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US senator Lugar to push for FTA with Asean

US Senator Richard Lugar said he plans to introduce legislation aimed at negotiating a free-trade agreement with the Association of South East Asian Nations.

Trade restrictions with Myanmar, an Asean member, should not hinder the US from pursuing a trade deal with the rest of the regional group, the Indiana Republican said in an Oct. 9 statement on his website.

The US signed a trade and investment framework with Asean in August 2006, aimed at boosting economic ties with the region and possibly leading to a free-trade deal.

“China, India, Australia, New Zealand and South Korea have already finalized FTAs with Asean and are sharpening a competitive edge over the US in Southeast Asia,” Lugar said. “The United States should proceed to develop a comprehensive strategy toward engaging ASEAN in serious FTA discussions.”

President Barack Obama may meet Asean leaders at an Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Singapore in November, Lugar said.

Asean includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

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Toll from Typhoon Ketsana rises to 38 in Vietnam, 11 in Cambodia as Philippines toll reaches 246

The death toll from Typhoon Ketsana in Vietnam rose to at least 38 and 11 in Cambodia on Wednesday, officials said, after 246 died when the storm struck the Philippines over the weekend. An official from the flood and storm control committee in the central Vietnam city of Danang said another

Toll from Typhoon Ketsana rises to 38 in Vietnam, 11 in Cambodia as Philippines toll reaches 246

The death toll from Typhoon Ketsana in Vietnam rose to at least 38 and 11 in Cambodia on Wednesday, officials said, after 246 died when the storm struck the Philippines over the weekend. An official from the flood and storm control committee in the central Vietnam city of Danang said another

Thai elephant wounded by landmine gets artificial leg

Elephant expert with false leg

A 48-year-old Thai elephant is due to be fitted with an permanent artificial leg, 10 years after losing a limb from treading on a land mine.

Motola was measured up at an elephant hospital on Saturday before experts made the leg.

The elephant has been walking with the help of a temporary artificial leg made of canvas, the Associated Press news agency reports.

A much younger elephant at the same hospital already has a false leg.

Outgrown

Motola was injured in 1999 while working at a logging camp along the Thai-Burmese border. Her front left foot was so badly damaged it had to be amputated.

Motola's amputated front left leg

Her permanent leg is being made by the Prostheses Foundation.

Motola and a three-year-old elephant, Mosha, have both been cared for by an elephant hospital run by the Friends of the Asian Elephant (FAE).

Mosha, who is three, lost part of her right front leg as a seven-month-old. Because Mosha is growing fast, she has already outgrown three of her prosthetic limbs.

Thailand’s borders with Burma and Cambodia are littered with unexploded landmines, the result of decades of conflict.

The FAE says many elephants, often domesticated ones used in the logging trade, are injured by mines every year as they work in remote forests close to the borders.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

India and Asean sign trade deal

Indian farmers

India and the 10-country South East Asian bloc Asean have signed a free trade agreement after more than six years of talks.

Tariffs on electronics, chemicals, machinery and textiles will be reduced and eventually eliminated.

These products make up 80% of goods traded between India and Asean.

But India has been allowed to continue protecting its farm sector, and has excluded 489 products, including rubber, from the trade deal.

Computer software and information technology are also exempt.

A smaller list of products, described as "highly sensitive", such as palm oil and coffee, will see tariffs reduced over about 10 years, but only modestly.

‘Win-win’

The deal was signed in Bangkok at a meeting of economic ministers of the Association of South East Asian Nations – made up of Brunei, Burma, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Asean is India’s fourth-largest trading partner. The value of trade between the two was $47bn (£28bn) in 2008.

Secretary-general of the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry, Amit Mitra, said the agreement, which comes into effect form January next year, was "a win-win for both sides".

"Our minds have met. Of course, a few will lose, but many more will gain."


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

A land for sale?

By Robert Walker
BBC World Service

Ramom Fil

Romam Fil is moving rapidly through a dense patch of forest. Every few metres he pauses and points to edible plants and roots that the Jarai people of north eastern Cambodia have relied on for generations.

Then suddenly the trees come to an end. In front of us is a vast clearing, the red earth churned up and dotted with tree stumps.

Beyond that, stretching as far as we can see is a rubber plantation, the young trees are still thin and spindly and sway gently in the breeze.

This is the scene of a battle the Jarai people of Kong Yu village have been fighting, and losing for the past five years.

It started when local officials called a meeting and said they needed some of the forest.

"They told us they wanted to give part of our land to disabled soldiers," said Mr Fil.

"They said if you don’t give us the land, we’ll take it. So we agreed to give them a small area, just 50 hectares."

"They cleared areas where our people had their farms, and they destroyed our burial ground"

Romam Fil

The villagers say they were then invited to a party and when many of them were drunk they were asked to put their thumbprints on documents.

"Most of us don’t know how to read or write, and the chiefs did not explain what the thumbprints were for," said Mr Fil.

The villagers later found they had signed away more than 400 hectares – and the land was not for disabled soldiers, but a private company who began making way for the rubber plantation.

"They cleared areas where our people had their farms, and they destroyed our burial ground," said Mr Fil.

Political connections

Lawyers for the owner of the plantation company, a powerful businesswoman called Keat Kolney, insist she bought the land legally.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen

But groups advocating for local land rights in Cambodia say part of the reason she was able to acquire the land is because she is married to a senior official in the ministry of land management.

It is not the only case where those closely connected to senior government figures are alleged to have taken land from poor Cambodians.

Five years ago, in north-western Pursat province a large grazing area was turned into an economic land concession – land the government grants to private firms for investment in large-scale agriculture.

It was allocated to a politically well-connected company called Pheapimex.

"They just came one day with their bulldozers and started clearing the land straight away," said Chamran, a farmer in the area.

"So we organised a demonstration but then a grenade was thrown among us – we don’t know who by. Nine people were injured. The military police pointed a gun in my stomach and said if you hold another demonstration we will kill you."

Transparent process

Under the law, land concessions granted by the government should not exceed 10,000 hectares but the Pheapimex concession, although much of it is so far inactive, covers 300,000 hectares.

Global Witness, an environmental pressure group, estimates Pheapimex now controls 7% of Cambodia’s land area.

"The requirement is that you have enough capital, you have the technology to develop the land"

Phay Siphan

Download the podcast

The organisation says the company’s owners, a prominent senator and his wife, have strong links to Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen.

Pheapimex did not reply to requests for a response to these allegations, but the Cambodian government maintains that the process by which private companies acquire land is both transparent and legal.

"The requirement is not to be close to the prime minister," said Phay Siphan, spokesman for Cambodia’s Council of Ministers.

"The requirement is that you have enough capital, you have the technology to develop the land."

‘Kleptocratic state’

It is not just in rural areas that people complain of losing land.

Cambodia’s recent stability, following decades of violence, has attracted a rapid boom in tourism and a race among foreign and local entrepreneurs for prime real estate on which to build new resorts.

A Cambodian farmer ploughs his rice farm by using oxen

Many of the country’s beaches have already been bought up.

And rights groups estimate that 30,000 people have been forcibly evicted from their homes in the capital Phnom Penh over the past five years to make way for new developments.

The roots of the problem date back to the 1970s when the brutal Khmer Rouge regime abolished private property and destroyed many title documents.

A land law passed in 2001 recognises the rights of people who have lived on land without dispute for five years or more, but in many cases it is not being implemented.

The UN estimates hundreds of thousands of Cambodians are now affected by land disputes.

A Cambodian farmer

But land is not the only state asset being sold at an alarming rate.

Beginning in the 1990s, large swathes of the country’s rich forests were bought up by logging companies.

Now sizeable mining and gas concessions are also being granted to private enterprises.

Eleanor Nichol of Global Witness believes individual members of the Cambodian government, right up to the highest levels, are benefiting.

"Essentially what we’re dealing with here is a kleptocratic state which is using the country and its assets as their own personal slush fund," she said.

The Cambodian government rejects these allegations.

"They could accuse [the government of] anything they like. Cambodia operates under a modernised state of law. Everyone is together under one law,” said Phay Siphan.

Back in Kong Yu village, the Jarai people are waiting to hear the result of suit filed in a local court to try to get their land back.

"If the company gets the land, many of our people will starve," says Mr Fil.

"If we lose the land, we have lost everything.”

Assignment is broadcast on BBC World Service on Thursday at 0906 GMT and repeated at 1406 GMT, 1906 GMT, 2306 GMT and on Saturday at 1106 GMT.

You can listenonlineor download the podcast.


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Cambodia cancels landmine pageant

Sou Yeu, one of the candidates, pictured in March 2009

A beauty pageant for landmine victims has been cancelled by the Cambodian government, which branded it an insult to disabled people.

Authorities said the contest, due to launch on Friday, would damage "the dignity and honour" of participants.

Twenty women were to have competed for the title of Miss Landmine and the prize of a high-tech prosthetic limb.

Norwegian organiser Morten Traavik expressed disappointment, but said the contest would go ahead on the internet.

He said the result would be announced on 31 December. The website shows photos of the contestants, with missing limbs, wearing crowns and dresses. They are aged from 18 to 48.

Between four and six million landmines are thought to have been laid in Cambodia during its three decades of civil war.

‘Mockery’

Mr Traavik – who launched the first Miss Landmine pageant in Angola two years ago – said his contest was intended to raise awareness about the issue and empower those whose lives had been affected by the explosive devices.

Cambodia’s landmine legacy

A landmine sign, next to a mine that will be destroyed in Boeung Prolite

"I’m not looking forward to breaking the news to the 20 candidates involved, as I know they will be very disappointed in the lack of support from Cambodian authorities," he told AFP news agency.

Photographs of the participants were to have been shown in an exhibition in the capital, Phnom Penh.

But government spokesman Khieu Khanarith said the competition would "make a mockery of Cambodia’s landmine victims".

"The government does not support this contest," he said.

Government and NGO teams are working to clear the country’s landmines, but swathes of contaminated land remain in western border regions.

In 2007, more than 350 people were killed or injured in blasts from landmines or unexploded ordnance, Landmine Monitor said.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Malaria parasite developing drug resistance in Cambodia

Malaria parasites in western Cambodia are becoming increasingly resistant to artemisinin-based therapies, say researchers.
Artemisinin-based therapies are the first-line treatment for malaria, which is caused by most deadly form parasite, Plasmodium falciparum.
It is derived from Artemisia annua, also known as sweet wormwood, which had been used in Chinese medicine for centuries under the name Qinghaosu. [...]

Khmer rock

The sound of Cambodia’s 1960s music is revived

Betwa Sharma: Ending Mass Atrocities: The Next Step

Millions died not because the right doctrine was missing. There was no political will to act. The Council did not need R2P to intervene in Rwanda and it doesn’t need it now.

Hunger bites back

If the news that for the first time more than a billion people are classified as chronically hungry doesn’t completely kill your appetite for eating out, there is a way to assuage the guilt

As the invitations for the autumn celebrity cook book launches pile up – the latest is Tamasin Day-Lewis‘s Supper for a Song – you realise that the publishing world has cottoned onto the fact that people are finding it tougher to feed themselves in their usual manner. Clever! “In tough times we still always crave good food, even if we have to cut down (or give up) eating out … ” runs the blurb for Tamasin (sister of Daniel).

I can’t help wondering about the people who are having to give up eating entirely. Any top tips for them? Their numbers are up more sharply than those of British shoppers forced by the recession to slum it at Lidl. For the first time over a billion people, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, are chronically hungry. Nearly half of them are children.

Climate change and the renewed rise in the price of staple food commodities now ensure that more people than ever before in history are going to bed hungry. There’s a good analysis in the Economist of what is happening, and what the future holds. Part of the problem, of course, is that we’re still turning poor people’s cereals into ethanol for our green cars. Here’s me banging on about the effect of this in Cambodia for OFM last year.

It is the height of the cyclical famine season in east Africa – but, as the Guardian reported yesterday, the financial crisis means that rich countries are cutting their aid budgets. The shortfall means that emergency feeding programmes in Uganda, Somalia and Kenya may soon have to stop. The money missing amounts to $4.8 billion – easy to find for a bank that’s got itself in a mess, but not for millions of people in east Africa.

Still reading? If you are, you may be wondering what we can do, The most food-head-friendly aid agency working on global famine is Action Against Hunger – who have teamed up with Carluccio’s, Oliver Rowe, Fergus Henderson, Giorgio Locatelli and Michel Roux to help you feel a little less guilty while you guzzle courtesy of their pleasingly counterintuitive Fight Hunger, Eat Out scheme. So – eat, drink and be generous. A song for these hungry times.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Hunger bites back

If the news that for the first time more than a billion people are classified as chronically hungry doesn’t completely kill your appetite for eating out, there is a way to assuage the guilt

As the invitations for the autumn celebrity cook book launches pile up – the latest is Tamasin Day-Lewis‘s Supper for a Song – you realise that the publishing world has cottoned onto the fact that people are finding it tougher to feed themselves in their usual manner. Clever! “In tough times we still always crave good food, even if we have to cut down (or give up) eating out … ” runs the blurb for Tamasin (sister of Daniel).

I can’t help wondering about the people who are having to give up eating entirely. Any top tips for them? Their numbers are up more sharply than those of British shoppers forced by the recession to slum it at Lidl. For the first time over a billion people, according to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organisation, are chronically hungry. Nearly half of them are children.

Climate change and the renewed rise in the price of staple food commodities now ensure that more people than ever before in history are going to bed hungry. There’s a good analysis in the Economist of what is happening, and what the future holds. Part of the problem, of course, is that we’re still turning poor people’s cereals into ethanol for our green cars. Here’s me banging on about the effect of this in Cambodia for OFM last year.

It is the height of the cyclical famine season in east Africa – but, as the Guardian reported yesterday, the financial crisis means that rich countries are cutting their aid budgets. The shortfall means that emergency feeding programmes in Uganda, Somalia and Kenya may soon have to stop. The money missing amounts to $4.8 billion – easy to find for a bank that’s got itself in a mess, but not for millions of people in east Africa.

Still reading? If you are, you may be wondering what we can do, The most food-head-friendly aid agency working on global famine is Action Against Hunger – who have teamed up with Carluccio’s, Oliver Rowe, Fergus Henderson, Giorgio Locatelli and Michel Roux to help you feel a little less guilty while you guzzle courtesy of their pleasingly counterintuitive Fight Hunger, Eat Out scheme. So – eat, drink and be generous. A song for these hungry times.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Danger ahead

De-mining team in Bungu

By Peter Martell
BBC News, Bungu

Jamba Besta had planned to be a secretary, hoping to find work in an office as her homeland of South Sudan emerged out of a 22-year long civil war.

Instead, the pregnant mother heads an all-female team of de-miners, removing dangerous explosives from former battlefields.

"I never thought I would be doing this," says Ms Besta, welcoming her six-woman team back from the danger zone they are clearing.

"Many people have died or had their legs shot off because of a mine"

Tabu Monica Festo
Mine clearer

Tabu Monica Festo

"But it shows those people who think that women can’t do jobs like this that they are wrong."

The team’s members say they work better as an all-women team – supporting each other against often critical comments that de-mining is work only for a man.

"We live and work away from home all as one team, so it is good we are all women together," she says.

Sudan’s north-south war – fought over ideology, religion, ethnicity and oil – ended more than four years ago.

Some two million people died in the war, and its bitter legacy of landmines and unexploded ordnance continues to kill and wound.

Warning signs

In Bungu, where Jama and her Sudanese team working for Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA) are clearing mines, the community want to rebuild a school abandoned during the war.

"The women do a great job – and we don’t have problems of fighting or drinking"

Kjell Ivar Breili
Norwegian People’s Aid

The small settlement, some 30 miles from the southern capital Juba, was a northern government outpost on a key rebel supply line from neighbouring Uganda.

Soldiers ringed the outpost with mines against the surrounding southern guerrilla forces, while unexploded ordnance is left from the battles between the two sides.

"It will take a long time to clear," says de-miner Tabu Monica Festo, waving at the waist high grass and tangled bushes.

"We don’t know where there may be something hidden."

Only a narrow passage has so far been cleared through the ruins of the old school, a jumbled pile of rocks covered in thick shrubs.

Map of Sudan

The path is clearly marked with warning sticks tipped with red, to show the rest remains unsafe.

"We have to be very careful to check all the ground is clear," Ms Festo added, resuming her slow sweeping of the ground with a metal detector.

A solid squeaking sound indicates hidden metal – and the risk of a mine or unexploded bomb.

Some were designed to maim people, others to take out an armoured tank.

"It’s a job that is important to do – many people have died or had their legs shot off because of a mine," Ms Festo adds.

Painstaking work

Similar all-women teams work elsewhere in the world, including Kosovo and Cambodia.

Mine-clearing workers in the field

But Kjell Ivar Breili, NPA’s programme manager, says this is the first such team to be used in Sudan.

Mr Breili said NPA’s two female teams have recently beaten several of the six male teams in terms of the numbers of mines cleared.

"The women do a great job – and we don’t have problems of fighting or drinking," he said.

Each de-miner creeps painstakingly forward down thin alleys, moving the safety line forward only once every section has been checked.

It is tough work in baking sun, and the plastic face-shields they wear inside the minefield mean that it is not possible to drink water during each 45-minute shift.

However, the women must pour water on to the hard-baked soil to soften the earth and allow the gentle probing of suspect objects.

Critics ‘are jealous’

One cleared passage stops just short of a tall mango tree, whose cool shade looks an inviting place to rest.

De-mining team on a break

But the women say such spots are especially risky – booby-trapped simply because they are likely places for people to go.

"The soldiers are believed to have buried mines all around here," said Fazia Annet, dressed in a heavy protective bomb blast jacket.

"But we have to check all the ground of course, because there could be danger anywhere."

Later, in the tent-camp a short distance outside the minefield, the women eat lunch before relaxing for a break in the shade.

One mother plays with their daughter, who is looked after in the camp while the women are at work.

But the team leader, currently assigned to logistical duties during the later stages of her pregnancy and for the following nine months, is clear that women can do the job just as well as men.

"Some say it is dangerous for a woman, but they are jealous because we are doing the same job as the men," said Ms Besta, with a laugh.

"What is dangerous is leaving mines hidden in the ground."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Responsibility to protect: An idea whose time has come—and gone?

An idealistic effort to establish a new humanitarian principle is coming under attack at the United Nations

GARETH EVANS, a former Australian foreign minister and roving global troubleshooter, makes a bold but passionate claim on behalf of a three-word expression which (in quite large part thanks to his efforts) now belongs to the language of diplomacy: the “responsibility to protect”. In a recent book, he says there are “not many ideas that have the potential to matter more for good, not only in theory but in practice.”

Like many people who labour to ensure that mass murder will never recur, he links his personal commitment to an early formative event: in his case, a visit to Cambodia on the eve of the massacres in which up to a quarter of the population died. For others, the spur was the genocide in Rwanda, pictured above; for others still, the killing of Muslim men and boys from Srebrenica in Bosnia. …

Responsibility to protect: An idea whose time has come—and gone?

An idealistic effort to establish a new humanitarian principle is coming under attack at the United Nations

GARETH EVANS, a former Australian foreign minister and roving global troubleshooter, makes a bold but passionate claim on behalf of a three-word expression which (in quite large part thanks to his efforts) now belongs to the language of diplomacy: the “responsibility to protect”. In a recent book, he says there are “not many ideas that have the potential to matter more for good, not only in theory but in practice.”

Like many people who labour to ensure that mass murder will never recur, he links his personal commitment to an early formative event: in his case, a visit to Cambodia on the eve of the massacres in which up to a quarter of the population died. For others, the spur was the genocide in Rwanda, pictured above; for others still, the killing of Muslim men and boys from Srebrenica in Bosnia. …

US piles pressure on Burma regime

The flags of nations attending the Asean conference

US officials have had a rare meeting with representatives of Burma’s regime.

Unnamed officials told reporters that efforts to improve ties depended partly on the outcome of democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi’s trial.

The US also pressed Burma to enforce a United Nations resolution imposing an arms embargo on North Korea.

The US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has been on the diplomatic offensive ahead of a regional meeting now under way in Thailand.

Earlier in her trip to Thailand, she issued warnings about how a nuclear North Korea was unacceptable to the United States, and expressed concerns about the possible transfer of nuclear technology from North Korea to Burma.

The wrong road

Mrs Clinton called for the release of Ms Suu Kyi from many years of detention.

"If she were released, that would open up opportunities… for my country to expand our relationship with Burma, including investments in Burma," Mrs Clinton said.

Hillary Clinton arrives in Phuket (22.7.09)

This point was reinforced in the face-to-face meeting between US and Burmese officials on Wednesday night, US officials said.

They said they had told Burma that "the outcome of the trial of Aung San Suu Kyi would affect our willingness and ability to take positive steps in our bilateral relationship".

Mrs Clinton was not present at the meeting with Burmese officials, and said she did not intend to appear at a possible meeting with North Korean officials either.

She told reporters that the US is convinced that Burma is taking the wrong road by associating with North Korea.

Mrs Clinton also told reporters that North Korea must completely and irreversibly end its nuclear weapons program or face further isolation and "the unrelenting pressure" of international sanctions.

She said there were more positive ways ahead if the North chooses, and she is expected to announce conditions in which the North will be welcomed back into international discussions later on Thursday.

Symbols matter

Meanwhile, Mrs Clinton signed a symbolically important treaty with members of Asean.

The Treaty of Amity and Co-operation binds the US more closely into the regional security architecture – something previous US administrations had fought shy of.

"I want to send a very clear message that the United States is back, that we are fully engaged and committed to our relationships in South East Asia," she said before the signing the treaty in the resort of Phuket.

Mrs Clinton’s predecessor Condoleezza Rice skipped two Asean forums, leading analysts to remark on how China was gaining friends and influencing people in the perceived US absence.

Mrs Clinton also said the Obama administration would soon appoint a permanent ambassador to Asean headquarters in Jakarta.

Asean comprises Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Burma, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Christopher Santora: Why The ICC Should Speak Out on Iran

Of the many criticisms levied against the international community’s efforts to promote accountability, perhaps the most pervasive critique is a rather simple one — the lack of consistency.

Khmer Rouge survivor tells of torture centre

Tribunal hears that prisoners ate next to dead bodies and caught insects for food at camp where 16,000 died

One of the few survivors of the Khmer Rouge’s main torture centre wept at a UN-backed tribunal today as he recounted the conditions at the prison where 16,000 people were tortured before execution.

Vann Nath, 63, escaped execution because he was an artist and took the job of painting and sculpting portraits of the Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot. His special status did not spare him misery.

“The conditions were so inhumane and the food was so little,” Vann Nath told the tribunal, tears streaming down his face. “I even thought eating human flesh would be a good meal.”

Vann Nath said he was fed twice a day, each meal consisting of three teaspoons of rice porridge.

“I lost my dignity,” he said. “They even gave animals more food.”

The testimony came at the trial of Kaing Guek Eav, better known as Duch, who headed the S-21 prison in Phnom Penh from 1975-79. Up to 16,000 men, women and children were tortured under his command and later taken away to be killed. Only 14 people, including Vann Nath, are thought to have survived.

Duch, 66, sat silently in his chair and watched Vann Nath closely as he spoke. Duch is charged with crimes against humanity and is the first of five defendants scheduled for long-delayed trials by the UN-assisted tribunal.

Duch has previously testified that being sent to S-21 was tantamount to a death sentence and that he was only following orders to save his own life.

Vann Nath said he was arrested on 30 December 1977 at his home in north-western Battambang province where he worked as a rice farmer. He was accused of trying to overthrow the Khmer Rouge and of being an enemy of the regime – a common accusation against prisoners. He arrived at S-21 on 7 January 1978 and was kept there until the regime collapsed about a year later.

Prisoners were kept shackled and ordered not to speak or move, Vann Nath told the court.

“We were so hungry, we would eat insects that dropped from the ceiling,” he said. “We would quickly grab and eat them so we could avoid being seen by the guards.”

He said prisoners ate their meals next to dead bodies and “we didn’t care because we were like animals”.

The regime’s extreme policies caused the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million people nationwide by execution, overwork, disease and malnutrition.

Most prisoners were tortured into giving fanciful confessions that suited the Khmer Rouge’s political outlook, though they generally had been loyal members of the group.

Duch is the first senior Khmer Rouge figure to face trial and the only one to acknowledge responsibility for his actions. Senior leaders Khieu Samphan, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Ieng Sary’s wife, Ieng Thirith, are all detained and likely to face trial in the next year or two.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds



Time’s Up For ‘brother No 3′

Former Khmer Rouge leader, wife to face genocide charges

PHNOM PENH – Former Khmer Rouge Foreign Minister Ieng Sary and his wife
Ieng Thirith were arrested yesterday, bringing to four the number of
regime leaders now facing Cambodia’s United Nations-backed genocide
court.

A French-educated communist, Ieng Sary, also known as “Brother Number 3″
emerged as the public face of the secretive Khmer Rouge. His wife became
the regime’s Social Affairs Minister and continued to defend its policies
long after its demise.

The elderly couple, who were seized in their villa in Phnom Penh, will
face charges of crimes against humanity. Ieng Sary, who also served as the
regime’s Deputy Premier, will face additional war-crimes charges,
officials said.

They are among five former top cadres currently under investigation for
their role in crimes committed during the Khmer Rouge’s rule from 1975 to
1979 over Cambodia, as efforts intensify to bring ageing regime figures to
justice.

Under the Khmer Rouge, up to 2 million people died from starvation and
overwork or were executed. The regime abolished religion, schools and
currency and exiled millions to vast farms in its bid to forge an agrarian
utopia.

During his rule, Ieng Sary, now thought to be 78 years old, convinced many
educated Cambodians who had fled the country to return. They were then
killed in the regime’s purge of intellectuals. Many of the victims were
diplomats taken from Ieng Sary’s foreign ministry with his knowledge.

The alleged crimes of his wife, Ieng Thirith, believed to be 75 years old,
includes participation in the “unlawful killing or murder of staff members
from within the Ministry of Social Affairs”, according to a report filed
by prosecutors with the tribunal’s judges on July 18.

Regime leader Pol Pot died in 1998, but his deputies Nuon Chea and Duch,
who oversaw the notorious Tuol Sleng torture centre, were arrested by the
tribunal earlier this year.

The fifth suspect under investigation has not been named, but some believe
it to be former head of state Khieu Samphan, 76 years old.

The court got under way last year after a decade of tense negotiations
between the UN and Cambodian government. Trials are expected next year.

Despite receiving a royal pardon for a 1979 genocide conviction after his
surrender to the government in 1996, Ieng Sary could face other charges.

Like other surviving Khmer Rouge leaders, he has repeatedly denied
responsibility for any crimes.

“I have done nothing wrong,” Ieng Sary told AP last month. “I even made
good deeds to save several people’s lives (during the regime)”, he said. -
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