ARRESTS HIGHLIGHT NEED FOR
REFORM AT KHMER ROUGE COURT
~ New Report Urges Donors to Lead
Improvement of ECCC ~
This week's arrest of two high level Khmer Rouge leaders,
Ieng Sary and Ieng Thirith, marks a significant step forward for Cambodia's war
crimes tribunal, the Open Society Justice Initiative said today.
But in a report released today,
the Justice Initiative urges the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of
Cambodia (ECCC) to take immediate action to improve the court's functioning and
calls upon donor states and the United Nations to take more assertive action to
ensure that needed reform takes place.
"Additional donor funds
alone will not contribute to the success of the court," said Robert O.
Varenik, the Justice Initiative's acting executive director. "For the
court to succeed in its historic task, international donors and the United
Nations must take immediate, concrete steps to address shortcomings in the
court's administration and leadership."
Ieng Sary and Ieng Thirith, the
first husband and wife to be charged by an international court, were arrested
at their Phnom Penh home on November 12 and taken into the ECCC's custody. Ieng
Sary was deputy prime minister and foreign minister of Democratic Kampuchea
during the Khmer Rouge rule between 1975 and 1979. He is charged with crimes
against humanity and war crimes. His wife, Ieng Thirith, was minister of social
affairs and education and is charged with crimes against humanity.
These arrests come in advance of
the ECCC's appeal to donor states for an estimated $45 million in additional
funding to ensure the trials can continue through 2010. They underscore the
significant strides the court is making and why it should be supported by the
international community. But in its new report, Critical Issues Surrounding the
Fundraising Drive of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia,
available here, the Justice Initiative urges states to condition future funding
on demonstrated results addressing administrative, transparency, and leadership
problems at the court.
According to the Justice
Initiative's latest report, the ECCC needs to:
• Effectively address corruption
allegations, minimize translation backlogs, institute best practices in human
resource management, and prepare the courtroom and other physical structures
for trial;
• Increase transparency through
the more frequent release of public information about the court's operations;
• Develop an active management
oversight group to ensure all donor funds are administered effectively and
efficiently; and
• Work with a UN-appointed
special advisor to the court, to assist with administrative and management
reforms and monitor their effectiveness.
"These arrests highlight the urgent need for the ECCC to address crucial issues affecting the court's administrative efficiency and its ability to meet international fair trial standards," said Varenik. "International donors who are supporting the court should link future donations to the court's efforts to address these challenges urgently and effectively."