The Phnom Penh Post

ECCC rules not to bring An to court over genocide

- Niem Chheng

THE Pre-Trial Chamber of the Extraordin­ary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) on Thursday ruled that it did not have enough votes to bring Case 004/02 against Ao An to a trial. The decision came after a threeday pre-trial hearing held in June.

“The pre-trial chamber declares that it has not assembled an affirmativ­e vote of at least four judges for a decision based on common reasoning on the merits,” the ECCC said.

In 2016, the internatio­nal coinvestig­ating judge charged An with genocide and crimes against humanity.

He was also charged with premeditat­ed homicide committed from around late 1976 until at least January 1979 under the previous Criminal Code while he served as Deputy Secretary of the Central Zone, a member of the Central Zone Committee and Secretary of Sector 41 in the Central Zone of the Khmer Rouge regime.

An went to trial in August 2018, with the national co-investigat­ive judge dismissing all charges against him.

On Thursday, the national coinvestig­ating judge argued that An was not senior enough of a Khmer Rouge official to fall under the scope of the court.

“The national co-investigat­ing judge found that Ao An did not fall within the personal jurisdicti­on of the ECCC as either senior leader or one of those most responsibl­e, in light of his role and participat­ion in criminal acts and the Communist Party of Kampuchea [CPK], the general characteri­stics of the Democratic Kampuchea

[DK] regime and its policies, and the genuine intent of t he negotiator­s of t he Agreement to establish the ECCC,” said t he closing order for dismissal.

The national co-investigat­ing judge also found that An c ontro l l e d a dministra t i v e work and general management in Sector 41, but there was no evidence confirming that he was responsibl­e for any military, security or economic tasks at the Zone level or that he participat­ed in making CPK policies.

The closing order dismissal said the national co-investigat­ing judge found that An’s participat­ion in the Khmer Rouge was “non-autonomous, inactive, non-creative and indirect in comparison to Duch’s direct and highly active role in the commission of crimes”.

In July 2010, Tuol Sleng prison director Duch was the first senior Khmer Rouge figure found guilty by the ECCC for crimes committed under the regime.

“While legal justice can be fulfilled, ‘history’ proves to be a subject that can never be about the past. Cambodia is benefiting so much from the ECCC,” said Youk Chhang, the director of the Documentat­ion Centre of Cambodia (DCCam).

 ?? DC-CAM ?? The Pre-Trial Chamber of the Extraordin­ary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) on Thursday ruled that it did not have enough votes to bring Case 004/02 against Ao An to a trial.
DC-CAM The Pre-Trial Chamber of the Extraordin­ary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) on Thursday ruled that it did not have enough votes to bring Case 004/02 against Ao An to a trial.

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