Nov 25, 2014
Cambodia's Khmer Rouge
tribunal announced Tuesday it will suspend trial sessions until
January, bowing to pressure from lawyers of one of the two defendants
charged with genocide.
A tribunal statement said hearings would resume Jan. 9, deferring to threats of a boycott by lawyers of Khieu Samphan,
who said it was unfair to proceed while they are still working on
appealing the verdict in his first trial. The tribunal met briefly
Monday before suspending proceedings. That hearing itself, at which it
had planned to begin witness testimony, had already been delayed several
weeks.
Khieu Samphan, the 1970s regime's head of state, and Nuon Chea, right-hand man to the communist group's late leader, Pol Pot,
received life sentences in August after being found guilty of crimes
against humanity. Some 1.7 million people are estimated to have died
from starvation, disease and execution due to the group's extremist
policies.
The tribunal said it was impractical to replace Khieu Samphan's lawyers
without causing even more delays, even though it had found that his
defense team was obstructing proceedings.
It did not, however, ruling out appointing additional lawyers or taking
actions with legal professional organizations regarding the counsels'
conduct.
The U.N.-backed tribunal split the cases into two trials for fear that
Khieu Samphan, 83, and Nuon Chea, 88, could die before complete
proceedings against them could be finished. In addition to genocide
against minorities, the second trial will address for the first time
accusations of rape and forced marriages.
Nuon Chea's team had also sought a delay on separate grounds.
After years of legal and political wrangling, the Khmer Rouge tribunal
was established in 2006, but has been plagued by corruption,
mismanagement, and financial woes. The hybrid structure of the court, in
which U.N.-appointed international judges and lawyers share duties with
Cambodian counterparts, has led to allegations of political
interference and repeated deadlocks.
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