Monday, 02 April 2012
Kristin Lynch and Cheang Sokha
The Phnom Penh Post
Kristin Lynch and Cheang Sokha
The Phnom Penh Post
Government officials refused to respond to the UN statement yesterday. Government spokesman Phay Siphan said “I have no business in this matter”, and referred all inquiries to Keo Remy, deputy president of the Press and Quick Reaction Unit, who hung up on a reporter and did not answer repeated phone calls after.
Citing “serious” concerns with the work of the Khmer Rouge tribunal, the
United Nations said on Friday that it is in the process of selecting
two international co-investigating judges to replace the ones who have
resigned from the court, and urged the Cambodian government to offer
them its “full cooperation”.
“Recent events at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of
Cambodia … have raised serious concerns about the ECCC judicial process
in relation to Cases 003 and 004,” the statement, issued by the
spokesperson for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, reads.
Less than two weeks ago, reserve international Co-Investigating Judge
Laurent Kasper-Ansermet resigned amid what he said was persistent
stonewalling by the Cambodian court staff of his efforts to investigate
government-opposed cases 003 and 004.
And in October, Kasper-Ansermet’s predecessor, Siegfried Blunk, resigned citing government interference.
“The circumstances that have given rise to these two resignations remain worrying,” Ban’s statement says.
Although it does not provide a timeline for the selection of the new
judges, the statement instructs the Cambodian government to “extend its
full cooperation to the new judges”, adding that they should be
“promptly appointed” by the Supreme Council of the Magistracy.
The statement also takes the Council to task for its failure to appoint Kasper-Ansermet.
“The Cambodian Supreme Council of the Magistracy did not appoint
Judge Kasper-Ansermet as the international Co-Investigating Judge as it
was required to do by the UN/Cambodia agreement,” the statement reads.
The statement also defends Kasper-Ansermet’s “full legal
authority” to conduct investigations into cases 003 and 004. That
authority had been consistently invalidated by the Swiss judge’s
Cambodian counterpart, You Bunleng.
Reached yesterday, You Bunleng said he had no further comment about
Kasper-Ansermet’s authority, and that he would “wait to work with”
whomever the UN selects to replace Kasper-Ansermet.
“The decision of approval of the new judge … is not my decision, it’s the decision of the Supreme Council of the Magistracy (sic!),” he added.
Government officials refused to respond to the UN
statement yesterday. Government spokesman Phay Siphan said “I have no
business in this matter”, and referred all inquiries to Keo Remy, deputy
president of the Press and Quick Reaction Unit, who hung up on a
reporter and did not answer repeated phone calls after.
Information Minister Khieu Kanharith also hung up on a reporter and refused to answer subsequent calls.
UN Special Expert to the Khmer Rouge tribunal David Scheffer did not respond to questions prior to press time.
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