By Paul Chesser on 9.1.09 @ 11:17AM
One aspect about the
trials of top officials in the despotic Khmer Rouge regime
that I have not addressed so far are
the problems of corruption and cronyism with the U.N. and
Cambodians who put the court together.
One aspect about the
trials of top officials in the despotic Khmer Rouge regime
that I have not addressed so far are
the problems of corruption and cronyism with the U.N. and
Cambodians who put the court together. The reason for that is
there has been limited reporting on the issue, so I don't
understand it as well. But today in the Wall Street
Journal's Asia edition, Killing Fields survivor Sophal Ear
-- an assistant professor of national security affairs at the
U.S. Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California --
explains:
I can no longer in good conscience sit back in silence and
watch this theater of the absurd. As with so many other
donor-financed projects, the Tribunal—set up in 2006 to bring
justice to millions of Khmer Rouge victims—has been mired in an
endless stream of corruption and mismanagement
allegations.
The latest news came on August 11, when Uth Chhorn was
named to the court as an independent counselor. Mr. Chhorn is
Cambodia's auditor-general and heads the seven-year-old
National Audit Authority, which is supposed to audit the
government's activities. It has yet to make a single report
public. His appointment was sanctioned by the United Nations,
which manages the court alongside the Cambodian
government.
Sophal goes on to list several other problems, including the hire
of an Australian Marxist as head of the victims unit for the
court. And there are also the standard kickbacks and
run-of-the-mill corruption. Not surprising considering that many
in the Cambodian government were once in the Khmer Rouge
themselves.
Those awaiting trial are in their final years of life, and others
who are culpable will finish out their lives without fear of
punishment. After 30+ years since Pol Pot's reign, justice for
the victims must be left in God's hands. There's just no other
way around that.
topics:
genocide