The Press

Call for end to UN tribunal

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A top Cambodian government official has reiterated his government’s intention to end the work of the UN-backed tribunal that last week convicted the last two surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Deputy Prime Minister Sar Kheng, speaking on Saturday at a government ceremony in the northern province of Oddar Meanchey, said the tribunal’s work had been completed and there would not be any additional prosecutio­ns for acts that led to the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million people in the 1970s.

He cited the terms under which the tribunal, staffed jointly by Cambodian and internatio­nal prosecutor­s and judges, had been establishe­d, limiting its targets to senior leaders of the Khmer Rouge regime that was in power from 1975 to 1979. The rules also allow prosecutin­g those most responsibl­e for carrying out atrocities.

Sar Kheng’s remarks reported yesterday. were

On Friday, the tribunal sentenced Nuon Chea, 92, the main Khmer Rouge ideologist and right-hand man to its late leader Pol Pot, and Khieu Samphan, 87, who served as its head of state, to life sentences. The two had already been serving life sentences on a previous conviction. In nine years of hearings and at a cost of more than US$300 million (NZ$436m), the tribunal has convicted only one other defendant, Kaing Guek Eav, alias Duch, who as head of the Khmer Rouge prison system ran the infamous Tuol Sleng torture centre.

Cases of four more suspects, middle-ranking members of the Khmer Rouge, had already been processed for prosecutio­n but have been scuttled or stalled. Without the co-operation of the Cambodian members of the tribunal, no cases can go forward.

Long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen has repeatedly declared there would be no more prosecutio­ns, claiming they could cause unrest. Hun Sen himself was a mid-level commander with the Khmer Rouge before defecting while the group was still in power, and several senior members of his ruling Cambodian People’s Party share similar background­s.

He helped cement his political control by making alliances with other former Khmer Rouge commanders. –AP

 ?? AP ?? Nuon Chea, 92, the main Khmer Rouge ideologist, was sentenced last week to life in prison.
AP Nuon Chea, 92, the main Khmer Rouge ideologist, was sentenced last week to life in prison.
 ??  ?? Sar Kheng
Sar Kheng

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