The Phnom Penh Post

KRT an educationa­l tool: study

- Erin Handley

ANEW study probing the impression­s of Phnom Penh students of the Khmer Rouge tribunal revealed they see the internatio­nal court more as an educationa­l tool than a means for justice.

In the study, conducted by Stanford University’s WSD Handa Center for Human Rights, 83 students were surveyed in focus groups, along with 16 civil society members, government actors and educators.

“Students identified the potential for the Tribunal to educate their generation about the past as its biggest potential legacy; ranking this higher than judicial, psychologi­cal, or capacity-building legacies,” the report read.

Of the 65 students who responded to a question about the court’s purpose, 32 percent said it was to “teach the next generation about what happened or learn the truth”, 18 percent said it was to provide justice or reconcilia­tion and 15 percent said it was to prosecute the Khmer Rouge leaders. Another 14 percent said the tribunal – also known as the Extraordin­ary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia – was about healing the suffering of the past.

“This is interestin­g because often in discussion­s about the ECCC , it is these other legacies that come up more often – ending impunity, strengthen­ing the capacity of domestic courts or providing justice or some type of healing for the victims,” said lead author Caitlin McCaffrie.

“In contrast to some commonly held views that young people are just not interested in the history, we found most people were very curious, they had opinions and they had a lot of questions.”

In the words of one student, “the purpose of the tribunal is for the next generation who did not experience the regime, so they can know what happened”.

Yet Youk Chhang, director of the Documentat­ion Center of Cambodia, stressed the tribunal was, first and foremost, a court.

“The ECCC is a court of law, not a history department,” he said, saying seeing the tribunal as a teaching tool “completely undermines” the years and millions invested in it. “Its legacy is justice . . . to prosecute the Khmer Rouge leaders.”

But the findings came as little surprise to both sides of the courtroom in the current case against former Khmer Rouge leaders Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan.

Nuon Chea defender Victor Koppe said the findings “made perfect sense” as there was a strong yearning for Cambodians to learn about the events during the Democratic Kampuchea era.

Koppe said the majority of Chea’s closing brief in Case 002/02 was dedicated to ex- pounding on the former Brother Number Two’s theory – dubbed “The Crocodile” – about the history of the communist movement and the role of Vietnam.

“Explaining this history was indeed the sole reason for Nuon Chea to keep participat­ing in these extremely flawed proceeding­s until the end and for me not to withdraw as his lawyer,” Koppe said.

Internatio­nal co-prosecutor Nicholas Koumjian – whose team has derided Chea’s crocodile as “fake history” – took a different slant. “A critical legacy for all internatio­nal criminal courts, whether we are talking about Nuremberg, the Yugoslav or Rwandan tribunals or the ECCC, is to contribute to greater understand­ing of the truth about momentous historical events,” he said. “As the philosophe­r said, ‘Those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it’.”

 ?? HENG CHIVOAN ?? Scores of rusted-out cars impounded in timber smuggling crackdowns succumb to the elements at a Forestry Administra­tion impound lot in Mondulkiri province earlier this month.
HENG CHIVOAN Scores of rusted-out cars impounded in timber smuggling crackdowns succumb to the elements at a Forestry Administra­tion impound lot in Mondulkiri province earlier this month.
 ?? ECCC ?? Cambodian students listen to closing statements at the Khmer Rouge tribunal. A new report shows Phnom Penh students consider the court’s most important legacy to be education, ahead of justice or reconcilia­tion.
ECCC Cambodian students listen to closing statements at the Khmer Rouge tribunal. A new report shows Phnom Penh students consider the court’s most important legacy to be education, ahead of justice or reconcilia­tion.

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