Cambodia (BBN)-Two top Khmer Rouge leaders have been jailed for life after being convicted by Cambodia’s UN-backed tribunal of crimes against humanity.
Nuon Chea served as regime leader Pol Pot’s deputy and Khieu Samphan was the Maoist regime’s head of state, reports BBC.
They are the first top-level leaders to be held accountable for its crimes.
Up to two million people are thought to have died under the Khmer Rouge from 1975-79 – of starvation and overwork or executed as enemies of the state.
Judge Nil Nonn said the men were guilty of “extermination encompassing murder, political persecution, and other inhumane acts comprising forced transfer, enforced disappearances and attacks against human dignity”.
The pair can appeal against the verdict but will remain in detention while this takes place.
‘ANGER REMAINS’
The regime sought to create an agrarian society: cities were emptied and their residents forced to work on rural co-operatives. Many were worked to death while others starved as the economy imploded.
During four violent years, the Khmer Rouge also killed all those it perceived as enemies – intellectuals, minorities, former officials – and their families.
Nuon Chea was seen an ideological driving force within the regime. Khieu Samphan was its public face.
Prosecutors argued that they formulated policy and were complicit in its brutal execution.
After three years of hearings, and a summary of charges that ran for 90 minutes, the presiding judge delivered sentencing against the two elderly defendants surprisingly briskly. Both men were guilty of crimes against humanity, both were sentenced to life in prison.
Khieu Samphan, the urbane, international face of the Khmer Rouge, was found not to have had authority over those carrying out the worst atrocities documented by the tribunal.
Nuon Chea was found guilty on all charges. Both in the end received the same sentence, somewhat academic given that both men are in their eighties, and in poor health.
They had insisted on their innocence, dismissing the accusations against them as propaganda and lies. Their defence, though, was dismissed by the tribunal as lacking credibility.
Nuon Chea, unable to stand for the sentence, showed little emotion, but Khieu Samphan appeared visibly angry. They had told their families not to come and hear the verdicts.
It was in many ways an anticlimactic end to the only official accounting for the horrors of the Khmer Rouge years. The true value of this unique “hybrid” tribunal, blending international and Cambodian judicial authority, is still difficult to assess.
Over three years the court has heard from some of those who lost entire families to the regime.
“My anger remains in my heart,” Suon Mom, 75, whose husband and four children starved to death, told the Associated Press news agency.
“I still remember the day I left Phnom Penh, walking along the road without having any food or water to drink.”
Both men denied the charges against them. In closing statements last year, they expressed remorse but said they had neither ordered deaths nor been aware of them.
The pair also face a separate genocide trial. The case against them was split to accelerate proceedings, because of their age.
Two other former Khmer Rouge ministers were to be tried with them.
Ieng Sary, the former foreign minister, died in March 2013. His wife Ieng Thirith, who served as the regime’s social affairs minister, has been ruled unfit to stand trial.
Before this, former prison chief Duch was the only senior Khmer Rouge figure held to account, but he was not part of the regime’s central leadership.
He was jailed in 2010 for running the Tuol Sleng prison, where thousands of people defined as enemies of the regime were tortured and killed.
BBN/AS-07Aug14-10:30am (BST)