3 June, 2012
Melbourne Times Weekly
FOUR senior officials in the Cambodian government have been named as
persons of interest by an investigating judge involved in the Khmer
Rouge genocide tribunal, confidential documents obtained by The Age
reveal.
A United Nations investigating judge who quit
the court in early May, citing dysfunctional investigations into the
case, has named current Cambodian senate president Chea Sim, National
Assembly president Heng Samrin, the chief of the army and another
senator as persons of interest.
All were officials in
the brutal Khmer Rouge regime that ruled the country from 1975 until
1979 and were named by investigators into Case 003, which includes the
imprisonment and murder of thousands of people at the Tuol Sleng
prison.
The Cambodian government has blocked
prosecutions in the case against former Khmer Rouge air force commander
Sou Met and navy chief Meas Muth. Mr Meas Muth allegedly sent two
Australian yachtsmen to their death at Tuol Sleng.
In
the documents, the UN investigator said the four senior members of the
ruling Cambodia People's Party held positions of authority in the Khmer
Rouge regime and are key witnesses to atrocities committed against
ethnic Vietnamese civilians living on the border with Cambodia.
The
judge conducted field investigations into the conflict between Cambodia
and Vietnam in the 1970s and states ''new facts'' were discovered about
the war.
These ''new facts'' include ''a premeditated
attack on an undefended civilian Vietnamese village'' and a supposition
that other similar attacks occurred, along with evidence of repeated
incursions into Vietnamese territory.
The confidential
court document alleges the four are likely to have crucial information
due to their positions of authority and that Mr Heng Samrin was a
deputy commander of troops who committed attacks that the investigator
called ''brutal and illegal''.
Many senior Cambodian
government officials, including Prime Minister Hun Sen, served in the
Khmer Rouge regime during its deadly reign.
The government is particularly sensitive about links between its
officials and the regime and Mr Hun Sen has told the UN that any
further investigations beyond the current trial of three ageing leaders
are ''not allowed''.
Three of the four senior leaders
named in the confidential court document, including Mr Heng Samrin and
Mr Chea Sim, have previously been summonsed by investigators in the
case against Khmer Rouge ''Brother Number 2'' Nuon Chea and others. The
senior politicians refused to obey the summonses.
The UN
investigating judge who led the recent investigations said he stepped
down from the court because he had been ''completely blocked'' by
Cambodian staff at the tribunal.
His predecessor similarly quit the court in October last year citing government interference in the case.
The
information comes on the eve of nationwide elections in Cambodia and
during its year as chair of the Association of South East Asian
Nations.
The trials, officially called the Extraordinary
Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, are in chaos following bitter
internal disagreements, staff resignations and a budgeting crisis.
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