The Morning Call (Sunday)

Little justice in Khmer Rouge trials

Only 3 are convicted in the horrific deaths of 1.7M Cambodians

- By Seth Mydans

For more than 15 years, a court in a military camp on the outskirts of Phnom Penh worked to bring some measure of justice for the horrors that killed nearly one-quarter of Cambodia’s population in the late 1970s. It spent more than $330 million. In the end, it convicted just three people.

On Thursday, the Extraordin­ary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia — a United Nations-backed tribunal charged with prosecutin­g the crimes of the Khmer Rouge regime — held its final hearing. It rejected an appeal by Khieu Samphan, 91, the fanatical communist movement’s last surviving leader, upholding his conviction and life sentence for genocide, as well as his conviction­s for other crimes.

As the ruling was read, Khieu Samphan, his face partially obscured by large black headphones and a white face mask, sank lower into his seat.

During its four years in power, from 1975 to 1979, the Khmer Rouge caused the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million Cambodians from execution, torture, starvation and untreated disease as it sought to abolish modernity and create an agrarian utopia.

For many Cambodians who survived one of the worst mass killings of a bloody century, the fact that the tribunal delivered so few conviction­s, so many years after the atrocities were committed, made it seem a hollow exercise. Many of the Khmer Rouge’s senior figures — including its notorious top leader, Pol Pot — were long dead by the time the court was created.

“The Khmer Rouge leaders have died,” said Yun Bin, 67, who was beaten and left for dead in a ditch by the regime’s cadres. “Some victims in my village have already died.”

Khieu Samphan, urbane and multilingu­al, was the nominal leader and presentabl­e face of the Khmer Rouge and a member of its tightknit inner circle. During the tribunal’s proceeding­s, Khieu Samphan insisted that he was “not aware of the heinous acts committed by other leaders.”

Delayed by war and politics, the tribunal, jointly administer­ed by the United Nations and the Cambodian government, was not formally establishe­d until 2006, more than a quarter-century after a Vietnamese invasion drove the Khmer Rouge from power.

The group continued for years afterward as a guerrilla insurgency.

The tribunal’s awkward pairing of two judicial systems, and two often-conflictin­g views of its purpose, led to delays and sometimes acrimoniou­s disputes. Besides coming under criticism for its high cost and slow pace, the tribunal was marred by corruption and succumbed to pressure from Prime Minister Hun Sen, himself a former Khmer Rouge cadre, to limit the scope of the prosecutio­ns.

As much as three-quarters of Cambodia’s current population is under 30, and many survivors of the Khmer Rouge have said their children and grandchild­ren had dismissed their stories about the time as exaggerate­d and impossible.

The Khmer Rouge evacuated entire cities, including sick people in hospitals, marching hundreds of thousands into the countrysid­e on foot; created a nationwide system of forced labor camps, torture houses and execution grounds, known as killing fields; banned religion and commerce; tore families apart; and executed people who were seen as part of the old order, in some cases simply because they wore glasses.

Only in the past decade have Cambodian schools begun to teach students about the Khmer Rouge period, spurred in part by the existence of the tribunal.

Youk Chhang, a survivor who heads the Documentat­ion Center of Cambodia, which provided much of the material used by the tribunal, said it was up to the younger generation to learn from the past and work toward “a more optimistic future.”

The tribunal’s main achievemen­t was the creation, through meticulous research and trial testimony, of “an empirical record that can never be revised or challenged,” Peter Maguire, an expert on war crimes and the author of “Facing Death in Cambodia,” said in an email.

One of its major shortcomin­gs, he said, was the small number of people it prosecuted, partly because Hun Sen, the prime minister, feared the trials could run out of control and cause political problems for his government.

Only five people were put on trial, two of whom died before facing judgment. Some of the most important potential defendants died before charges could be brought, chief among them Pol Pot, who died in 1998.

Khieu Samphan unsuccessf­ully appealed an earlier conviction, in 2014, for murder and other crimes. He received a life sentence in that case, which would have remained in effect no matter the outcome of his hearing Thursday.

His co-defendant, Nuon Chea, often referred to as Brother Number Two to Pol Pot, was also found guilty in both trials and sentenced to life in prison. He died at 93, less than a year after the two men were convicted of genocide in 2018.

The third person convicted by the tribunal was Kaing Guek Eav, known as Duch, the commander of the central Khmer Rouge prison in Phnom Penh. Thousands of people were tortured there before being brought to a killing field on the city’s outskirts and executed. He was sentenced in 2012 to life in prison for crimes against humanity and died in 2020, at 77.

 ?? NHET SOK HENG/EXTRAORDIN­ARY CHAMBERS IN THE COURTS OF CAMBODIA ?? Khieu Samphan, now 91, appears at a hearing Thursday in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.
NHET SOK HENG/EXTRAORDIN­ARY CHAMBERS IN THE COURTS OF CAMBODIA Khieu Samphan, now 91, appears at a hearing Thursday in Phnom Penh, Cambodia.

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