VOANews.com

Voice of America - Khmer

 
News in 45 Languages
Former Rebel Leader ‘Won’t Go’ to Tribunal


10 September 2009

With further indictments at the UN-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal moving forward for five leaders of the regime, a likely suspect, Im Chaem, told VOA Khmer she will not go to the court if summoned.

Im Chaem, now 65, is well known to villagers as a Khmer Rouge district chief in Banteay Meanchey province. She is now a deputy commune chief in Anglong Veng district, the last of the 1990s Khmer Rouge strongholds.

“I absolutely will not go, because the charge is unacceptable, and even if I’m called to court, I will not go,” she told VOA Khmer by phone. Asked why she would refuse to cooperate with the court, she said she had “no faults” reason enough to go.

She said she was “relieved” to hear Prime Minister Hun Sen object to further indictments, following promises of amnesty to cadre in the waning days of the regime, which ultimately fought a losing battle with government forces led by today’s premier.

If new investigations are opened ‘just to prosecute without reason,’ it will unsettle former Khmer Rouge cadre, she said.

‘’If you challenge more, it makes everybody feel no peace,’’ Im Chaem told VOA Khmer.

In on-site interviews with VOA Khmer several months ago, villagers in Proneth Preah district said Im Chaem was feared in the region and had been in charge when a number of crimes were committed under the Khmer Rouge.

Im Chaem has denied any wrongdoing, saying people who were killed or went missing there did so before her arrival as chief in 1978.

However, Khmer Rouge scholars say she could be among a tier of the regime’s leaders to face indictments. The Pre-Trial Chamber have now allowed five indictment submissions from the prosecutors office to move to the investigating judges, despite warnings from Hun Sen and other Cambodian officials more arrests could lead to instability.

Knut Rosandhaug, a UN coordinator for the tribunal, told VOA Khmer in an e-mail “it is a clearly established international standard that courts do not seek approval or advice on their work from the executive branch.”

“I expect that the ECCC will comply with this internationally recognized standard and make its decisions independently,” he said, referring to the tribunal by its official initials, for the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.

The tribunal is currently trying its first Khmer Rouge suspect, the former prison chief known as Duch, and is holding four more: Nuon Chea, Khieu Samphan, Ieng Sary, andIeng Thirith. 


Download Sok Khemara report aired 09 September 2009 Part I (2.11 MB)
Download  (MP3)
Listen to This Report Sok Khemara report aired 09 September 2009 Part I (2.11 MB)
Listen (MP3)
Download Sk Khemara report aired 10 September 2009 Part II (1.37 MB)
Download  (MP3)
Listen to This Report Sk Khemara report aired 10 September 2009 Part II (1.37 MB)
Listen (MP3)
E-mail This Article E-mail this article
Print This Article Print Version
  Cambodia News
Anti-Corruption Law Moves Ahead  Audio Clip Available

  More Stories
Public Has Little Say in Resource Management  Audio Clip Available
Assembly Must Play Stronger Role in Resources: Experts  Audio Clip Available
‘Agangamsor’ a Hit in Maryland Performance  Audio Clip Available
A Cambodian Boy’s Rise to Ballet, on Film  Audio Clip Available
Halloween Fundraiser To Benefit Students  Audio Clip Available
World Heritage Status a Great Benefit: Expert  Audio Clip Available
Victims Want Justice as Final Arguments Begin for Case 001  Audio Clip Available
Nobel Laureate Inspires Cambodian Students  Audio Clip Available
No Farmland Lost to Vietnamese: Ruling Party  Audio Clip Available
Film Star Jackie Chan on Arts, Culture, Peace  Audio Clip Available
Khmer Rouge Tribunal Asked to Define Victim Reparation  Audio Clip Available
Seven villagers charged in Kampong Thom land dispute  Audio Clip Available
First Miss Landmine Cambodia Crowned  Audio Clip Available
First Cambodian American to run for US Congress  Audio Clip Available
Fire Destroys over 200 Houses  Audio Clip Available
Seven Arrested in A Chronic Kampong Thom Land Dispute  Audio Clip Available
Opposition Blames Hun Sen for Border Encroachment  Audio Clip Available
Massage Offers Blind Cambodians Way Out of Poverty  Video clip available
Land Dispute in Kampong Thom Leads to Violence and Arrests  Audio Clip Available
Silencing Opposition,  A Threat to Cambodia Democracy: US Congressman  Audio Clip Available
Villagers Oppose Coastal Backfill Plan and Leaflets are Seized  Audio Clip Available
Counterfeit Drugs Trouble Asia, officials say at Phnom Penh conference  Audio Clip Available
Opposition leader seeks international support on immunity  Audio Clip Available
Cambodia caught between Thai internal politics, official  Audio Clip Available
Accused Thai spy received visitors  Audio Clip Available
Visit to detained Thai man allowed, officials  Audio Clip Available
Biased investigation is merely a joke: judge  Audio Clip Available
Miss Cambodia Landmine 2009 to boost self esteem  Audio Clip Available
US asked to take tough action on Cambodian human rights  Audio Clip Available
Two senior Khmer Rouge leaders to stay another year in detention  Audio Clip Available
No Cambodian-Thai dispute raised at a meeting with Obama  Audio Clip Available
UN, Cambodian Officials Meet Over Tribunal  Audio Clip Available