Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Thursday, 09 December 2010 
"So donors must “make it clear to the government of Cambodia that they are not going to be able to tolerate ongoing interference in decision-making at the court.”
A  US-based monitoring group for the Khmer Rouge tribunal says the  UN-backed court is suffering under the weak positions of international  donors in the face of government opposition to further indictments.
The international prosecution  for the hybrid court has said more indictments of Khmer Rouge cadre  should be pursued, something Prime Minister Hun Sen and Cambodian judges  object to on grounds of national stability.
The tribunal has successfully  completed the trial for torture chief Duch and is at work on its second  case, to try four leaders in custody for atrocity crimes.
With two cases—003 and 004—now  in the office of the investigating judges, it remains a question how  much farther it will go. And a number of senior government officials  within the ruling Cambodian People's Party have failed to respond to  court summonses for testimony.
In a December report, OSJI says donors can push harder for wider indictments and great participation by leaders.
Donor countries “can make it  clear to the government that they are not going to continue to support  the court unless the government allows Cambodian staff to move ahead  fully with the investigation into Case 003 and unless witnesses that are  summoned by the court are allowed to appear,” said Heather Ryan, who  monitors the court for OSJI in Phnom Penh.
OSJI says statements by Hun Sen and a lack of cooperation from officials under him are tantamount to tampering at the tribunal.
So donors must “make it clear to  the government of Cambodia that they are not going to be able to  tolerate ongoing interference in decision-making at the court,” Ryan  said.
Hun Sen also warned UN  Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who visited Cambodia in October, that he  did not want to see further indictments at the court. In response, Ban  said the issues were a matter for the court and beyond the purview of  his office.
OSJI called that response  inadequate. But a diplomat based in New York told VOA Khmer that donors  have been briefed about the court's activities and the meeting between  Ban and Hun Sen. Asked whether the donors will push for more cases, the  diplomat said: “It's up to the court, and the donors can't interfere.  Judicial independence should be respected.”
Meanwhile, donors are still  wrestling with the question of how to fund the completion of the court,  which could leave unfinished cases in the hands of the national courts, a  move tribunal observers say could undermine international standards of  justice.
The New York diplomat said negotiations over more indictments and the court's completion strategy are ongoing






0 comments:
Post a Comment