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Cambodia's Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal

Khmer Rouge Victims - Decades after the fall of the regime, Duch has been sentenced
Khmer Rouge Victims - Decades after the fall of the regime, Duch has been sentenced

Toul Sleng

Questions and answers about Cambodia's Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal.

A war crimes tribunal delivered its verdict today in the trial of Pol Pot's chief torturer, the first for a top Khmer Rouge cadre 31 years after the fall of a regime blamed for 1.7m deaths in Cambodia.

Kaing Guek Eav, known as Duch, was found guilty of murder, torture, rape, inhumane acts, crimes against humanity and other charges for running a prison that symbolised the horrors of the ultra-communist regime in the 1970s.

Why has the process taken so long?

The UN and the international community set up a tribunal more than a decade ago, but the government sought to retain control of the court and the plan languished for years.

The UN gave the go-ahead for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC), as the tribunal is known, in 2005.

The trial, originally expected to cost around $20m a year over three years, was delayed by bail hearings, appeals and pre-trial machinations.

The ECCC has spent $78.4m of foreign donations so far and was granted a further $92.3m last year for 2010-2011.

The whole process is extremely bureaucratic and painstakingly slow. Khmer Rouge victims have the right to a lawyer, to call witnesses and to ask questions and some lawyers have tied up proceedings with repetitive or irrelevant questions.

The Documentation Centre of Cambodia, which collects evidence of Khmer Rouge crimes and estimates about 5m survivors of the regime are still alive, accuses the tribunal of failing to invest enough time and resources.

The tribunal hopes to streamline victim participation for its next four cases.

How politicised are the cases?

Many Cambodians have expressed frustration over the slow pace of bringing Khmer Rouge leaders to justice and fear the complex nature and politicisation of the cases will mean many will never go to trial.

Many former Khmer Rouge members have been reintegrated into Cambodian society and the civil service and top levels of provincial and national government.

Allegations of political interference in the court have been made and Cambodia's government has been in no hurry to speed up the hearings.

The UN has appointed a special expert it hopes can address issues of political meddling and corruption.

Long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen, himself a former Khmer Rouge guerrilla who says he defected to the Khmer Rouge's eventual conqueror, Vietnam, has warned of a potential civil war if the court indicts more suspects.

Finance Minister Keat Chhon has also admitted his Khmer Rouge past and Foreign Minister Hor Namhong has long been accused of involvement, which he denies.

Who has been charged so far?

Duch is among five ageing and infirm senior cadres facing various charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity.

They include ex-president Khieu Samphan, former Foreign Minister Ieng Sary and his wife Ieng Thirith, a former Shakespeare scholar, and 'Brother Number Two' Nuon Chea, Pol Pot's right-hand man.

All four received additional charges of genocide in December, prompting concerns among experts that the court could become even more bogged down.

'Brother Number One' Pol Pot, the French-educated architect of the ultra-Maoist movement, died in 1998 and there are fears his surviving allies will die of old age before they face trial.

How does the joint tribunal work?

Conducted under a modified form of Cambodia's French-based judicial system, Cambodian and foreign judges and prosecutors work together and try to reach unanimous decisions.

If they cannot all agree, a decision then requires a 'super-majority'.

The Trial Chamber of three Cambodian and two foreign judges requires four to agree on a verdict.

The seven-judge Supreme Court Chamber - comprising four Cambodians and three foreigners handling appeals - must have five judges in agreement.

Sentences can range from a minimum five years to a maximum of life in prison. There is no death penalty in Cambodia.

The court can also seize money or property acquired unlawfully.

Will anyone else be investigated?

Cambodia's prosecutor opposed a bid by her foreign counterpart to go after six more suspects, citing the need for national reconciliation.

Critics saw a political move to stop the court from digging too deep and avoid implicating senior figures in Cambodia's business and political circles.

More broadly, some critics say the role of the US and China in supporting Pol Pot's regime should also be probed.

The court says it can only try individuals for crimes committed in Cambodia between 17 April, 1975 and 6 January, 1979, and cannot try countries or organisations.

By Martin Petty, Reuters