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As Khmer Rouge Trial Nears End, Prosecutors Say Tribunal Is Lesson to World


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human rights, Cambodia, Khmer Rouge, crimes against humanity

A Cambodian boy stands inside a small Buddhist stupa full of human bones and skulls of victims of the Khmer Rouge near his home in Khnounh village, Kandal province, Cambodia. (Photo: AP)

PHNOM PENH — Prosecutors at Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge tribunal said Thursday the trial sends a strong message to the world that massive human rights violations will not go unpunished.

They spoke as the prosecution launched its closing arguments against two surviving leaders of the communist regime under which an estimated 1.7 million people died.

Nuon Chea, the regime’s chief ideologist, and Khieu Samphan, its head of state, both in their 80s, are charged with genocide and crimes against humanity.

The Khmer Rouge, in power from 1975 to 1979, emptied the country’s cities, forcing Cambodians into backbreaking work in rural cooperatives and executing anyone suspected of dissent. Executions, death by starvation, torture, lack of medical care and overwork were rampant.

“Even today countless Cambodian families carry a heavy burden from the four-year period that the Khmer Rouge ruled Cambodia: memories of mistreatment, starvation and torture of loved ones lost who were killed or simply disappeared,†Prosecutor Chea Leang told the court.

“This trial is important for Cambodia, but not just Cambodia — it is important for the entire world,†she said. “It demonstrates that crimes of such magnitude and severity will not be forgotten and that those responsible will be held to account.â€

While Khieu Samphan sat in the courtroom Thursday, often closing his eyes, Nuon Chea followed the proceedings by a video link from a holding cell due to ill health.

Their trial began in November 2011. To make a massive indictment more manageable, the judges split the case into a series of smaller trials that would examine evidence in rough chronological order. The present trial’s focus on the forced movement of people excludes some of the gravest charges related to genocide and detention centers.

Many fear further trials will never take place, given the slow pace of the proceedings and the poor health of the aging defendants. The trial already has lost two other defendants to death and dementia.

Chea Leang said she hoped the examination of the forced evacuation of the capital, Phnom Penh, would offer a foundation for understanding “one of the most factually complex criminal cases ever prosecuted.â€

“From the moment that the residents of Phnom Penh left their homes and embarked into the unknown, they were the virtual slaves of the Khmer Rouge soldiers who escorted them,†she said.

The entire population, including young children, pregnant women, the elderly and even hospital patients were “exposed to the elements at the hottest month of the year without water, shelter, food or medical assistance,†she said. “Those who could not leave and had no relatives to help them were abandoned to die.â€

The UN-assisted court, launched in 2006, so far has convicted only one defendant, Khmer Rouge prison director Kaing Guek Eav, who was sentenced to life imprisonment in 2011. Cambodia has no death penalty.

The post As Khmer Rouge Trial Nears End, Prosecutors Say Tribunal Is Lesson to World appeared first on The Irrawaddy Magazine.



Source: Irrawaddy.org
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  • 4 weeks later...

Kaing Guek Eav alias Duch, Director of S21 Toul Sleng Torture Prison. Convicted in 2011 to Life Imprisonment

Prison was liberated in 1979 by Cambo/Viet Liberation Army. It took them 32 Years to lock him up.. and why just put him in prison ? They should subject him inside S21 to the torments he approved on 20.000 people that were killed in S21

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