Source: Human Rights Watch
Government Obstruction and Non-Cooperation Sabotage Justice
(New York) – The death of Ieng Sary, on trial before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
after indictment for genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes,
means that another senior leader of the Khmer Rouge has not been held
accountable for his crimes. Ieng Sary, the foreign minister of the Khmer
Rouge regime that ruled Cambodia from 1975 to 1979, died in a Phnom
Penh hospital on March 14, 2013.
“Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen asked the United Nations in 1997 for
assistance in holding Khmer Rouge leaders accountable – and since then
has done everything in his power to stymie the tribunal’s work,” said Brad Adams,
Asia director at Human Rights Watch. “Hun Sen bears primary
responsibility for denying justice to the victims of Ieng Sary’s
atrocities.”
Khmer Rouge rule under the leadership of Pol Pot, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary,
Khieu Samphan, and others resulted in the deaths of at least 1.7
million Cambodians, about one-quarter of the population. Pol Pot, known
as Brother Number One, died in 1998 after years of protection from
Thailand and China.
Ieng Sary’s responsibility for the regime’s crimes derived from his
position as a Permanent Member of the Khmer Rouge Standing Committee,
which formulated policy and oversaw its implementation nation-wide. As
Khmer Rouge minister of foreign affairs, he also directly oversaw the
purge of ministry officials, sending many accused of treason for torture
and execution. He repeatedly endorsed the Khmer Rouge policy that he
helped formulate of “smashing” to death all those deemed to be enemies
of the radical Khmer Rouge revolution, making baseless claims that those
executed were agents of the US Central Intelligence Agency, Soviet KGB,
or the Vietnamese Communists. He blamed those who were executed for the
policies that brought about mass starvation and death from disease. He
also defended the Khmer Rouge’s abusive policies in speeches and
communications to the UN.
“It is a sad indictment of the Khmer Rouge tribunal that after more
than six years, only one person has been convicted and only two others,
Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan, remain on trial for Khmer Rouge-era
crimes,” Adams said. “Cambodians now face the prospect that only three
people will be held legally accountable for the destruction of their
country.”
The Tribunal’s Genesis
Negotiations for the establishment of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal
began in 1997 when Hun Sen wrote to then-UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan asking for help in establishing a courtsimilar to the
International Criminal Courts for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda.
However, after a UN Group of Experts provided detailed suggestions about
how this could be done in order to ensure judicial independence from
Cambodia’s politically controlled judiciary, Hun Sen insisted that
trials could only be conducted by Cambodian courts. He also rejected a
UN proposal for an independent, international prosecutor.
The slow pace of establishing the Tribunal reflected a longstanding
policy articulated by Hun Sen during internal discussions with other
former Khmer Rouge members at the highest levels in his ruling Cambodian
People’s Party. For example, Hun Sen explained in a February 2000
Central Committee meeting of the party that stalling would be his main
tactic to assert control over the UN and the tribunal. This allowed the
government to play what Cambodian analyst Lao Mong Hay rightly predicted
in 2000 would be a long-term “cat and mouse game” to “delay to wear out
the patience of the UN.”
In 2002 the UN announced that it was pulling out of negotiations with
Hun Sen to create a tribunal. Annan concluded that “interference by the
executive with the independence of the judiciary” in Cambodia meant
that “established international standards of justice, fairness and due
process might therefore not be ensured.” The UN was fully aware that the
government would use delaying tactics in negotiations to obtain a court
it could control. In February 2002, Hans Corell, the chief UN
negotiator, warned that foot-dragging and convoluted judicial
decision-making procedures meant the Tribunal would be a “monster court …
unable to produce a final judgment” since it was likely that key
figures among the accused would die before that happened, given their
already advanced age. He also foresaw that this would make it inevitable
that the Tribunal would be “extremely costly.”
However, UN member states, led by the US, Japan, France, and Australia,
forced the UN to resume negotiations. This led to an agreement to
create the Tribunal with a majority of Hun Sen-appointed and controlled
judges and a minority of judicial officers nominated by the UN
secretary-general. Judges would make some decisions according to a
complicated “super-majority” formula that recognized but sought to
mitigate the inevitability of government interference in the court.
The UN’s concerns have been proven to be accurate, Human Rights Watch
said. Government-installed Cambodian court personnel have obstructed
investigations. The government has failed to require its members to
provide evidence to the Tribunal’s judicial investigation and trial
proceedings. Serious corruption allegations affecting the proceedings
have never been adequately investigated.
Justice Denied
Only one trial of the five people that Hun Sen allowed to be
indicted has been completed: Kaing Guek Eav alias Duch, the chairman of
the Khmer Rouge S21 Security Office in Phnom Penh known as Tuol Sleng,
who confessed to overseeing mass murder and torture there and was
convicted of crimes against humanity and war crimes and sentenced to
life imprisonment in February 2012. Ieng Thirith, the wife of Ieng Sary
and the former Khmer Rouge minister of social action, was ruled unfit
for trial in November 2011 due to worsening dementia. She was
subsequently released from detention under judicial supervision. Only
former Khmer Rouge Deputy Communist Party Secretary Nuon Chea and
Central Committee member Khieu Samphan remain on trial.
Meanwhile, Cambodian judges and prosecutors are continuing successfully
to block the arrest and indictment of five additional suspects whom UN
prosecutors have named as responsible for serious crimes during the
Khmer Rouge period. Hun Sen has publicly called for no further trials.
For instance, in a March 2009 speech he stated that if attempts were
made to expand the number of suspects beyond those he wanted prosecuted,
he would instead have the tribunal fail, even if this meant completion
only of the trial of Duch and the death of the other four during
subsequent proceedings. He also said if such efforts to expand the scope
of prosecution persisted, he would “pray for the court to run out of
money” as a result of donor country dissatisfaction, and would prefer
the departure of the international prosecutor and international judges
to trials of additional suspects.
“There are real questions about the purpose of continuing international
UN involvement and donor support for the Khmer Rouge Tribunal,” Adams
said. “Hun Sen has run circles around the UN and donors while
successfully denying justice for the Cambodian people.”