*CAMBODIA: The 'Ruling Elite' faces charges of crimes against humanity*

Please read the article below from *Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth, *a retired from
the University of Guam, where he taught political science for 13 years.
He currently lives in the United States. He can be reached at peangmeth
@gmail.com.

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Best Regards,

*Khmer Forum*
*A place for sharing community events and public news.*

   On Tuesday, October 14, 2014 6:10 AM, Gaffar Peang-Meth <
[email protected]> wrote:


*FOR PUBLICATION *AHRC-ETC-021-2014
October 14, 2014
*An article by Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth published by the Asian Human Rights
Commission*
 *CAMBODIA: The 'Ruling Elite' faces charges of crimes against humanity*

Excitement abounds these few days among Cambodians, particularly
expatriates, who hope to see Prime Minister Hun Sen brought to justice
before the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague. On October 7, a
long-awaited criminal complaint was filed at the ICC's Office of the
Prosecutoron behalf of Cambodian victims by international lawyer Richard J.
Rogers of the London-based law firm Global Diligence LLP, charging
Cambodia's "Ruling Elite" with crimes against humanity.
The filing did make headlines. For some Cambodians, Premier Hun Sen is a
step closer to being on trial. After all, individuals indicted (formally
accused) in the ICC have included Sudanese President Omar al-Basir, Kenyan
President Uhuru Kenyatta, Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi, Ivorian President
Laurent Gbagbo. The Cambodian leader would be next, some Cambodians dream.
Not any time soon.

*Criminal complaint*
The ICC was established by the Rome Statute, adopted in July 1998 and
entered into force in July 2002.
Cambodia, which ratified the Rome Statute (or ICC Statute) in March 2002,
gives the ICC jurisdiction to prosecute individuals for international
crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes committed on
her territory subsequent to July 2002.
Richard Rogers, who hastwenty years of experience in international
humanitarian law, human rights, and legal system development in
post-conflict states, was Principal Defender of the United Nations' Khmer
Rouge Tribunal (Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia – ECCC),
among other distinguished positions held.
In the filing, Rogers alleges mass human rights violations against
Cambodian civilians by senior members of Cambodia's royal government,
senior members of State security forces, and of government-connected
business leaders (collectively referred the "Ruling Elite"), from July 2002
to the present, with the "twin-objectives of self-enrichment and
maintaining power at all costs" in a "widespread or systematic attack"
against the civilian population, "pursuant to a State policy."
"There is a reasonable basis to believe that members of the Ruling Elite
have committed, aided and abetted, ordered and/or incited the crimes of
forcible transfer, murder, illegal imprisonment, other inhumane acts, and
persecution, since Cambodia signed the Rome Statute," Rogers posited.

*Victims*
The filing allegesthe Ruling Elite's primary source of self-enrichment has
been land grabbing on a massive scale: Some 770,000 people, six per cent of
Cambodia's population, have been evicted since 2000 – in Phnom Penh alone,
10 per cent of the capital city's population, or more than 145,000 people
have been forcibly displaced. In the first three months of 2014, some
20,000 people became new victims of land grabbing,and at least 4,000,000
hectares (or 10 million acres) of land have been confiscated, 22 per cent
of Cambodia's land area.
The complaint alleges the Ruling Elite have relied on the "(Shadow) State
apparatus to maintain power at all costs" – the State's "legal and security
systems" used to quell not just Cambodians who challenge the land grabbing,
but "civil society leaders, monks, journalists, lawyers, environmental
activists, trade unionists, civilian protesters, and opposition
politicians" who are seen as threats to the Ruling Elite's power.

*Alleged perpetrators*
The filingdoes not single out anyindividualto be investigated. It alleges a
"well-organized and recurring pattern of perpetration" and "complicity
between the RGC (Royal Government of Cambodia), State Security Forces,
local authorities, private businesses, and judiciary"; that "the most
prevalent crime – forcible transfer – was implemented by one or a
combination of the National Police, Royal Gendarmerie, and the Royal
Cambodian Armed Forces." It recommends the ICC examine the role of specific
organs directly involved in forcible transfers and that those ultimately
responsible should be investigated.

*Legal hurdles*
The ICC's Office of the Prosecutor isled by prominent Gambian lawyer Ms.
FatouBensouda, a recipient of the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
International Jurists Award in 2009 and the World Peace Through Law Award
in 2011. She has beenthe ICC Chief Prosecutor since June 2012.
Anyone can file a complaint. It is said that Ms. Bensoula's office's
assessment of the filing may take between three to six months before
takinga decision to initiate a two-to-three year-long "preliminary
investigation" that would include sending an ICC investigation team to
Cambodia. Only when the ICC is satisfied with a "reasonable basis to
believe" that crimes against humanity may have been committed by Cambodia's
Ruling Elitewould a formal investigation begin and a trial perhaps ensue.
Rogers argued thatthe Office of the Prosecutor is obliged to examine the
information provided and allegations made as it evaluates if the
"admissibility criteria," i.e., the complementarity and gravity, have been
met.
Note that the ICCwas created to complement existing national judicial
systems. It may exercise its jurisdiction when national courts are
unwilling or unable to prosecute criminals, such as in the case of
Cambodia. Rogers contendsthere have been no known genuine domestic
proceedings to investigate or prosecute criminals in CAMBODIA: "This
relentless, omnipresent, State-sponsored criminality reaches the level of
gravity contemplated by the ICC Statute" – Article 17(1)(d).
Of course the progress of the complaint may prompt the regime to initiate
its own proceedings to prosecute scapegoats thereby blocking an ICC
investigation.

*Interests of Justice*
The filing points out,"no exceptional circumstances" should dissuade the
ICCfrom undertaking a preliminary examination of events described in the
complaint.
To the contrary, should the ICC fail to act, "hundreds of thousands more
Cambodians will likely fall victim to the land grabbing," and "Cambodia may
descend into larger-scale violence, as societal stability is progressively
undermined by the crimes and their consequences."
The filing requests the ICC to initiate an investigation pursuant to
Article 53 of the ICC Statute, that there is "a reasonable basis to
believe" a crime has been committed and the ICC has jurisdiction; that the
case is admissible under ICC Statute's Article 17; and considering the
gravity of the crime and the interests of victims, no substantial reasons
exist to believe an investigation would not serve the interests of justice.

*More than one way to skin a cat*
The London-based law firm, Global Diligence, and the Paris-based*Federation
internationale des droits de l'homme* (FIDH) or International Federation
for Human Rights comprised of 178 human rights organizations throughout the
world, posited that, the "threat of a preliminary examination" that would
lead to an investigation would yield a "significant deterrent effect" on
committing further such crimes in Cambodia, and "may force" the Cambodian
government to "re-consider its approach to land grabbing and suppression of
dissidents." Engaging the ICC "could spur genuine national judicial
proceedings" since the ICC's jurisdiction is "complementary" and not
superior to national courts.
On October 9, the London-based political international federation for
liberal political parties, Liberal International, came out in strong
support of an ICC investigation of the criminal complaint against
Cambodia's Ruling Elite. "People everywhere in the world, who suffer from
government oppression, need to be reassured that no one is above the law
and that international institutions like the ICC exist in order to protect
them from harm."
The criminal complaint against Cambodia's "Ruling Elite" is one more
powerful tool in Cambodian democrats' fight for their people's freedom,
justice, and human rights as 20,000 new Cambodian victims of land grabbing
are facing authorities today in the country.
……………..
 *The AHRC is not responsible for the views shared in this article, which
do not necessarily reflect its own.*

*About the Author:*

 Dr. Gaffar Peang-Meth is retired from the University of Guam, where he
taught political science for 13 years. He currently lives in the United
States. He can be reached at [email protected].



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