Judge: Cambodian genocide court faces funds crunch
By SOPHENG CHEANG – 9 hours ago  
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — Funding for some operations of Cambodia's  
genocide tribunal, already tarnished by corruption allegations, may dry up by  
the 
end of the month and cause local staff to walk out, a judge said Monday. 
The warning by Judge Kong Srim, president of the Supreme Court Chamber,  
raised the prospect of yet more disruption to the long-delayed U.N.-assisted  
tribunal, which is seeking justice for the estimated 1.7 million Cambodians who 
 
died during the brutal 1975-79 reign of the communist Khmer Rouge. 
Political and procedural disputes between Cambodia and the United Nations  
have delayed the tribunal's launch . It has been 13 years since Cambodia asked  
the U.N. to help establish the special court, which still has not heard any  
testimony, and many fear the defendants — already old and infirm — could die  
before they face justice. 
The judge's statement came as it was revealed that defense lawyers want to  
question the country's prime minister and former king, which could revive an  
uncomfortable debate about the roles each played during Cambodia's  holocaust. 
Kong Srim told reporters the tribunal would not have sufficient funds to pay  
Cambodian staff salaries this month. 
"It hardly seems reasonable for judicial officers and staff to be expected to 
 continue working without remuneration," Kong Srim said. He added, however, 
that  Cambodian and U.N. officials "are confident that this problem will 
shortly be  resolved." He did not explain how. 
The U.N. Development Program, which manages the funds contributed by  
international donors for the Cambodian side of the court, froze disbursements  
last 
July pending an investigation into allegations that the Cambodian personnel  wer
e forced to pay kickbacks to obtain their positions, 
Aid donors have warned they will reconsider their pledges if the allegations  
of corruption are not satisfactorily resolved. 
The allegations, which were originally leveled two years ago by the Open  
Society Justice Initiative, a New York-based watchdog group monitoring the  
tribunal, have been publicly denied by Cambodian and most U.N. officials. 
A report surfaced last week on the German legislature's Web site alleging  
that a top U.N. tribunal official had acknowledged the kickbacks and accused a  
senior Cambodian administrator of corruption. 
The head of public affairs for the tribunal refused to comment on the report, 
 which has been removed from the Web site. 
"I can't comment on a document I haven't seen about a meeting I was not at,"  
Helen Jarvis said Monday. 
Legal maneuvering ahead of the trials meanwhile continued. 
According to confidential documents obtained Monday, the  defense team for 
Nuon Chea, the main Khmer Rouge ideologist, is seeking court  permission to 
interview Prime Minister Hun Sen and former King Norodom  Sihanouk. 
The documents also request testimony from Senate President Chea Sim and  
Assembly President Heng Samrin. Both men, along with Hun Sen, were members of  
the 
Khmer Rouge but defected to Vietnam before the regime was ousted. 
"They are likely in possession of much relevant information to the pending  
judicial investigation," one of the documents said. All have denied any role in 
 atrocities. 
The defense team said that the 86-year-old former King  Sihanouk, who briefly 
served as a symbolic head of state after the regime took  power, had "rare 
access to the Khmer Rouge leadership, their strategies and  policies" and was 
"privy to a range of sensitive information." 
Son Arun, Nuon Chea's Cambodian attorney, confirmed the authenticity of the  
documents but said he had not personally filed the request. 
The tribunal's first trial, scheduled to begin March 30, is for 65-year-old  
Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, who headed the Khmer Rouge's largest  
torture center. Later trials will be held for Khieu Samphan, the group's former 
 
head of state; Ieng Sary, its foreign minister; and his wife Ieng Thirith, 
who  was minister for social affairs. 
Copyright © 2009 The Associated Press. All  rights reserved. 
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