonde will resign from the UN-backed court.

In an interview with VOA Khmer Friday, Lemonde said he hoped his successor, German judge Siegfried Blunk, would carry the tribunal forward for Cambodian victims of the Khmer Rouge.

“I take my retirement absolutely,” Lemonde told VOA Khmer. He would not only be retiring from the hybrid court, but from the French judiciary as well. However, he said he would not have an inactive retirement.

“I have many projects,” he said. “I have scheduled for a long time to do other things after Cambodia. I will be traveling, writing and I have scheduled as well a personal project. It will not be a passive retirement, you'll see.”

Lemonde joined the tribunal in the office of co-investigating judges in 2006. He had planned to stay three years, he said, but he ended up staying for four.

Lemonde's office oversaw the indictment and trial of Khmer Rouge torture chief Duch, as well as the investigations and indictments of four senior Khmer Rouge leaders on atrocity charges, including genocide.

He also sought, without the public support of his Cambodian counterpart, You Bunleng, the testimony of six senior government officials, who have all so far ignored the summonses. He also unilaterally began an investigation of five more unnamed Khmer Rouge suspects, following a motion by the international prosector that divided the court.

Still, Lemonde told reporters earlier this month he had been satisfied with his efforts in the tribunal and his partnership with You Bunleng.

Friday, September 17, 2010

KR Tribunal starts Case 002


Report by Yun Samean, Radio Free Asia
Video by Uon Chhin

Four Khmer Rouge suspects face “questionable” genocide trail

(Photo: Flickr)

16 September 2010

By Lula Ahrens
Radio Netherlands Worldwide


Four former Khmer Rouge regime leaders will stand trial for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity at Cambodia's national, UN-backed war crimes court. The closing order was signed on Tuesday 15 September, allowing for the trial to begin in 2011. The Dutch lawyer of suspect Nuon Chea has serious doubts about the fairness of the trial. “I’m afraid it won’t meet international standards.”

The four are the most senior members of the hard-line communist movement still alive.

Former deputy to Khmer Rouge founder Pol Pot, Nuon Chea (84); foreign minister Ieng Sary (84), Sary’s wife and social affairs minister Iengh Thirith (78), and head of state Khieu Samphan (79) were indicted in December 2009. They have been in detention since their arrests in 2007.

Dutch lawyers
The Marxist Khmer Rouge regime wiped out nearly a quarter of the country's population between 1975 to 1979 in a bid to create an agrarian utopia. Up to two million people died from starvation, overwork or execution.

The current genocide charges relate specifically to the deaths of Vietnamese people and ethnic Cham Muslims under the Pol Pot regime. Estimates for the number of Cham who died under the Khmer Rouge range from 100,000 to 400,000. It is not known how many Vietnamese were killed.

One of the suspects, Chea, is defended by Dutch lawyers Victor Koppe and Michiel Pestman. Mr Pestman told Radio Netherlands that he expects the trial to start in April, and that it will probably last three years. “That excludes the appeal.” He added that from a statistical perspective, it is very likely that not all four suspects will live to hear the verdict. “Which is why one could wonder: what’s the point of this trial?”

“Unfair” trials
The Cambodia tribunal is a UN-backed national tribunal that tries senior members of the Khmer Rouge regime for violations of both Cambodian and international law. It is composed of both local and international judges.

Mr Pestman wonders whether it was a good idea of the UN to allow a majority of Cambodian judges to serve at the tribunal. “There is a painful gap between them and the international judges,” he said. “I’m afraid that this trial won’t be fair, that it will not meet international legal standards.”

The court is still investigating whether to open more cases against five other former Khmer Rouge cadres, but faces political and financial pressures. Prime Minister Hun Sen has said further trials could drive the country back to civil war.

Government influence
Cambodia is a one-party state that has been in power since 1979. Its judiciary has an ambiguous record. Mr Pestman wonders to extent it is able to free itself from that tradition.

“Ultimately, the government decides whether or not more suspects will be prosecuted,” Mr Pestman said. “That tells you how far-reaching the government’s influence is.

Last Friday, the Pre-Trial Chamber rejected our request to interview more witnesses, which gives the impression that the Cambodian government is in charge of who is and who isn’t allowed to testify. The credibility of the preliminary investigation is being called into question, and that affects the reputation of the court as a whole.”

Petit and Lemonde
Canadian prosecutor Robert Petit resigned in September 2009, later explaining that efforts by the Cambodian government to influence the court and the decision whether or not to prosecute more suspects had led him to his decision.

Mr Pestman told Radio Netherlands his position as a Dutch lawyer is also difficult. "On the other hand, I am a whistle blower. I am here to make sure this trial does not turn into a farce. But if the situation gets worse, I might reach the point where I, too, decide to leave.”

Frenchman Marcel Lemonde, one of the tribunal's two co-investigating judges, announced Thursday 16 September that he was quitting to focus on other projects. He will be replaced by German Siegfried Blunk.

This will be the court's second trial, following the historic sentencing of former prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, alias ‘Duch’ (67), in July for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Duch was given a 30-year jail term for his role overseeing the executions of an estimated 15,000 men, women and children. He could be released in 19 years, because of the time already served.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

French judge quits Khmer Rouge tribunal

Khmer Rouge tribunal investigating judge Marcel Lemonde, shown in February 2009, has stirred controversy by requesting that six senior government officials appear as witnesses at the court. (Photo: AFP)

16/09/2010
Expatica.com

One of the two co-investigating judges of Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, Frenchman Marcel Lemonde, said Thursday he was quitting his job at the tribunal to focus on other projects.

The announcement came as the court indicted four former senior Khmer Rouge leaders for genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity.

Lemonde said he had joined the tribunal in 2006, intending to stay for just three years but he had ended up serving for four.

He said he was proud with what he had achieved in his role for the tribunal, despite frequent difficulties, but that he was now "passing the baton to someone else". He plans to leave in early December.

"I have other longstanding plans that I cannot now ignore. I have informed (co-investigating) judge You Bunleng and my colleagues and so I would like to move on with my other plans."

Bunleng said his colleague's departure had not surprised him because he always knew Lemonde would only stay for a limited number of years.

He thanked the Frenchman for his commitment and for staying "with us until the closing order was finalised."

He added that he would work with Lemonde's successor to decide how to proceed with a possible third case against other former Khmer Rouge cadres.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Hor 5 Hong’s criticisms of Lemonde were without merit: Anne Heindel


Minister explains KRT snub

Wednesday, 16 June 2010
Cheang Sokha and James O’toole
The Phnom Penh Post


Hor Namhong says foreign judge ‘abused the law’ by issuing summons alone

FOREIGN Minister Hor Namhong said Tuesday that he had ignored a request to testify at the Khmer Rouge tribunal because co-investigating judge Marcel Lemonde had “abused the law” in issuing the summons.

With his comments, Hor Namhong became the first among six high-ranking government officials summoned without success by Lemonde in September to publicly explain his refusal to testify. Cambodian co-investigating judge You Bunleng did not join Lemonde in signing the summonses.

“I did not respond because I have a legal reason,” Hor Namhong said.

“According to the rules between Cambodia and the UN, there must be two signatories, from the Cambodian side and foreign side, but Marcel Lemonde ... abused the law by signing alone, so on behalf of the government, which participated in the negotiations for the establishment of the court, I would not abuse this agreement like Marcel Lemonde did.”

In January, Lemonde issued a note detailing the action he had taken in attempting to secure testimony from Hor Namhong and five other officials: Senate President Chea Sim, National Assembly President Heng Samrin, Minister of Economy and Finance Keat Chhon and Cambodian People’s Party senators Sim Ka and Ouk Bunchhoeun. All of these officials had apparently ignored their summonses, prompting Lemonde to conclude that it was not feasible at the time to pursue their testimony further, and to defer the matter to the hybrid court’s Trial Chamber.

In a statement given through UN court spokeswoman Yuko Maeda, Lemonde defended his issuance of the summonses.

“It is not for a judge to engage in controversy with a witness,” Lemonde said. “The summons in question was delivered pursuant to Rule 72(3) of the ECCC internal rules.”

Rule 72(3) states that in the event of a disagreement between the co-investigating judges, “the action or decision which is the subject of the disagreement shall be executed” pending the resolution of the dispute. Exceptions in which no action may be taken arise if the action or decision relates to an arrest or issuance of charges, or if it may be appealed by parties to the case.

Anne Heindel, a legal adviser with the Documentation Centre of Cambodia, said Hor Namhong’s criticisms of Lemonde were without merit.

I think it’s pretty clear that Lemonde did have authority to move forward based on the rules, and because there was disagreement between [the co-investigating judges], he’s acting on his own,” Heindel said. “That doesn’t seem to be a problem, or to lessen his mandate.”

The issue of whether Hor Namhong and the other officials can claim immunity if the court seeks to compel their testimony is still unclear, Heindel added.

“The other international courts generally don’t find that government officials have immunity,” Heindel said. “One important issue is how international this court is, but even if this is a strictly Cambodian court, I don’t think that it’s clear that they have immunity.”

You Bunleng said Tuesday that he had not joined Lemonde in summoning the six officials because he did not believe their testimony was necessary in light of other evidence gathered by the Office of the Co-Investigating Judges (OCIJ).

“The OCIJ has already interviewed many witnesses, so there is no need for these people to come,” You Bunleng said.

Lemonde and You Bunleng have also registered disagreement over the timing of investigations in the court’s third and fourth cases, according to documents made public last week. Lemonde has signed a rogatory letter authorising preliminary investigations in the cases. You Bunleng signed the letter, but changed his mind, saying that the OCIJ should wait to consider this issue until indictments or dismissals have been issued in the second case.

Lemonde is currently going forward on his own with the investigations, UN court spokesman Lars Olsen said last week. Within 30 days from the disagreement, however, You Bunleng may choose to bring the matter to the court’s Pre-Trial Chamber for arbitration.

You Bunleng said Tuesday that he had “not yet considered whether to file a complaint about the disagreement to the Pre-Trial Chamber”.

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

Investigators' spat reveals more divisions at Khmer Rouge tribunal [-You Bunleng parrots Hun Xen?]

Marcel Lemonde (L) and You Bunleng (R) (Photo: AP)

Jun 9, 2010
DPA

Phnom Penh - Further divisions in Cambodia's war crimes tribunal came to light Wednesday after its two senior investigators openly disagreed on when to proceed with cases against five new suspects.

The hybrid UN-Cambodian court, which is tasked with trying those responsible for Khmer Rouge-era crimes, has a dual structure in which local and foreign staff fill equal positions in each of the court's operational areas.

Documents released Wednesday showed Cambodian investigating judge You Bunleng reversed an earlier agreement with his international counterpart to start investigations into the five suspects, none of whom has been named by the court.

Court spokesman Lars Olsen said tribunal rules meant international investigating judge Marcel Lemonde would proceed alone.

'The international investigating judge will go ahead by himself and start the investigation,' Olsen said.

In his memorandum to Lemonde, You Bunleng said he had changed his mind after taking into account several factors, including the state of Cambodia's society.

That echoed comments made by Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has argued that the prosecutions could lead to civil war. His weighing-in on the tribunal led to accusations of political interference.

You Bunleng told his international counterpart that they could discuss the issue in September once formal notices to prosecute four ageing Khmer Rouge leaders now in custody were issued.

Youk Chhang - who heads DC-Cam, an archive of material relating to the 1975-79 rule of the Khmer Rouge - said he was encouraged that You Bunleng had not ruled out investigating the new cases.

'The good news is that he is not saying no,' Youk Chhang said in reference to fears that political pressure could stop those cases.

Judgement in the tribunal's first case - that of the former head of the S-21 prison, Comrade Duch - was scheduled for July 26. Duch was prosecuted for war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in the deaths of more than 12,000 people who entered S-21 in Phnom Penh.

The four surviving senior leaders of the Khmer Rouge are in detention for their alleged involvement in the deaths of 1.7 million people. Their trials were expected to begin early next year.

The four are: former Brother Number Two Nuon Chea, the movement's ideologue; former head of state Khieu Samphan; former foreign minister Ieng Sary; and his wife, the former social affairs minister Ieng Thirith.

Around 1.7 million people are thought to have died from execution, disease, starvation and overwork during the Khmer Rouge's rule of Cambodia. Its leader, Pol Pot, died in 1998 on the Thai-Cambodian border.

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

Hun Xen's testimony is a NO, NO!


Tribunal Asked To Call Hun Sen: Letter

By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Original report from Washington
02 March 2010


Khmer Rouge tribunal investigators were requested to call Prime Minister Hun Sen to testify with other key government figures, but declined, according to a confidential court order obtained by VOA Khmer.

In the days before they concluded their investigation of the tribunal’s second case, judges Marcel Lemonde and You Bunleang decided Hun Sen “was not likely to provide additional evidence” and that he should not be interviewed.

The decision was a response to a request from the defense teams of Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan, who wanted Hun Sen interviewed along with Foreign Minister Hor Namhong, Finance Minister Keat Chhon, and other senior government leaders.

“They are not likely to provide any additional evidence in relation to that already obtained from a large number of documents or from interviews of other witnesses, 725 in total,” You Bunleang wrote.

In January, judges closed the investigation of Case No. 002, which will try Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary, Ieng Thirith and Kaing Kek Iev for atrocity crimes.

Defense for Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan have reportedly filed a complaint to the Pre-Trial Chamber of the UN-backed court over the decision.

The decision raises more questions about the independence of the court, which had sought to question senior Cambodian People’s Party members last year but was refused.

“A critical test for the success of the [tribunal]—as for all courts trying international crimes—is that the judicial process be allowed to run its course without political interference,” James Goldston, executive director of the Open Society Justice Initiative, in New York, told VOA Khmer.

The group remains concerned over government objections to trials of lower-tiered Khmer Rouge and of the senior officials’ refusal to testify, he said.

“It is important for the rule of law in Cambodia that decisions about whom to charge, what to charge and who should testify be made by judges, not politicians,” he said.

Cambodian officials have denied political influence at the court, and tribunal officials say the court works independently, according to agreements between the UN and Cambodia.

Meanwhile, the tribunal retains the right to issue arrest warrants along with subpoenas but has no real way to enforce them.

Wednesday, January 06, 2010

Judges Expected To End Investigation of Five Leaders

By Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
05 January 2010


Judges at the Khmer Rouge tribunal are expected next week to announce an end to the investigation of senior leaders in custody, paving the way for a trial next year, officials said Tuesday.

Investigating judges Marcel Lemonde and You Bunleng “will announce the end of the investigation to parties by next week,” tribunal spokesman Reach Sambath said Tuesday.

The judges have been examining evidence in Case No. 002, which seeks to try Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary, Ieng Thirith and Kaing Kek Iev, also known as Duch, for atrocity crimes.

The end of the investigation marks the beginning of a 30-day period for the defense to appeal the conclusions of the judges, before the case moves forward to trial.

Judges have said they will employ joint criminal enterprise, a doctrine of liability that pursues crimes via a defendant’s participation in a common criminal plan.

Nuon Chea defense attorney Son Arun told VOA Khmer the team planned to appeal for further investigations of potential defense witnesses.

Reach Sambath urged victims of the regime to register complaints with the tribunal’s Victims Unit before the third week of the month.

The tribunal, which completed its first case, against Duch, in October, has asked donors for an additional $93 million in funding over the next two years.

Last month, investigating judges added charges of genocide to the charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for four of the senior-most leaders in custody—though not including Duch. Observers worry the new charges could actually prolong the beginning of the trial, expected early this year.

Thursday, December 10, 2009

KRouge court dismisses bias claims against judge

Photo: AFP

Wednesday, December 09, 2009
AFP

PHNOM PENH — Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes tribunal on Wednesday dismissed a demand to disqualify the court's French investigating judge for bias, submitted last month by the lawyer for a Khmer Rouge leader.

In its ruling the court, set up to try leaders of the late 1970s regime, said there was insufficient evidence that Marcel Lemonde told staff to favour evidence showing suspects' guilt over evidence of innocence.

"Judge Lemonde in his response states that he does not remember saying the words attributed to him, and that if he did say them it would only have been 'in jest, as would have been obvious to everyone present,'" the ruling said.

The decision marks the second rejection in two weeks of bias allegations against officials at the court submitted by the defence for ex-Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary.

Last week the court also rejected a request by them to examine Dutch judge Katinka Lahuis and Australian judge Rowan Downing for bias, based on comments made in a speech by Cambodian premier Hun Sen.

Wednesday's dismissal makes it likely that another complaint against Lemonde, filed by the lawyer for Khmer Rouge former head of state Khieu Samphan, will also fail, said a court observer on condition of anonymity.

The complaint against Lemonde was based on a statement made by the former head of his intelligence and analysis team, Wayne Bastin.

A copy of the statement obtained by AFP said Lemonde shocked subordinates in a meeting at his Phnom Penh home in August when he told them, "I would prefer that we find more inculpatory evidence than exculpatory evidence".

Tribunal monitor Heather Ryan from the Open Society Justice Initiative said the rulings showed the judges could not be easily accused of partiality.

"They've set a very high standard for what kind of allegations are necessary to raise any kind of presumption for bias. There's a very high standard for attacking the independence of a judge in this court," Ryan told AFP.

Final arguments were heard last month in the court's first trial of prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, known by the alias Duch.

But the tribunal, created in 2006 after several years of haggling between Cambodia and the UN, has faced accusations of political interference and allegations that local staff were forced to pay kickbacks for their jobs.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge a communist utopia between 1975-79, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Biased investigation is merely a joke: judge

Judge Marcel Lemonde (Photo: AFP)

By Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
Original report from Phnom Penh
16 November 2009


An investigating judge at the Khmer Rouge Tribunal denied ordering investigations biased against detained former Khmer Rouge leaders.

“I have never given orders to my investigators to prioritize the gathering of inculpatory over exculpatory evidence,” said Marcel Lemonde in a statement submitted to the tribunal’s pre-trial chamber, a copy of which was obtained by VOA-Khmer on Monday.

In October, lawyers for the regime’s foreign minister, Ieng Sary, and former head of state, Khieu Samphan, accused the French co-investigating judge of being biased and asked to have him removed.

In the statement Lemonde admitted that he might have joked about it in English at an informal meeting at his home.

“He said he was just joking but it was taken seriously. But if he doesn’t know English how can he joke?” said Sar Savan, a defense lawyer for Khieu Samphan.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Heat on KRouge judge upped

The move follows motions over the past week seeking to disqualify Marcel Lemonde (left) from the court for alleged bias, filed by defence teams for former Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary and former head of state Khieu Samphan. --PHOTO: AFP

Oct 13, 2009
AFP

PHNOM PENH - DEFENCE lawyers increased the pressure on the French investigating judge at Cambodia's UN-backed Khmer Rouge court on Tuesday, filing an appeal accusing his office of withholding information.

The move follows motions over the past week seeking to disqualify Marcel Lemonde from the court for alleged bias, filed by defence teams for former Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary and former head of state Khieu Samphan.

Now, Ieng Sary's lawyers are arguing in an appeal that the co-investigating judges have refused to answer a May request to reveal how they collect and weigh evidence against leaders of the brutal late 1970s regime. 'This denial effectively obstructs the defence's ability to ensure Mr Ieng Sary receives a fair trial and has negative implications for the transparency of the proceedings,' said the appeal, a copy of which was obtained by AFP.

Tribunal spokesman Lars Olsen said Tuesday that the investigating judges did not consider they had rejected the request from Ieng Sary's lawyers, but had been occupied by a number of other time-consuming defence filings.

'The request by the defence team is currently under consideration by the co-investigating judges. There has been no intention to not answer their request,' Mr Olsen said.

The accusations of bias also facing Mr Lemonde were based on a sworn statement by his former chief of intelligence, alleging the judge told subordinates to favour evidence showing suspects' guilt over evidence of their innocence. Mr Lemonde has refused to publicly comment on the allegations, but indicated he will provide necessary information about the issue to the court.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Ieng Sary Defense Moves to Bar French Judge

By Kong Sothanarith, and Heng Reaksmey
Original report from Phnom Penh
12 October 2009


The defense team for jailed Khmer Rouge leader Ieng Sary moved on Friday to have French investigating judge Marcel Lemonde removed from a UN-backed tribunal case, claiming he was conducting a biased investigation.

Lemonde provoked a response from Prime Minister Hun Sen earlier this week by summoning six Cambodian government officials to appear as witnesses in the court’s second case, against four jailed leaders, including Ieng Sary.

“We insist he withdraw himself from Case 002,” defense attorney Ang Udom said. “We have witnesses who have indicated he is biased. According to witnesses, he instructed to seek evidence for guilt, rather than evidence to release the charged.”

Lemonde could not be reached for comment. Tribunal legal affairs officer Lars Olsen said the judge “doesn’t want to comment publicly on this allegation.”

If the complaint goes to the Pre-Trial Chamber, “he will give all information to the…chamber,” Olsen said.

Long Panhavuth, a project officer for the Open Society Justice Initiative, which monitors the tribunal, said the complaint may only refer to Ieng Sary, as other defense teams have not filed, leaving Lemonde a free hand in other parts of the case.

Meanwhile, the six officials summoned Wednesday remained mostly silent on whether they would comply with the order, following statements by Hun Sen on Thursday calling them plaintiffs, not witnesses.

Among those summoned, Foreign Minister Hor Namhong said he had not decided yet whether he would answer the summons. Heng Samrin, a former Khmer Rouge cadre and now head of the National Assembly, declined to comment Friday.

Monday, October 12, 2009

French Judge Under Fire For Alleged Krouge Investigation Bias

PHNOM PENH, Oct 12, 2009 (AFP) - A second lawyer for a former Khmer Rouge leader said Monday he will seek the removal of the French investigating judge at Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court, adding to allegations of bias.

Sa Sovan, who is defending former Khmer Rouge head of state Khieu Samphan, said he would file a motion later on Monday or Tuesday to seek the removal of judge Marcel Lemonde for bias in the investigation of his client.

The move follows a similar motion filed last week by the defence team for former Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary, demanding Lemonde be disqualified from the war crimes court for bias.

"I will file a motion to have such a judge removed because he did not respect the neutrality in the investigation," said Sa Sovan at the tribunalset up to try leaders of the brutal late-1970s regime.

The motions are based on a sworn statement by Lemonde's former chief of intelligence and analysis, alleging the investigating judge told subordinates to favour evidence showing suspects' guilt over evidence of their innocence.

"It is unjust, and I am afraid that this will affect my client," Sa Sovan told AFP, adding that both "black and white" evidence about his client's role in the regime had to be investigated.

Under the Khmer Rouge court's regulations, investigating judges are required to be impartial while researching allegations made by prosecutors.Defence teams are not permitted to make their own investigations.

Speaking on Lemonde's behalf, court spokesman Lars Olsen told AFP Monday that the judge was "not interested in commenting on the allegations" but would provide "necessary information" about the issue to the court.

Lemonde is currently investigating the court's second case, against Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary and his wife, former minister of social affairs Ieng Thirith, as well as Khmer Rouge ideologue Nuon Chea.

Final arguments in the court's first trial of prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, known by the alias Duch, are scheduled for late next month.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge a communist utopia between 1975-79, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Khmer Rouge case judge 'biased'

Ieng Sary's lawyers say the judge has trampled over his rights

Saturday, October 10, 2009

By Guy De Launey
BBC News, Phnom Penh


Lawyers for Cambodia's former foreign minister have called for the removal of the judge investigating his role in the Khmer Rouge era.

Ieng Sary is charged with crimes against humanity for his part in the deaths of as many as two million people in the late 1970s.

His defence team claims the judge at the UN-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal, Marcel Lemonde, is biased.

The controversy is the latest in a series of problems to hit the tribunal.

'One-sided investigation'

The defence team's claims are based on a sworn statement by a former member of the investigating judge's staff.

Wayne Bastin accused his boss, Mr Lemonde, of instructing his team to concentrate on finding only incriminating evidence.

Under the rules of the tribunal, the investigating judges are supposed to be impartial - and should also seek out evidence which might exonerate defendants.

Mr Bastin admitted that Ieng Sary's defence team had encouraged him to make the statement.

But he insisted that he had enjoyed a good working relationship with Judge Lemonde - and only came forward because he felt "morally and ethically" obliged.

Ieng Sary's lawyers said the investigating judge had "trampled over" the rights of their client.

The tribunal's pre-trial chamber will now rule on whether Mr Lemonde should be disqualified.

It has already rejected two attempts to disqualify court officials on the grounds of bias.

Progress in the case against Ieng Sary and his three co-defendants has been slow.

But closing statements in the trial of a former Khmer Rouge prison chief are expected next month.

KRouge lawyer demands judge [Marcel Lemonde]'s disqualification in Cambodia

Marcel Lemonde

Friday, October 09, 2009
By Patrick Falby
AFP


PHNOM PENH — The lawyer for a former Khmer Rouge leader on Friday filed a demand that the French investigating judge be disqualified from Cambodia's UN-backed war crimes court for alleged bias.

Michael Karnavas, attorney for ex-Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary, said the motion was based on allegations that Marcel Lemonde told subordinates to favour evidence showing suspects' guilt over evidence of their innocence.

The tribunal was set up to bring to justice the leaders of the genocidal late 1970s Khmer Rouge regime.

Karnavas said Lemonde was "giving instructions to his investigators to game the process. In other words, to look primarily for evidence that supports the prosecution".

The lawyer said he submitted his complaint based on a statement made by the former head of Lemonde's intelligence and analysis team, Wayne Bastin, at an Australian police station on Thursday.

A copy of the statement obtained by AFP said Lemonde shocked subordinates in a meeting at his Phnom Penh home in August when he told them, "I would prefer that we find more inculpatory evidence than exculpatory evidence".

Under the Khmer Rouge court's regulations, investigating judges are required to be impartial while researching allegations made by prosecutors. Defence teams are not permitted to make their own investigations.

"How is it that (Lemonde) can remain in the position in light of what we know now?" Karnavas said, adding that such behaviour was "outrageous".

Speaking on Lemonde's behalf, tribunal spokesman Lars Olsen said he had no comment on the issue.

Lemonde is currently investigating the court's second case, against Ieng Sary and his wife, former minister of social affairs Ieng Thirith, as well as Khmer Rouge ideologue Nuon Chea and ex-head of state Khieu Samphan.

Heather Ryan, who monitors the court for the Open Society Justice Initiative, told AFP that the defence would probably need to demonstrate systemic bias for Lemonde to lose his job.

"An off the cuff remark made in private -- like what was quoted -- may not be significant," Ryan said.

Under the court's internal rules, Lemonde's previous work on investigations remains valid even if he is disqualified from the tribunal.

Lemonde also met controversy earlier this week when it was revealed he summoned six top government and legislative officials to testify against Khmer Rouge leaders, a move opposed by Prime Minister Hun Sen's administration.

Final arguments in the court's first trial of prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, known by the alias Duch, are scheduled for late next month.

But the tribunal, created in 2006 after several years of haggling between Cambodia and the UN, has faced accusations of political interference and allegations that local staff were forced to pay kickbacks for their jobs.

Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the Khmer Rouge emptied Cambodia's cities in a bid to forge a communist utopia between 1975-79, resulting in the deaths of up to two million people from starvation, overwork and torture.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Judge says will quit KRouge court if can't work

Judge Marcel Lemonde (Photo: AP)

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

PHNOM PENH (AFP) — The French investigating judge at Cambodia's troubled Khmer Rouge war crimes court told reporters Wednesday he would quit his post if he sensed interference in his work.

The UN-backed tribunal, which is trying the regime's former prison chief Duch, has been plagued by allegations of political interference by the government and claims that Cambodian staff had to pay kickbacks for jobs.

"I came here to work as a judge... The day I will not be able to work anymore, I will leave," said investigating judge Marcel Lemonde at a press conference.

The UN has withheld funds to Cambodian operations at the court in absence of an agreement to stop the alleged corruption, however the global body's talks with senior government officials have ended without a deal.

Lemonde and co-investigating judge You Bunleng said their office had so far interviewed more than 450 witnesses but their work on the court's second case against four senior leaders would not be completed before the end of the year.

"We are very aware of the necessity to complete the investigation as soon as possible. Our goal is to complete it by the end of 2009," Lemonde said.

However he added "this goal is a very ambitious one, given the complexity of the file".

Two investigators have also been in France since last week to interview witnesses, court officials said.

Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot died in 1998 before facing justice, and fears over the health of ageing suspects hang over the court.

Former Khmer Rouge ideologue Nuon Chea, head of state Khieu Samphan, foreign minister Ieng Sary and his wife, minister of social affairs Ieng Thirith are in detention awaiting the court's second trial.

The long-awaited first trial has heard Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, acknowledge responsibility and beg forgiveness for overseeing the torture and execution of more than 15,000 people at the notorious Tuol Sleng prison.

Testifying on Wednesday, American Khmer Rouge expert Craig Etcheson said that among the network of regime prisons around the country, Tuol Sleng was the only one that worked directly for the regime's leaders.

"S-21 was unique. It was... considered an organ of the government or the communist committee," Etcheson said.

The widespread purges during the 1975 to 1979 regime were probably due to senior leaders' paranoia and a result of indiscriminate methods of weeding out Khmer Rouge enemies, Etcheson said.

Up to two million people were executed or died of starvation, disease and overwork as the Khmer Rouge movement emptied cities and enslaved the population on collective farms in its bid to create a communist utopia.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

A short course on the Khmer Rouge Trial with co-Investigating Judge Marcel Lemonde: who does what?

Kambol (Phnom Penh, Cambodia). 20/03/2008: Marcel Lemonde, co-Investigating Judge at the ECCC. Behind him on the wall, an aerial photograph of Tuol Sleng. (Photo: John Vink/ Magnum)

17-03-2009
By Stéphanie Gée
Ka-set


The judicial system of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) leaves more than one perplexed, and even has some of the Court’s protagonists baffled. The hybrid tribunal is indeed the first internationalised jurisdiction based on Civil Law, also known as Romano-Germanic legal system, when until now what always prevailed was Common Law. Landmarks are somewhat changed, particularly with the introduction of Investigating Judges and the possibility for victims to constitute themselves as Civil Parties. The court’s Internal Rules, amended and completed with every Plenary Session of the judicial staff, set the rules of the game step by step and the limits of each party’s role. However, a few elements still remain unclear to this day. In order to shed some light on the whole process, co-Investigating Judge Marcel Lemonde, who trained in Civil Law, accepted to evaluate the system and focus on 4 themes elaborated by Ka-set, so as to provide, in the most pedagogical way, some clarity on some of the court’s main mechanisms.

Click to Read More...

Friday, November 16, 2007

Khmer Rouge court on track, could widen list of suspects: judge [-Prince Thomico: it's time for you to act against your parents' killer(s)]

16 November 2007
AFP

BANGKOK: With four suspects charged and a fifth arrest expected, judge Marcel Lemonde says Cambodia's UN-backed genocide court could widen its net as evidence is gathered against other regime cadres.

"Yes, absolutely," Lemonde, one of two judges tasked with investigating criminal accusations against former Khmer Rouge, told AFP when asked whether the list of suspects could be expanded.

Prosecutors in July filed cases against five people -- all top leaders in the regime -- to be investigated by the judges, with trials expected to take place in mid-2008.

While the tribunal restricts the scope of prosecution to "senior leaders" of the Khmer Rouge, the court is in no way limited to those already under investigation.

"If, in the course of investigation, we identify other suspects, we can charge them. The only obligation is that we have to get the advice of the prosecutors beforehand," Lemonde, a French national who is one of 12 foreign jurists in the tribunal, said by telephone from Cambodia.

"But we can envisage widening the list. It is possible."

Former foreign minister Ieng Sary and his wife Ieng Thirith, who served as social affairs minister for the Khmer Rouge, became the latest suspects taken into the tribunal's custody when Lemonde and his Cambodian counterpart, judge You Bunleng, issued a formal detention order Wednesday.

The pair had been arrested in their home in the capital Phnom Penh on Monday and charged with crimes against humanity.

Earlier this year regime ideologue Nuon Chea and prison chief Duch were arrested by the court.

A fifth top cadre, former head of state Khieu Samphan, is the last of those currently under investigation to remain free. But his arrest is also expected to happen soon.

All have been widely implicated in crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge, including "murder, extermination, imprisonment, enslavement and forced labour," according to court records.

Up to two million people were executed or died of starvation and overwork as the communist regime emptied Cambodia's cities, exiling millions to vast collective farms in a bid to forge an agrarian utopia during its 1975-79 rule.

The Khmer Rouge also abolished money, religion and schools.

Cambodia's genocide court got underway last year following a decade of often tense negotiations between Cambodia and the United Nations.

Since then, the tribunal has been buffeted by infighting and corruption accusations, suffering further delays.

But Lemonde refuted the idea that the process was faltering, saying the flurry of arrests and other activity over the past six months indicated otherwise.

"Everything is proceeding at a completely normal pace and I would even say that it is quite satisfactory," he said.

A serious obstacle remains in the ailing health of the suspects, Lemonde said.

All except Duch, who at 65 is the youngest of the five under investigation, are suffering serious health problems, raising fears that one or more could die before a court verdict.

Health was "an obvious problem from the start," Lemonde said.

"We are dealing with old people. All medical precautions are being taken to make sure their health is attentively cared for."

"There is a medical department here in the (court) detention centre which alerts us if there is the least problem. However, all these people could die from one day to the next," he said.

"It is necessary that one is as effective and diligent as possible but also respects the requirements of justice.... One does not want to give the impression of dispensing hasty or expeditious justice."

"It is these two requirements which guide us," he said.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

ECCC co-investigating judges: Nuon Chea's charges are so grave that, if released, protests of indignation leading to violence would ensue

UN-backed Tribunal In Cambodia Details Charges

Saturday, 22 September 2007
Press Release: United Nations

UN-backed tribunal in Cambodia details charges against ex-Khmer Rouge leader

The former Khmer Rouge leader Nuon Chea faces charges of having planned and ordered the murder, torture and enslavement of civilians during the regime's rule over Cambodia in the late 1970s, according to a statement issued by a United Nations-backed war crimes tribunal today.

The Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), based in the capital Phnom Penh, detailed the charges that Nuon Chea, 81, faces in a statement explaining why it has decided to place him in provisional detention for a year.

You Bunleng and Marcel Lemonde, co-investigating judges of the ECCC, said Nuon Chea - also known as "Brother Number Two" in the Khmer Rouge - was being remanded in custody because he posed a potential threat to witnesses and victims and was also a flight risk.

In addition, the judges said that the charges are so grave that if he were released, it was possible there could be "protests of indignation which could lead to violence and perhaps imperil the very safety of the charged person."

Nuon Chea is charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes over his actions in various senior positions with the Communist Party of Kampuchea between April 1975 and January 1979.

He is alleged to have "planned, instigated, ordered, directed or otherwise aided and abetted in the commission" of numerous crimes against humanity, namely murder, torture, imprisonment, persecution, extermination, deportation, forcible transfer, enslavement and other inhumane acts.

He is also accused of war crimes on the basis of breaches of the 1949 Geneva Conventions, including wilful killing, torture, inhumane acts, wilful deprivation of rights to a fair trial and unlawful confinement.

The statement noted that Nuon Chea disputes the charges, saying that he would be ashamed to have committed such crimes. He contends that all real power during the Khmer Rouge rule was in the hands of its Military Committee, of which he was not a member, and he has also told the court that he also lost 40 family members during the period in question.

In a separate press statement released today, the ECCC announced that Nuon Chea had selected a Cambodian lawyer, Son Arun, to represent him. He said he does not have the means to pay for a lawyer so the work of Mr. Son will be funded by the ECCC until Nuon Chea's claim is assessed.

Under an agreement signed by the UN and Cambodia, the ECCC was set up as an independent court using a mixture of Cambodian staff and judges and foreign personnel. It is designated to try those deemed most responsible for crimes and serious violations of Cambodian and international law between 17 April 1975 and 6 January 1979.