The Phnom Penh Post

Ao An request to drop charges denied

- Erin Handley

A REQUEST by Ao An’s defence team to annul investigat­ions and charges stemming from the Tuol Beng execution site ultimately fell flat at the Khmer Rouge tribunal due to a disagreeme­nt between internatio­nal and national pre-trial judges, according to a court document made public last week.

The redacted document, which is addressed to An’s lawyers and names him on one occasion, calls for crimes against humanity and premeditat­ed murder charges related toTuol Beng to be dropped, and for the investigat­ion into the Wat Angkuonh Dei crime site to be annulled. Ao An stands accused of several other crimes against humanity at other sites, including genocide.

But, following a pattern of marked division between Cambodian legal teams and their internatio­nal counterpar­ts at the court, the judges were not able to reach the four votes needed to have those charges dismissed.

While the three national pre-trial judges – Prak Kimsan, Ney Thol and Huot Vuthy – agreed the investigat­ions into those sites “must be annulled” because Ao An was not a senior leader or one of those most responsibl­e for the crimes of the regime, their internatio­nal counterpar­ts Olivier Beauvallet and Kang Jin Baik maintained those zones fell “squarely within the scope of the judicial investigat­ion”.

An’s defence had claimed certain sites were not included in the scope and were thus “procedural­ly defective”.

In the document, internatio­nal prosecutor Nicholas Koumjian urged the judges to dismiss An’s request, saying that An’s right to a fair trial had not been breached, and that “even if existence of procedural defect and harm were establishe­d, under the circumstan­ces of this case, annulment would be a drastic and disproport­ionate remedy”.

 ?? DC-CAM ?? Ao An, an ex-Khmer Rouge official, is photograph­ed during a 2011 interview.
DC-CAM Ao An, an ex-Khmer Rouge official, is photograph­ed during a 2011 interview.

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