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International-UN-NGOs
Pol Pot's right-hand man declares innocence as genocide trial looms
2007-07-20
The most senior surviving leader of Cambodia's infamous Khmer Rouge regime, accused of genocidal policies that led to the deaths of 1.7 million of his countrymen, declared his innocence yesterday as he prepared to face trial.
"Those were other bloody-handed henchpersons, yer Judgeship!"
He spoke a day after prosecutors in the tribunal examining the deaths gave a list of five former Khmer Rouge leaders they believe should be tried, along with the evidence to back the charges. Judges will decide whether to proceed. "They did not specify the names of the people, but I know I am included," Nuon Chea said at his home in north-west Cambodia near the Thai border. Now an ailing 82-year-old, Nuon Chea - the former "Brother Number Two" in the Khmer Rouge, right-hand man to the group's notorious leader, the late Pol Pot - has consistently denied any responsibility for the mass brutality.

"I was president of the National Assembly and had nothing to do with the operation of the government," he said. "Sometimes I didn't know what they were doing because I was in the assembly. I will go to the court and don't care if people believe me or not." He was the chief ideologue for the communist Khmer Rouge when it held power in the late 1970s. Its ideology was largely responsible for the genocide. The prosecutors said the acts allegedly carried out by the five unnamed Khmer Rouge leaders "constitute crimes against humanity, genocide, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, homicide, torture and religious persecution".

Nuon Chea said: "I had no intention to kill my people. The tribunal should not rely solely on the law but on intention."
"My heart, pure! My love for the children, unbounded! You could look it up!"
Former Khmer Rouge leaders have usually denied knowledge of large-scale killings, even though mass graves have been found around the country. They sometimes blame neighbouring Vietnam, Cambodia's traditional enemy. After bloody border raids by the Khmer Rouge on Vietnamese villages in 1978, Hanoi invaded Cambodia to oust the Khmer Rouge and install a puppet government, garrisoning the country for about a decade.

"There are two kinds of war, one to protect your country, one where you invade another country," said Nuon Chea, in apparent reference to battles with Vietnam. "I was trying to protect my country."

He said there were more police than usual outside his house since Wednesday's announcement of the legal moves and he had to be careful what he said. "It happened 30 years ago and it's very difficult to remember. Some of them [tribunal members] never experienced that. They weren't there, how could they know what was going on?"

Marcel Lemonde, of France, one of the tribunal's co-investigating judges, declined to discuss when the suspects' names would be made public and when they might be arrested, though he indicated it could be soon.

Ros Saroeun, a 53-year-old taxi driver, reflecting the opinions of many Cambodians, said: "I am delighted they will be brought to trial. They caused the death of more than 30 of my relatives."

The late Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot died in 1998 and his former military chief, Ta Mok, died in 2006. In addition to Nuon Chea, former foreign minister Ieng Sary and former head of state Khieu Samphan live freely in Cambodia but are in declining health. Kaing Khek Iev, also known as Duch, who headed the Khmer Rouge's S-21 torture centre, is the only former senior official in government custody. His lawyer said he had been told his client was soon to be transferred from a military prison to the detention facility at the tribunal's headquarters, an indirect confirmation that he was one of the five suspects named by prosecutors. He said Duch "welcomed the news and wished for his trial to take place as quickly as possible".

The maximum penalty for crimes falling within the tribunal's jurisdiction is life imprisonment.

Cambodia sought UN help in 1997 to set up a tribunal, but it took years of talks before the agreement to hold trials.
Posted by:Seafarious

#4  Cretins like this simply cannot die slowly or painfully enough.
Posted by: Zenster   2007-07-20 22:05  

#3  According to Kaing Khek Iev (alias Deuch,former governor of Tuol Sleng (S-21) as mentioned above), his immediate boss was Nuon Chea & the executions of 'important comrades' were approved by the aforementioned. IIRC Deuch claimed that it was Nuon Chea who ordered the S-21 posse 'not to bother about confessions, just smash them' after the crushing of So Phim's Eastern Zone in 1978. Deuch was apparently horrified by the order - "killing people without torturing them first - that's obscene!" Even though the KR hierarchy seem to define shamelessness, I'm slightly surprised that this scumbag (a member of the CPK's Standing Committee no less) has the balls to claim that he had 'had nothing to do with the operation of the government'. Oh well, I suppose he has nothing to lose...
Posted by: Glusort Guelph8163   2007-07-20 17:46  

#2  He is going to federal "pound me in the a** Prison" and then will be shot.... if he lives.
Posted by: newc   2007-07-20 11:38  

#1  yer honor, I was the right-hand man! I didn't know what the left-hand man was doing.
Posted by: AT   2007-07-20 00:53  

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