Monday, 14 June 2010 15:02 James O'toole and May Titthara
KRT prosecutor holds meeting with group worried about being overlooked.
KHMER Rouge tribunal co-prosecutor Andrew Cayley addressed a group of Khmer
Krom residents of Pursat province on Sunday, intent on assuring them that
the suffering inflicted upon their community under Democratic Kampuchea will
not be overlooked by the court.
In speaking to a group of around 200 in Pursat's Romlech commune, Bakan
district, Cayley made the uncommon move of reaching out and explaining the
status of the court's investigation to survivors who have voiced concern
that attacks and alleged genocide against them have yet to be acknowledged.
"I know there is a feeling amongst some of your community that you haven't
been properly considered by the court," Cayley told the audience, speaking
in the dusty courtyard of the Wat Romlech pagoda.
"But I want to say to you today, sincerely, why I'm here is because I do
recognise what happened to you as a people."
"Khmer Krom" is a term for ethnic Khmer with roots in the Mekong Delta
region of Vietnam.
In January, the court's co-investigating judges ruled that genocide charges
and other offences would not be brought against the Khmer Rouge
leaders currently in detention based on the regime's treatment of the Khmer
Krom.
This decision, court officials emphasised at the time, was based not on a
historical judgment that the Khmer Krom were not victims of genocide and
other crimes, but on procedural factors: Such offences had not been properly
listed in evidentiary submissions by the prosecution.
As a result of this decision, a number of Khmer Krom civil party applicants
from Pursat who had been provisionally accepted in Case 002 were rejected,
as their claims were deemed to be outside the scope of the court's
investigation. An April ruling from the court's Pre-Trial Chamber reversed
the decision against several of these applicants, though only on the basis
that their claims could be connected to crimes in other provinces that had
already been established as part of the court's investigation.
"The rules are ridiculously complicated on the acceptance of civil parties,"
Cayley told one woman who approached him after the event to ask about the
process.
Assistant prosecutor Dale Lysak explained that although the deadline has
passed to add crimes against the Khmer Krom in Pursat to the list of alleged
offences being investigated in Case 002, evidence related to the group will
nonetheless be utilised in supporting the case for existing crimes under
investigation; namely, forced relocations from Eastern Cambodia and genocide
of the Vietnamese in Prey Veng, Svay Rieng and across the border in Vietnam.
"This area is very important to both of those, because we have to prove that
there was a policy of the Khmer Rouge with respect to the Vietnamese," Lysak
said.
Cayley said that the complexity and the volume of evidence in Case 002 would
stretch the trial for "at least two years". Were the court to properly
account for all crimes committed under Democratic Kampuchea, the trial
"would go on for 20 years", Cayley said, though he promised those assembled
that the Khmer Krom will not be forgotten during the proceedings.
"We will seek to have evidence from witnesses heard in that trial in respect
to crimes committed against the Khmer Krom, so that the judges and the world
can hear what happened to you as a people," he said.
Meas Chanthorn, a Khmer Krom man who was chief of Romlech commune at the
time the Khmer Rouge took power, called Cayley's visit "a historic day" for
his community.
"The co-prosecutor came to talk to villagers in this area to show that the
court is paying attention to the Khmer Krom case," Meas Chanthorn said. He
called Romlech a "genocide area", and urged the court to reconsider
investigating the charge in the context of the Khmer Krom.
In December, the court announced that the four Khmer Rouge leaders awaiting
a first round of indictments were facing genocide charges in connection with
the regime's treatment of Cham Muslims and Vietnamese.
Historians such as David Chandler have argued, however, that Khmer Rouge
killings do not fit within the legal definition of genocide: criminal acts
committed "with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national,
ethnical, racial or religious group".
A number of Khmer Krom who gathered in Romlech said they were singled out
for persecution under the Khmer Rouge because of their perceived connection
to the regime's enemies in Vietnam.
At a meeting organised in the commune last week by the Documentation Centre
of Cambodia (DC-Cam), 42-year-old Peou Sophy recalled an incident in which
cadres gathered local residents together and separated them into two groups:
"pure" Khmer and Khmer Krom, who were taken away from the village and
killed.
"They said they had to kill everyone with Khmer bodies and Vietnamese
heads," said Kim So, another Romlech resident.
John Ciorciari, an assistant professor at the University of Michigan and a
senior legal adviser with DC-Cam, said in an email last week that it was
unfortunate that the popular and legal uses of the term genocide "have
diverged so widely".
"Many people have come to use 'genocide' as a generic label for the most
serious mass crimes, which tends to suggest that other similarly heinous
crimes are lesser offenses," he said. Analysis of targeted attacks on the
Khmer Krom, however, could help explain the animus that drove Khmer Rouge
atrocities, Ciorciari added.
"One important fact for the court to shed light on is the motives for the
alleged Khmer Rouge genocide," he said. "Were victims targeted due to their
ethnicity, their perceived nationality, politics, or all three?"
It is this sort of explanation that 51-year-old Pao Sinoun, another Romlech
resident, said she hoped to get from the tribunal.
"We want to know the reason why Pol Pot killed the Khmer Krom - they did
this for what?" she said.
Copyright © 2010 The Phnom Penh Post. All Rights Reserved.
Photo by: James O'toole
Members of the Khmer Krom community review materials distributed by the
Documentation Centre of Cambodia concerning the Khmer Rouge tribunal's
second case.
Photo by: Courtesy of Rothany Srun/Access to Justice Asia
Khmer Krom residents of Pursat's Bakan district listen to a presentation
about the Khmer Rouge tribunal's second case on Sunday.
Pursat Province
Independently Searching for the Truth since 1997.
MEMORY & JUSTICE
“...a society cannot know itself if it does not have an accurate memory of its own history.”
Youk Chhang, Director
Documentation Center of Cambodia
66 Sihanouk Blvd.,
Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Thursday, June 24, 2010
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About Me
- Duong Dara
- Dara Duong was born in 1971 in Battambang province, Cambodia. His life changed forever at age four, when the Khmer Rouge took over the country in 1975. During the regime that controlled Cambodia from 1975-1979, Dara’s father, grandparents, uncle and aunt were executed, along with almost 3 million other Cambodians. Dara’s mother managed to keep him and his brothers and sisters together and survive the years of the Khmer Rouge regime. However, when the Vietnamese liberated Cambodia, she did not want to live under Communist rule. She fled with her family to a refugee camp on the Cambodian-Thai border, where they lived for more than ten years. Since arriving in the United States, Dara’s goal has been to educate people about the rich Cambodian culture that the Khmer Rouge tried to destroy and about the genocide, so that the world will not stand by and allow such atrocities to occur again. Toward that end, he has created the Cambodian Cultural Museum and Killing Fields Memorial, which began in his garage and is now in White Center, Washington. Dara’s story is one of survival against enormous odds, one of perseverance, one of courage and hope.
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