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| How about the 'denial' of atrocities committed on 30th March 1997 against innocent civilians shown above? |
By Dene-Hern Chen and Phorn Bopha - June 5, 2013
A new law called for last week by Prime Minister Hun Sen
to criminalize the denial of crimes during the Khmer Rouge regime does not
contain the word genocide.
Though the official definition of genocide refers to
attempts to destroy in whole or in part any ethnic, religious, national or
racial group, scholars here have said the word has never been properly
translated into Khmer and its usage in the Cambodian context applies to crimes
in general during the Pol Pot regime.
The Khmer Rouge war crimes tribunal has also not ruled on
whether genocide actually took place in Cambodia under the Pol Pot regime.
According to a copy of The Law on the Denial of Crimes
Committed During the Period of Democratic Kampuchea obtained Tuesday by The
Cambodia Daily, the legislation will punish individuals who “refuse to
acknowledge, diminish, deny, or challenge the existence of crimes or glorify
crimes committed during the Democratic Kampuchea in accordance with criminal
provisions.”
The public denial of crimes can take the form of a public
announcement, “written correspondence or paintings” and “audio-visual
communications for the public,” the draft law states, adding that punishments
for denying crimes will range from six months to two years in jail and be
levied with a fine ranging from 1 million riel to 4 million riel, or about $250
to $1,000.
Officials from the opposition Cambodia National Rescue
Party (CNRP) said Tuesday the draft law criminalizing the denial of Khmer Rouge
crimes should persecute government officials who interfere with proceedings at
the Khmer Rouge tribunal and prevent former “leaders” of the regime from taking
up positions as senior government officials.
Mr. Hun Sen called for the law to be drafted last week,
just days after the government released an audio recording of the CNRP’s acting
president, Kem Sokha, apparently accusing Vietnam of inventing the torture and
jailing of thousands of Cambodians at the Khmer Rouge’s Tuol Sleng prison in
Phnom Penh.
The law, drafted and hastily approved by the National
Assembly in just four days, will be debated on Friday and if passed, could see
people imprisoned for up to two years for denying crimes that took place during
the Pol Pot era.
In an emailed statement Tuesday, CNRP president Sam
Rainsy said the opposition party would propose changes to the law when it is
debated later this week.
“The CNRP will propose an amendment to also punish those
who use and abuse their political position to interfere in judicial proceedings
with the effect of obstructing justice and preventing the due prosecution of
former Khmer Rouge leaders responsible for crimes against humanity,” Mr. Rainsy
said.
Though the government has denied having any influence
over the Khmer Rouge tribunal, Mr. Hun Sen has previously stated on several
occasions that any additional trials beyond Case 002 would not be allowed to
move forward as wider investigations could reignite a civil war.
CNRP spokesman Yim Sovann said Tuesday that the
opposition would also push for the inclusion of an article that prevents former
Khmer Rouge leaders from being allowed into senior positions inside the
government.
“We do not want the Khmer Rouge regime to happen again in
Cambodia and most of the former Khmer Rouge have their hands dirtied with blood
and they should not become the leader of the country,” Mr. Sovann said.
“We want to ban Khmer Rouge leaders from taking high
positions in the government,” he continued, declining to elaborate on the
definition of a Khmer Rouge leader or say whether the law could be used to
target any current members of the government.
“I do not want to tell any names and I don’t want to
target any individual, but this should be in the law,” Mr. Sovann said.
Mr. Hun Sen is often credited by his supporters for
having developed the so-called win-win policy in the 1990s by dismantling the
Khmer Rouge through integrating them into the government. There are many former
Khmer Rouge members in the government including Mr. Hun Sen himself, National
Assembly President Heng Samrin and Senate President Chea Sim, all of whom
defected from the regime when it was in its latter stages.
CPP lawmaker Chheang Vun, who helped to draft the new
law, said that since national election candidates for the CNRP are no longer
members of the Human Rights Party and SRP—which merged to form the CNRP last
year—their arguments would be dismissed during Friday’s parliamentary session.
“Whatever they suggest, I will not take it into
consideration since they are no longer the members of the National Assembly,”
Mr. Vun said. “We won’t think about it since it would cause us a headache.”
Sok Sam Oeun, executive director of the Cambodian
Defenders Project, a legal aid NGO, welcomed the CNRP’s proposed article
criminalizing political influence over the Khmer Rouge tribunal.
“To punish the ones who interfere in the [Extraordinary
Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia] is necessary. But it should not only be for
the ECCC, but for all crimes and all courts,” Mr. Sam Oeun said.
However, he said an article forbidding “former Khmer
Rouge leaders” from taking high-ranking government positions was too vague and
could fuel discrimination.
“What is a leader and what is a high-ranking official in
government?” Mr. Sam Oeun asked. “It looks like discriminating [against] former
Khmer Rouge because not all Khmer Rouge leaders were involved with the killing
so we cannot presume like this.”
-The Cambodia Daily.

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