Four to face trial for Cambodian genocide

Cambodia's UN-backed genocide tribunal has formally indicted the four top surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge regime blamed for 1.7 million deaths in the 1970s, paving the way for the panel's long-awaited second trial next year.

The frail, elderly defendants, who have been in detention since 2007, deny any guilt for their roles in the radical communist rule during which about a quarter of Cambodia's population was either executed or died from starvation or overwork.

The trial, due to start by mid-2011, will bring to the stand Nuon Chea, 84, the group's ideologist; former head of state Khieu Samphan, 79; former Foreign Minister Ieng Sary, and his wife Ieng Thirith, former minister for social affairs, both in their 80s.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Each faces four charges: crimes against humanity, genocide, war crimes and a combined charge of murder, torture and religious persecution, joint investigating Judge You Bunleng told a news conference yesterday. They will be tried together.

Several other major Khmer Rouge figures have already died, including supreme leader Pol Pot in 1998, adding pressure on the tribunal to expedite proceedings against the four indicted yesterday.

Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan have high blood pressure and have suffered strokes. Ieng Sary has a heart problem and Ieng Thirith suffers from chronic mental and physical illnesses, according to defence lawyers.

The devastation to Cambodia caused by the group's radical policies during its 1975-79 rule is beyond doubt. Towns and cities were depopulated in a disastrous agrarian experiment that shunned technology and persecuted the nation's educated people. Even many within the regime were ruthlessly purged.

But the opaque nature of the regime's workings may make it harder to establish complicity of the accused.

"Given the magnitude of the crimes committed" under the Khmer Rouge, the case will focus on "a specific selection of sites and criminal activities," the tribunal said in a statement.

Though the tribunal - more than ten years and $100 million in the making - has been credited with helping the traumatised nation speak out publicly for the first time about atrocities committed three decades ago, it has been criticised as well.

The government insisted Cambodians be on the panel of judges, opening the door for possible interference by current leaders - including the prime minister - who were once low-level members of the Khmer Rouge. It also sought to limit the number of suspects being tried - to avoid, some say, implicating its own ranks.