Published on Monday, March 30, 2009 by Inter Press Service
Khmer Rouge Trials May Expose US,
by Marwaan Macan-Markarq
It ranges from the period of Khmer Rouge history that the court will consider, a geographic limit to account for only atrocities committed by Cambodian nationals, and who among the surviving Khmer Rouge leadership can be hauled before the tribunal of foreign and local jurists.
Tourists visit the Choeung Ek Genocidal Centre built on the site of
Already, Noam Chomsky, linguist and trenchant critic of
On Monday, Kaing Khek Eav, or ‘Duch,' took the stand at the ECCC to mark the beginning of the tribunal, which comes 30 years after the extremist Maoist group was driven out of power by Vietnamese troops.
Duch was the chief jailor of Tuol Sleng, a former high school in the Cambodian capital, which became the largest detention and torture centre of the Khmer Rouge.
Between 12,380 to 14,000 men, women and children were tortured and then killed under Duch's watch. Many victims were accused of having links with the
In all, the Khmer Rouge was responsible for the deaths of 1.7 million people, nearly a quarter of the country's population at that time, as they sought, between April 1975 and June 1979, to create an agrarian utopia.
But, as Chomsky asserts in the ‘Phnom Penh Post', an English-language daily, the Khmer Rouge's brutality against fellow Cambodia citizens did not emerge out of a political vacuum.
Chomsky points a finger at leading figures of the U.S. political establishment like Henry Kissinger, a member of the late president Richard Nixon's administration, who should also be held accountable for creating the conditions that paved the way for the rise the Khmer Rouge.
‘'It (the trial) shouldn't be limited to the Cambodians,'' says Chomsky in an interview that appeared on the weekend. ‘'An international trial that doesn't take into account Henry Kissinger or other authors of the American bombings and the support of the KR (Khmer Rouge) after they were kicked out of the country, that's just a farce.''
‘'The records say that the US wanted to ‘use anything that flies against anything that moves' (during the bombing of Cambodia), which led to five times the bombing that was reported before, greater that all bombings in all theatres of World War Two, which helped create the Khmer Rouge,'' he asserted.
During the Nixon years, from 1969 to 1973, an estimated 500,000 bombs were dropped, resulting in the deaths of close to 600,000 Cambodian men, women and children.
But the relatives of these victims will not have their day in tribunals such as the ECCC.
It stems from the limit of ‘'territorial jurisdiction'' and ‘'temporal jurisdiction'' written into the language of the laws to establish the special tribunal.
Washington, in fact, had a role in a placing such limits on how far across geography and time the war crimes tribunal could reach when a law to deal with the genocide in Cambodia was being shaped in the early 1990s.
‘'It is the policy of the United States to support efforts to bring to justice members of the Khmer Rouge for their crimes against humanity committed in Cambodia between April 17, 1975 and January 7, 1979,'' Washington declared at the time as it threw its weight behind the effort to investigate a grisly period of Cambodia's past.
China, however, may have more to worry, given its direct role in assisting the Khmer Rouge during the period the ECCC is examining. Beijing reportedly pumped in a billion U.S. dollars to help the Khmer Rouge, in addition to providing other material and diplomatic support.
The Asian giant wanted to draw
The current Cambodian government of Prime Minister Hun Sen, in fact, has grown nervous about the prospect of
‘'The government would like to keep
Hun Sen, himself, hopes to benefit from an initial decision by the ECCC to prosecute Duch and four other surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge. Such a limit will ensure that he and other senior members of his government who held roles of commanders or ranked as officials in the Khmer Rouge regime will not have to account for their role in the genocide.
‘'Many more people need to face the court to really deliver justice to the millions of victims of these horrific crimes,'' says
Copyright © 2009 IPS-Inter Press Service
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"The master class has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles. The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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