Prosecutors Says Releasing Khmer Rouge Torturer Could Spark Public Outrage
- From: Chim <ChimS1@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 20 Nov 2007 23:45:15 -0800 (PST)
Cambodia: Prosecutors Says Releasing Khmer Rouge Torturer Could Spark
Public Outrage
News 2007-11-21 11:59
PHNOM PENH, CAMBODIA: Prosecutors urged a U.N.-backed genocide
tribunal Wednesday (21 Nov) to deny bail to the former head of the
Khmer Rouge's largest torture center, saying his release could pose a
threat to public order in Cambodia.
Kaing Guek Eav _ alias Duch _ is charged with committing crimes
against humanity as the commandant of the regime's notorious Tuol
Sleng prison. He is one of five people held in connection with the
communist regime's brutal 1970s rule of Cambodia.
Duch has been in custody since 1999. He became the first defendant to
appear before the long-awaited tribunal when his bail hearing opened
Tuesday (20 Nov). His defense lawyers argued that Duch's human rights
were being violated by his long detention and he should be freed on
bail ahead of trials expected to start next year.
Prosecutors called Duch a "flight risk" and urged the court Wednesday
to keep him behind bars _ for his own safety and in the interest of
public order.
If Duch were released he could be harmed both by "accomplices wishing
to silence him and by the relatives of victims seeking revenge,"
Robert Petit, a prosecutor from Canada, told the court.
Petit added that "the entire public order (could) be jeopardized" if
the aging Khmer Rouge official were freed.
The Khmer Rouge regime was blamed for the deaths of an estimated 1.7
million people during its reign from 1975-79. Many have said they
feared the surviving Khmer Rouge leaders might die before being
brought to justice, as did the movement's notorious leader, Pol Pot,
in 1998.
Duch, now 66, was the commandant of the Tuol Sleng prison in Phnom
Penh, also known as S-21. As many as 16,000 men, women and children
were tortured there before being executed outside the capital at the
site known as "the killing fields." Only 14 people are thought to have
survived.
Graying and frail, Duch took the witness stand for a second day
Wednesday dressed in the same white polo shirt he wore a day earlier.
At Tuesday's hearing he was relaxed and polite. He stood when asked to
tell the court his name and pressed his palms together in a sign of
respect for the judges.
His lawyers, countryman Kar Savuth and Francois Roux of France, argued
that he should be released because his human rights had been violated
during the eight years he already spent in a Cambodian military prison
on war crimes charges before being transferred to the tribunal's
custody in July.
Duch was a former schoolteacher with leftist sympathies and then
deputy principal of a provincial college before joining the Khmer
Rouge in 1970.
After the Khmer Rouge was toppled, Duch disappeared for almost two
decades, living under different names in a former Khmer Rouge
stronghold in northwestern Cambodia, where missionaries converted him
to Christianity. His chance discovery by a Western photojournalist led
to his arrest in May 1999.
Duch has said he was simply following orders from the top to save his
own life. "I was under other people's command, and I would have died
if I disobeyed it," he told a government interrogator after his
arrest.
Former Khmer Rouge head of state Khieu Samphan, 76, was arrested
Monday and charged with crimes against humanity and war crimes.
Last week, authorities arrested Ieng Sary, the Khmer Rouge's ex-
foreign minister, and his wife Ieng Thirith, its social affairs
minister. Both were charged with crimes against humanity; Ieng Sary
was also charged with war crimes.
Former Khmer Rouge ideologist Nuon Chea was detained in September on
charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity. (By SOPHENG CHEANG/
AP)
.
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