Attempts at providing Khmer Rouge victims with long
overdue justice have faltered badly.
Over a period of several
decades, Cambodia experienced prolonged civil conflict that cast a paralyzing
shadow over its entire society, most notably during the rule of the Pol Pot-led
Khmer Rouge from 1975 to early 1979. That brutal regime is estimated to have
killed approximately 1.7 million Cambodian people through various systematic
means including torture, execution, enslavement, starvation and forced labor,
under its Maoist-oriented ideology – the so-called Super Great Leap Forward
policy – combined with a heavy dose of paranoia.
January 7, 1979 was for Cambodia a
milestone. That was the day the Vietnam-backed Kampuchean United Front for
National Salvation (KUFNS), under Heng Samrin, the current president of
National Assembly, captured the capital Phnom Penh, finally ousting the Khmer
Rouge several days later. However, for another 19 years, Khmer Rouge soldiers
waged guerilla warfare along the northern borders with Thailand, a conflict
that only ended with the death of Pol Pot (in 1998) and other cadres and the
Win-Win Policy of the Hun Sen government.
One year before peace was finally
restored to the kingdom, the Cambodian government had lodged a proposal for a
postwar transitional justice court with the Secretary-General of the United
Nations (UN), in which it sought assistance in setting up trial proceedings
against the “most responsible” Khmer Rouge leaders. Eventually, in 2006, the
so-called hybrid
Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) began work with
financial aid from more than 35 countries (with Japan to date accounting for almost 50 percent of all contributions to the
court) to prosecute Khmer Rouge senior leaders and those “most responsible” for
genocide, crimes against humanity, and other serious abuses committed during
the Khmer Rouge-reigned period.
Since the court began its work in
2006, with high expectations that it would give victims justice in postwar
Cambodia, more than 30,000 people, including survivors, have visited the court
to witness trial proceedings. Millions more have followed on television or
online.
In 2012, the court finally ended the
very time-consuming case 001, sentencing prison chief Kaing Guek Eav, known as
Duch, to life imprisonment for his “shocking and heinous” crimes. As of early
2011, four senior Khmer Rouge leaders – Noun Chea, the deputy secretary known
as “brother number two”; Khieu Samphan, head of state of Democratic Kampuchea;
Ieng Sary, deputy prime minister and minister of foreign affairs; Ieng Thirith,
minister of social affairs – had been indicted. They were thus the defendants in case 002,
in which they would answer for their actions during the alleged genocide.
But over the last eight years, the
ECCC has been widely criticized for the languid pace of its proceedings. It has
also faced many challenges, making it uncertain whether or not full
transitional justice will be possible, not only for those who were killed, but
also for those who lived, traumatized and bereft.
Challenges
Even prior to case 002, the court
was dealing with government displeasure over subsequent cases. For instance,
cases 003 and 004 have been deemed sensitive, involving former Khmer Rouge cadres
who currently hold high-ranking positions in the government. The court has also
been criticized for incompetence, ineffectiveness, corruption, lengthy trial
proceedings, and complicated political issues. The ECCC has consequently been
widely regarded as inadequate and unable to deliver the justice that would
satisfy either its donors or the victims.
Since early 1999, neither Cambodia’s
local civil society organizations (CSOs) nor its citizens have had much say in
the functioning of the
tribunal. Therefore, despite the ongoing proceedings, the CSOs and
Cambodian people, especially the victims, have been regarded as followers of
the trials, rather than as active participants. In short, the court’s
agenda has been dominated by the government and the ECCC.
Another hurdle for justice is the
practical inability for the court to prosecute any individuals who are
currently part of the government. Hun Sen clearly prioritizes national
security, social harmony, political stability, and steady economic growth, even
if that is at the expense of justice. And the Cambodian judiciary is hardly
independent, ultimately answering to the Supreme Council of Magistry, a
constitutional body with the power to take disciplinary actions against judges
and prosecutors.
Appetite within the ruling Cambodian
People’s Party (CPP) for prosecutions is weak. Prime Minister Hun Sen – a
former Khmer Rouge commander who defected in 1977 – together with other senior
government officials are opposed to further trials, repeatedly warning that
additional prosecutions would upset reconciliation with former Khmer Rouge
guerillas, and spark another civil war, although many independent Cambodian
political analysts see that as unlikely.
In fact, Hun Sen has been explicit
in saying that there would be no more than “four or five individuals” in cases 001
and 002 who would be charged, and that cases 003 and 004 “would not be
allowed.” Any investigations in the latter cases would “not happen on my
watch,” he said. “The UN
and the countries [including China] that supported Pol Pot to occupy Cambodia’s
seat at the UN from 1979 to 1991 should be tried first. They should be
sentenced more heavily than Pol Pot.”
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith
concurred:
“If they [international staff] want to go into case 003 and 004, they should
just pack their bags and leave [Cambodia].” And so only five former senior
Khmer Rouge leaders have to date appeared before the tribunals, while the low
and mid-level perpetrators and other top government leaders, including former
Khmer Rouge military and political cadres who would certainly seem to fit the description
of “most responsible” for the atrocities, are now in power and apparently safe
from prosecution.
Meanwhile, the Cambodian government
has been unwilling to cooperate with the ECCC in building a permanent center to
store its archives, as a resource for students, scholars, and other researchers
studying war crimes and other Khmer Rouge atrocities. The Japanese government
offered $2 million to build the center, with the Cambodian side to fund its
operations. More than four years later, however, although the center has long
been built, it still stands empty on a patch of land in Sen Sok district. CPP
spokesman, Phay Siphan, said he was “unaware” of any legacy project, while Neth
Pheaktra, a spokesman for the court, said there
was “no money available [from Cambodian side] to embark on the sustained legacy
project,” although the government has had no trouble funding dozens of
ceremonies, including the recent Angkor Sangkran celebration taking place on
Khmer’s traditional New Year in Siem Reap province recently.
The court has faced other troubles.
In a 2007 and 2008 kickback scandal,
“Cambodian staff complained that they were being forced to bribe their
superiors to keep their [lucrative] jobs.” Former UN human rights envoy to
Cambodia, Yash Gai, wrote in 2009
that “the weakness and corruption within the national legal system have
infected the ECCC, instead of the ECCC influencing the conduct of local judges
and prosecutors.” Similarly, according to
Kelli Muddell, a rapporteur from International Center for Transitional Justice
(ICTJ), the Cambodian people have lost faith in the public institutions and
have little trust that perpetrators would be held accountable before the ECCC,
given the corruption in the legal system.
The lengthy proceedings have been
costly, with spending estimated at more than $200 million. Much of the funding
for the court has come from international donors, who have been told that
“their money was purchasing not only a semblance of justice [for Cambodians],
but also lasting improvements in the Cambodian judiciary.” Given the advance
ages and health problems of the defendants in case 002, it is questionable
whether justice can truly be delivered.
Any change will require from all
parties – the Cambodian government, the ECCC itself, CSOs, and the Cambodian
people – a genuine willingness and commitment, with strict regulations to
tackle corruption scandals along with effective and rapid reform. For now,
though, a lack of stakeholder participation, a patronage-driven court
structure, systematic corruption, financial question, time-consuming trial
proceedings, and particularly a dubious commitment from the government look
likely to deny Khmer Rouge victims their justice.
Lak Chansok is a lecturer at
Institute of Foreign Languages’s Department of International Studies, Royal
University of Phnom Penh (RUPP), and has been a research fellow at Cambodian
Institute for Cooperation and Peace.
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