Senior Khmer Rouge cadre jailed for mass murder and torture 

Hong Sa Vath (L), 47, whose father was killed in the S-21 Tuol Sleng prison 
during the Khmer Rouge regime, reacts after hearing the verdict for senior 
Khmer Rouge commander Kaing Guek Eav outside the ECCC on the outskirts of Phnom 
Penh, July 26 2010. A U.N.-backed tribunal sentenced Kaing, also known as 
"Duch", to 35 years in prison on Monday in its first verdict on the "Killing 
Fields" revolution blamed for 1.7 million deaths in Cambodia three decades ago. 
REUTERS/Chor Sokunthea


Mon Jul 26, 2010
By Martin Petty and Prak Chan Thul

  "We hoped this tribunal would strike hard at impunity but if you can kill 
14,000 people and serve only 19 years -- 11 hours per life taken -- what is 
that? It's a joke" - Theary Seng
  Many former Khmer Rouge members are now part of Cambodia's civil service and 
occupy top positions in provincial and central government and experts say they 
are keen to curtail the court's progress and limit the scope of future 
investigations.

  Long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen is himself a former Khmer Rouge foot 
soldier who says he defected to eventual conquerors Vietnam. He has warned of 
another civil war if the court expands its probes into the horrors of Pol Pot's 
"year zero" revolution.

  Finance Minister Keat Chhon has also admitted his involvement as an 
interpreter for late Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, while Foreign Minister Hor 
Namhong has been accused of having Khmer Rouge connections and heading a 
detention center. He denies the claims. 
PHNOM PENH (Reuters) - The first Khmer Rouge commander to face a U.N.-backed 
tribunal was sentenced to 35 years in prison on Monday for overseeing 14,000 
deaths in the 1970s, but he'll serve about half that, angering many Cambodians.

Kaing Guek Eav, a 67-year-old former prison chief known as Duch, received less 
than the maximum 40 years sought by the prosecution for his role in the 
ultra-communist "Killing Fields" regime blamed for 1.7 million deaths from 1975 
to 1979.

Duch was found guilty of murder, torture, rape, crimes against humanity and 
other charges as chief of Tuol Sleng prison, a converted school known as S-21 
that symbolized the horrors of a regime that wiped out nearly a quarter of 
Cambodia's population.

He betrayed no emotion as a judge read the verdict, which cut his sentence to 
19 years for time already served. He could be released even earlier on parole 
if authorities believe has been rehabilitated, according to the court.

"We hoped this tribunal would strike hard at impunity but if you can kill 
14,000 people and serve only 19 years -- 11 hours per life taken -- what is 
that? It's a joke," said Theary Seng, a Cambodian who is now a U.S. citizen and 
lost her father at S-21.

"My gut feeling is this has made the situation far worse for Cambodia," she 
said. "It has taken a lot of faith out of the system and raised concerns of 
political interference."

Duch had told the court he had no choice but to carry out orders and "kill or 
be killed." Prosecutors insisted he was "ideologically of the same mind" as the 
Khmer Rouge's top leaders and did nothing to stop rampant torture at his prison.

Some Cambodians wept after hearing the verdict, expressing outrage at the joint 
U.N.-Cambodian court, which has spent $78.4 million of foreign donations over 
five years to bring the first of five indicted Khmer Rouge officials to trial.

"There is no justice. I wanted life imprisonment for Duch," said Hong Sovath, 
47, sobbing in the courtroom. Her father, a diplomat, was killed in the prison. 
Khan Mony, whose aunt was executed after passing through S-21, said she was 
devastated.

Thousands huddled around televisions in cafes and homes to watch live 
broadcasts of the verdict.

COMPLEX SENTENCE

The court said it decided against life in prison for several reasons, including 
Duch's expressions of remorse, cooperation with the court, his "potential for 
rehabilitation" and the coercive environment of life under the Khmer Rouge.

"The chamber has decided there are significant mitigating factors that mandate 
a finite term imprisonment rather than life imprisonment," the tribunal's 
president said in a statement. Cambodia does not have capital punishment.

Now a born-again Christian, Duch had expressed "excruciating remorse" for the 
S-21 victims, most of them tortured and forced to confess to spying and other 
crimes before they were bludgeoned to death at the "Killing Fields" execution 
sites during the agrarian revolution, which ended with a 1979 invasion by 
Vietnam.

Foreign investors see the Khmer Rouge trials as a gauge to whether rule of law 
is taking root in one of Asia's fastest-growing frontier markets. Justice, 
however, could be elusive as controversy surrounds other cadres awaiting trial.

The cases of former President Khieu Samphan, "Brother Number Two" Nuon Chea, 
ex-Foreign Minister Ieng Sary and his wife, Ieng Thirith are highly complex and 
politicized. Many fear they may never go to trial, or they might die before 
seeing a courtroom.

Standing in the way of justice, analysts say, is not just the excessive 
bureaucracy and a drawn-out legal process, but a powerful single-party 
government that has never fully backed the tribunal and has historical ties to 
the Khmer Rouge.

Many former Khmer Rouge members are now part of Cambodia's civil service and 
occupy top positions in provincial and central government and experts say they 
are keen to curtail the court's progress and limit the scope of future 
investigations.

Long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen is himself a former Khmer Rouge foot 
soldier who says he defected to eventual conquerors Vietnam. He has warned of 
another civil war if the court expands its probes into the horrors of Pol Pot's 
"year zero" revolution.

Finance Minister Keat Chhon has also admitted his involvement as an interpreter 
for late Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, while Foreign Minister Hor Namhong has 
been accused of having Khmer Rouge connections and heading a detention center. 
He denies the claims.

(Writing by Jason Szep. Editing by Miral Fahmy)

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