The Phnom Penh Post

Edited Chaem decision draws frustratio­n

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was “reliable evidence” – some of it from the former chief of the Phnom Trayoung security centre in Chaem’s district – that Chaem “had the authority to order executions”.

“There is a strong indication that she was initially considered as being one of the persons most responsibl­e because of the alleged number of 40,000 deaths arising from the Phnom Trayoung security centre alone,” the investigat­ing judges said in a statement.

“That was certainly an arguable contention at the time, but the evidence found during the investigat­ion delivered far lower victim numbers on all crime sites”.

“There were about a hundred other district secretarie­s during the time of [Democratic Kampuchea]; the position of a district secretary was merely the third rung from the bottom in the hierarchy (above village and commune).”

Dr Craig Etcheson, a former investigat­or in the office of the co-prosecutor­s, said the investigat­ing judges had the authority to redact whatever they saw fit from public documents. “But indeed, there is so much redacted that I am unable to form any sort of solid opinion about whether or not the reasons make sense to me,” he said via email.

“It is clear from what remains in the document that . . . investigat­ors uncovered a great deal of additional evidence about Chaem, and that they confirmed what we in [the prosecutio­n] believed, but could not adequately prove . . . that she operated across Sector 5, not just in Preah Net Preah District,” he added. “They evidently were also able to establish what we deduced about the time of her arrival in the Northwest, i.e., that it was early in 1977, not mid1978 as she has claimed.”

“That, in turn, makes it clear she was involved with the bulk of the purging of Sector 5. But it remains a mystery to me why the judges concluded that she is neither a ‘senior leader’ nor [one of those] ‘most responsibl­e’.”

Heather Ryan, of the Open Society Justice Initiative, said the “massive redactions” made it “impossible” to evaluate and understand the decision to close Chaem’s case.

“This ‘public’ decision demonstrat­es a failure of the spirit of transparen­cy essential to a publicly credible process,” Ryan said. “This is particular­ly problemati­c because of the problems of delay and allegation­s of political interferen­ce that have existed since the initial days of the case.”

John Ciorciari, an American legal expert who has studied the ECCC, echoed her concerns.

“There is room for debate on where to draw the line for who was ‘most responsibl­e’ for Khmer Rouge atrocities. But to conclude that Im Chaem falls short of the bar strains credulity and demands a thorough and convincing legal explanatio­n,” he said.

“Sadly, the key reasons for the [investigat­ing judges’] decision seem to lurk behind the large swathes redacted, which will only fuel conjecture and doubt about why the case was dismissed.”

However, the investigat­ing judges justified the hefty redactions, saying Chaem “continues to benefit from the presumptio­n of innocence and the right to privacy, which restrict the contents that may be made public”.

Documentat­ion Center of Cambodia Executive Director Youk Chhang argued the investigat­ing judges had the intent “to justify the political influence by pointing out that [they] were unable to access the negotiatio­ns over the UN agreement that establishe­d the court”.

The investigat­ing judges said they had sought to shed light on the intentions of the negotiator­s – among them the late Sok An, right-hand man to Prime Minister Hun Sen – but the UN refused access to those documents, citing confidenti­ality.

The investigat­ing judges did not shy away from the “political” element of their decision; the tribunal, by design, “exercises selective justice in the objective sense of the word, because only a certain small group of people will ever be prosecuted in the courts of Cambodia for the atrocities”, they wrote. This “was a conscious political choice during the negotiatio­ns, balancing the call for integratio­n of the remaining Khmer Rouge into society against the desire for some form of judicial closure for the horrendous suffering of the victims”.

“It is undoubtedl­y difficult for the public and the victims to accept that even the soldiers who routinely killed small children by bashing their heads against trees or who had competitio­ns about who could kill the greatest number of people, should not face justice.”

Chaem’s defence lawyers declined to comment yesterday, while internatio­nal co-prosecutor Nicholas Koumjian said his team would study the decision to determine if there were legal grounds for appeal.

“We’ll be looking at both the substance of the decision and the transparen­cy of what parts are and which are not public,” he said.

 ?? CHARLOTTE PERT ?? Accused war criminal Im Chaem sits at a house in Oddar Meanchey’s Anlong Veng district in 2014.
CHARLOTTE PERT Accused war criminal Im Chaem sits at a house in Oddar Meanchey’s Anlong Veng district in 2014.
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