ICC case may ‘have a chance’
Analysis
While the government yesterday brushed off attempts by the opposition
Cambodia National Rescue Party to bring a case against it to the
International Criminal Court as “a joke”, international legal experts
said that, legally speaking, the odds might not be so long after all.
Cambodia is under the ICC’s jurisdiction as a signatory to the Rome
Statute, and Richard Rogers, the lead investigator commissioned by the
CNRP, has said that his complaint will deal with Cambodia’s widespread
and often-violent forced evictions – acts that could constitute crimes
against humanity under the ICC’s articles if they are deemed grave
enough.
If domestic courts are incapable of addressing the issues – a
long-standing criticism of Cambodia’s judiciary – then “Mr Rogers might
have a chance”, said Dr Harmen van der Wilt, a professor of
international law at the University of Amsterdam.
“Cambodia is a state party to the Rome Statute, so the major
jurisdictional hurdle is overcome,” van der Wilt said in an email
yesterday, noting that “the evictions would arguably qualify as crimes
against humanity”.
Furthermore, the opposition’s stated aim of trying Prime Minister Hun
Sen isn’t out of the question either, van der Wilt continued, citing
the ICC arrest warrant issued against Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir.
International attorney Michael Karnavas – a former defence counsel at
the Khmer Rouge tribunal – said in a lecture on the possible
politicisation of the ICC at Brown University last month that while the
CNRP’s complaint may have strong legal footing, it was nonetheless an
“obvious” attempt to use the court for political gains.
“Since the courts in Cambodia have been deemed in the past to be
neither fair nor impartial, and since the likelihood of an objective
investigation and prosecution by the national authorities is rather
remote, there is a strong case for ICC intervention, provided of course
the gravity test is met,” he said in an advance summary copy of his
remarks provided to the Post.
However, despite the fact that “the [Cambodian] institutions which
are responsible for ensuring the rule of law are substandard, even on a
good day”, Karnavas called the CNRP’s attempt to file a complaint to the
ICC “a pretext to score politically against the [ruling] CPP”.
Multiple representatives of the CNRP could not be reached for comment
yesterday. Without speculating on the complaint’s chances of
acceptance, Karnavas went on to argue that the court should consider
enacting measures “to combat or at least limit abusive attempts to drag
the ICC into the sordid quagmire of domestic politics”.
Council of Ministers spokesman Phay Siphan agreed that the CNRP’s move was a political ploy.
“They try to manipulate the political situation,” he said. “That’s what they want to earn from that action.”
Siphan went on to argue that the ICC did not automatically have
jurisdiction in the matter simply because Cambodian court’s have flaws.
“We’re not a failed state,” he said. “We accept that we have some
flaws, we accept that we have some not-up-to-date laws, but we are a
nation.”
We don't know Phai Siphan is talking from his boss idea or he makes up himself. But if his boss allows him to speak in his behalf, Mr. Phai is jeopardizing his boss and leading his boss to his appearance in front of International Criminal Court related to his action. But we still assume that Mr. Hun Sen has ordered Mr. Phai to make that statement. We want to see the ICC issue summon to order Mr. Hun Sen to answer the charge regarding Human Right violation and mass killing of Cambodian innocents without trial.
ReplyDeleteMr. Phai Siphan argument is an unacceptable stipulation requiring him to appear in court fo answer the charge with his boss Mr. Hun Sen. If found guilty, they both must have a maximum prison term of 200 years confinement.
ReplyDeleteMr. Phai Siphan argument is an unacceptable stipulation requiring him to appear in court with his boss Mr. Hun Sen. If found guilty, they both must be charged for a maximum penalty of 200 years in prison related to crime against humanity and mass killing of innocent people.
ReplyDelete