PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — An internal debate over the targets of
Cambodia's Khmer Rouge genocide tribunal turned into a public dispute
Wednesday, when judges ordered a prosecutor to retract his call for
further investigations.
The fight at the United Nations-backed
tribunal added to mounting fears that prosecutions are being quashed for
political reasons.
The two investigating judges, from Germany and
Cambodia, on Wednesday ordered British co-prosecutor Andrew Cayley to
withdraw a statement he issued last week citing specific crimes that
deserved further investigation. They said the statement violated
tribunal rules and must be retracted within three days, without
specifying the punishment for failure to comply.
Critics fear the
judges ended their investigations prematurely into what the court calls
Case 003, bowing to Prime Minister Hun Sen's demands that the trial's
focus be kept narrowly on the one suspect convicted last year and four
set for trial next month.
About 1.7 million people died of
starvation, exhaustion, lack of medical care or torture during the
communist Khmer Rouge's reign of terror in the 1970s.
Cayley's
statement was issued just a few days after co-investigating judges
Siegfried Blunk and You Bunleng announced that all investigations into
Case 003 had been concluded.
The tribunal follows French-style
law, which mandates that investigating judges collect evidence that is
then forwarded to prosecutors who decide whether to go to trial. There
are parallel sets of Cambodian and international judges and prosecutors
working together.
Legal observers and victims advocates complained
that the investigations into the new cases were cut short without even
the most basic effort being made, such as summoning the suspects for
questioning.
"They've basically done a desk study, and it appears
that that desk study was a sham," Brad Adams, Asia director for Human
Rights Watch, said in an interview last week in Bangkok. "It was a
political decision, it appears, to shut down this case."
Cayley's
statement called the investigation inadequate and detailed previously
unreleased information about the yet-to-be-prosecuted cases, including
information about mass graves and other alleged crime sites.
The
judges' order said that Cayley violated court confidentiality rules and
ordered him to publicly retract his statement within three days.
Cayley
was traveling and could not be reached for comment Wednesday. But his
deputy, Bill Smith, told The Associated Press that Cayley had not
decided yet whether to appeal the judges' order. He said Cayley was
justified in releasing the information under court rules.
Source: Associate Press
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