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Kaing Guek Eav, also known as Duch, former Khmer Rouge torturer - Source: Reuters -
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Cambodia's "Killing Fields" tribunal on Wednesday ploughed through lists of witnesses set to testify in the first trial of a senior Khmer Rouge cadre 30 years after the end of a regime blamed for 1.7 million deaths.
Duch, former chief of the notorious S-21 torture centre who went
on trial for crimes against humanity on Tuesday, sat quietly in a
white shirt as the tribunal laid the groundwork for a full-blown
trial in March.
"The focus today is on preliminary objections, finalising witness
lists and determining additional evidence," said Helen Jarvis, head
of public affairs for the tribunal set up to prosecute those most
responsible for Khmer Rouge atrocities.
On the streets of the capital Phnom Penh, newspapers with front
page stories and photographs of Duch's first day in the dock sold
out quickly.
"We cannot forgive them," 48-year-old Seng Hy said between drags on
a cigarette. "If they are found guilty, they should get the death
sentence."
There is no death penalty in Cambodia and the five Khmer Rouge
cadres charged with various crimes against humanity could get life
sentences if convicted by the joint Cambodian-United Nations
court.
Duch, whose real name is Kaing Guek Eav, is the first of the five
to face the panel of five Cambodian and international judges.
No trial dates have been set for the others, who include "Brother
Number Two" Nuon Chea and former President Khieu Samphan.
Survivors, former guards and Khmer Rouge experts are expected to
testify against Duch, a born-again Christian who has asked
forgiveness for the deaths of 14,000 "enemies of the revolution" at
S-21. His lawyers argue he was only following orders and should not
be made a scapegoat for the Khmer Rouge era.
"The Khmer Rouge denied victims their humanity and in doing so, the
Khmer Rouge lost their own humanity," French defence lawyer
Francois Roux told reporters after Tuesday's hearing.
"The purpose of this trial is to allow people on both sides to
regain their humanity," he said.
But some Cambodians wonder if the trials, which come after a decade
of wrangling over jurisdiction and funding, are worth it.
"You don't have to find proof of atrocities because you can see
skulls everywhere in Cambodia and you can see the legacy of S-21,"
said 60-year-old Horn Oeurn.