No redemption: the failing Khmer Rouge trial.
Yang, Allen
Three decades after planning the genocide of 1.7 million
Cambodians, the remaining leaders of the infamous Khmer Rouge regime in
Cambodia are finally being-brought to justice. Between July and November
2007, the five most prominent living former leaders of the radical
communist group were arrested in anticipation of their appearance in an
official tribunal, which is receiving backing from the United Nations
and the international community. However, with the Cambodian government
seemingly uneager to bring these ex-leaders to justice, the trials may
only stir up bitter memories and expose the Cambodian government's
flaws.
The Khmer Rouge came to power in 1975, after the previous
government's involvement in the Vietnam War led to its collapse.
The group immediately initiated radical changes, such as forcing city
dwellers to march miles to agricultural collectives, eliminating money,
disestablishing schools, and arresting intellectuals. Thousands of
Cambodians were held in prisons and tortured until they confessed to
crimes they did not commit. Pol Pot, the charismatic but secretive
leader of the Khmer Rouge, oversaw the slaughter of at least 1.7 million
people in the span of less than four years. This genocide was largely
unknown in the Western hemisphere until many years later.
The Vietnamese occupation of Phnom Penh in 1978 shook the Khmer
Rouge from power, beginning the regime's long period of decline. By
1989, the Vietnamese withdrew, and the United Nations stepped in to help
establish a new government. Despite the clear majority of votes in the
elections of 1993 for the royalist political faction, the present Prime
Minister Hun Sen ultimately came to power as the leader of a coalition
government. There was little influence from the Khmer Rouge in any of
these developments, as the group was largely dissolved by the mid-1990s.
It finally surrendered completely in 1999.
After the formation of the new government, most of the former
leaders of the Khmer Rouge were either granted official pardons or left
alone. Pol Pot, the mastermind and "brother number one" of the
Khmer Rouge, was put under a lifetime house arrest imposed by the
remaining fragments of the Khmer Rouge after an internal power struggle.
He died in 1998 of natural causes. Currently on trial are prominent
leaders such as Khmer Rouge second-in-command Nuon Chea, "brother
number three" Ieng Sary, his wife the social affairs minister Ieng
Thirith, and infamous prison leader Kang Kek Ieu, also known as Duch.
All are over 60 years old; some are nearing 80. Most were only arrested
in late 2007.
In 1997, the United States and United Nations began calling for the
trial of Khmer Rouge leaders after Prime Minister Sen welcomed two such
leaders in their return to Cambodia. Although Sen initially opposed such
an international tribunal, claiming it would only cause more division in
Cambodia, he eventually requested aid from the United Nations to set up
official tribunals for the leaders of the Khmer Rouge when international
pressures did not cease. Sen also insisted that other crimes against
humanity in Cambodia be investigated, especially the US'
carpet-bombing in the country during the Vietnam War. Although these
additional requests were rejected by the United Nations, Sen's
approval launched the process to set up the tribunal.
In 2000, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan stopped the establishment
negotiations, accusing the Cambodian government of not keeping up its
end of the negotiations. Talks began again in 2003 after renewed
promises from the Cambodian government, and the trials are now set to
begin in 2008. The tribunal, with its budget of US$56.3 billion, will
officially try the leaders for genocide and crimes against humanity.
Five judges will sit on the tribunal, three of whom will be Cambodian.
The cases will be decided with a majority vote, and the maximum
punishment for a conviction will be life in prison.
The conditions of the tribunal, however, could be the very sources
of its failure. Cambodia was originally reluctant to have international
judges sit on the tribunal, and it only agreed to having two after some
urging from the United Nations. With the majority of the judges being
Cambodian, there is a large possibility of bias towards those being
tried; many leaders in the current Cambodian government have past ties
to the regime. The government may even find supporters of the Khmer
Rouge to sit as judges. In addition, the international community was
unsuccessful in persuading the government to hold the trials outside of
Cambodia. During negotiations, the Cambodian Bar Association wanted to
charge exorbitant fees for any foreign lawyers who wished to represent a
client on the tribunal. Although this fee was eventually reduced
significantly, all of these events showcase Cambodia's
unwillingness to let international forces have a strong influence in the
proceedings.
Another unfortunate reality of the tribunal is that without the
UN's help, Cambodia lacks the money and skilled labor to handle the
expensive proceedings. The country was already underdeveloped before the
Vietnam era, and the continual wars and political struggles have done
little to improve its economy or living conditions in rural areas. At
least 70 percent of workers are still involved in agriculture, and 40
percent of the population lives below the poverty line. To compound
these worries, the country faces a demographic crisis resulting from the
genocide: over 50 percent of the population is under 21 and the
education system is not sufficiently preparing this generation for
future economic progress. The only bright spots of the Cambodian economy
are the growing number of tourists per year and the new discovery of oil
deposits in the country's territories.
Already the recipient of large international donations, Cambodia
could be willing to hold the trials in the hopes of receiving funding
from the United Nations. Indeed, the government was criticized in
October 2007 for hiring unqualified workers and overpaying them. There
are also allegations of the government using donated money
inefficiently, and in some cases government officials have been
suspected of taking money for personal use. The tribunal is already
running over its US$56.3 billion budget, and the country has asked for
more donations from other countries. The trials could be an economic
boon for Cambodia in more than one way: not only do they bring in money
for their day-to-day operations, they also attract the benevolence of
the international community by acting as a sign of increased attention
to human rights.
In addition to these structural flaws, the trial may be occurring
too late to bring the former leaders to any sense of true justice. It
has been 30 years since the official end of the Khmer Rouge regime. When
compared to the Nuremburg Trials, which started within a year of the end
of World War II; the tribunal for Rwanda, which was formed the same year
as the genocide in the country; and the Yugoslavian trials, which
started six years after the end of the Bosnian genocide of 1992-1996,
the Khmer Rouge tribunal is coming incredibly late. Those that will be
brought to trial are already elderly. The tribunal's only clear-cut
outcome, it seems, will be to rouse the bitter memories of those who are
old enough to remember suffering under the regime.
Ultimately, the Khmer Rouge trials, while at one point necessary to
bring the organizers of a horrific genocide to justice, may turn out to
be a case of too little, too late. The trials will come and go, but they
will do little to ease Cambodia's existing problems or to allow the
country to finally escape the suffering of its past.
staff writer
ALLEN YANG