Toronto Star

Canadians helped bring killers to justice

An estimated 1.7 million Cambodians were killed after the Khmer Rouge took power in 1975. Dale Lysak was a prosecutor during the nearly decade-long tribunal.

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

LEE BERTHIAUME

A Vancouver lawyer who helped prosecute two of the Khmer Rouge’s most senior surviving leaders is breathing a little easier after a tribunal this week found the two elderly Cambodian men guilty of genocide and other crimes.

Dale Lysak says he has been waiting more than a year for the joint UN-Cambodian tribunal’s ruling against Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan, and that the verdict ensures some accountabi­lity for one of recent history’s worst atrocities.

“I’m very satisfied,” Lysak said in an interview. “I’ve been waiting for over a year to get the judgment on this trial and it feels great.”

An estimated 1.7 million Cambodians were killed during a bloody four-year period after the Communist-inspired movement known as the Khmer Rouge took over the poor Southeast Asian country in 1975.

Lysak was one of several prosecutor­s during the nearly decade-long tribunal hearings, and said he felt the weight of responsibi­lity for all those affected by the murderous regime during his eight years working on the tribunal.

That included when he led the prosecutio­n’s cross-examinatio­n of Nuon Chea, who served as second in command to Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, who died in 1998. There were also daily reminders as survivors sat in the courtroom to listen to the trial.

“What drove a lot of hard work over a really long period of time was that understand­ing that this was kind of the one chance to get justice for one of the worst incidents of mass atrocities in modern history,” Lysak said in an interview.

Lysak’s involvemen­t in the tribunal was almost an accident. After practising commercial law in San Francisco for several years, he did some travelling and ended up in Cambodia in 2008 — just as the tribunal was getting underway.

The tribunal’s lead internatio­nal prosecutor at the time was Justice Canada lawyer Robert Petit and when Lysak asked the fellow Canadian whether he could volunteer for a few months, Petit jumped at the offer.

While Petit would eventually resign in 2009, citing family reasons as well as frustratio­n with the tribunal, which has long been plagued with allegation­s of political interferen­ce by the Cambodian government, Lysak stayed until closing arguments last year.

And then, after returning to Canada, he and everyone else waited until this week to find out the court’s verdict. Nuon Chea, 92, and Khieu Samphan, 87, had been found guilty of crimes against humanity and sentenced to life in prison in 2014 for the forced displaceme­nt of millions of people and mass disappeara­nces during the start of the Khmer Rouge’s brutal rule.

The most recent verdict related to the murders, tortures and other atrocities committed in the years afterwards. The finding of genocide was particular­ly notable, however, as scholars had debated for decades whether such a crime had been committed.

Some have questioned whether the tribunal was worth it given the high cost in money and time to convict only a small number of Khmer Rouge leaders; besides Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan, only one other person has been tried and convicted.

Others have said the tribunal, which likely won’t prosecute any more former leaders, should have been able to accomplish more.

The tribunal’s mandate was also limited to prosecutin­g only the most senior leaders, while Lysak and his colleagues had to prove that the regime’s leaders were responsibl­e for the actions of their subordinat­es.

“But I think when we’re talking about killings of this magnitude, look at the amount of money spent for each person who died and it comes to $100 per victim. Does that seem like a lot of money to pursue justice? No, of course not,” Lysak said.

 ?? JEFF WIDENER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
JEFF WIDENER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
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