Bangkok Post

Judges dismiss case against KR cadre

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PHNOM PENH: A UN-backed court yesterday dismissed a case against a former Khmer Rouge cadre charged with crimes against humanity, highlighti­ng the difficulti­es of bringing lower level members of the brutal regime to justice.

The Khmer Rouge dismantled modern society in Cambodia in their quest for an agrarian Marxist utopia, killing up to two million people.

Only a handful of senior leaders have been jailed by the special court set up to deliver justice to the regime’s victims. But a string of recent cases had raised hopes of new conviction­s in a country where thousands of regime officials have never paid for their crimes.

Mid-ranking cadre Im Chaem, a former district official, was among four Khmer Rouge members facing prosecutio­n for charges including genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Prosecutor­s and survivors accused her of being a key player in overseeing regime policies that led to the deaths of tens of thousands.

But yesterday two judges — a Cambodian and a German national — threw out the prosecutio­n against her, ruling the court did not have the remit to pursue lower level cadres. “Im Chaem is not subject to the [tribunal’s] personal jurisdicti­on, which means she was neither a senior leader nor otherwise one of the most responsibl­e officials of the Khmer Rouge regime,” the court said in a statement.

The decision illustrate­s both t he limits of the court’s powers as well as the Cambodian government’s public unease over pursuing fresh trials. Strongman Prime Minister Hun Sen — himself a former Khmer Rouge cadre before he defected — has repeatedly hit out at the prospect of further prosecutio­ns, warning they could ignite civil unrest. Critics say Hun Sen is worried new cases might shine an uncomforta­ble spotlight on historical links between government members and the brutal communist regime.

Youk Chhang, director of the Documentat­ion Centre of Cambodia, which researches the Khmer Rouge atrocities, said he was dismayed by the decision. “It is difficult to swallow but we must accept the decision with the understand­ing that the judges have followed the rules and the evidence,” he said.

“In reality it shouldn’t just be those who commit crimes against millions of people who should be charged as a responsibl­e person,” he added, saying lower level members responsibl­e for fewer deaths should still be in the dock.

But some survivors welcomed the decision, weary that new trials would hinder the country’s ability to move on.

“I don’t want this Khmer Rouge trial to go too far. Otherwise we need to prosecute all Khmer Rouge members,” Chum Mey, one of a handful survivors from Khmer Rouge’s notorious Tuol Sleng prison, said.

Prosecutor­s and civil parties are allowed to appeal against the decision.

Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot died in 1998 without ever facing justice and the vast majority of regime cadres responsibl­e for one the twentieth century’s worst genocides remain free.

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