INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightECCCImage caption
Soy Sen testifies at the Khmer Rouge Tribunal in 2015
After 12 years in
operation, the UN-backed Khmer Rouge Tribunal in Cambodia on Friday delivered what will likely be its final verdict
But away from the courtroom, some survivors of one of the 20th Century's greatest horrors are ambivalent about the tribunal's legacy,
reports George Wright from Phnom Penh.Like many 60-year-old men in rural Cambodia, Srei Than can often be found relaxing and drinking beer
with friends outside his home
But when he locks eyes with Soy Sen, who lives a short motorcycle ride away down a dusty lane, he quickly looks away
"Whenever I see him, he walks away," Sen says
There's good reason for this
In 1974, when Sen was just 14, Khmer Rouge guerrillas took control of his hometown in Takeo province, to the south of the capital Phnom Penh
It was a year before they would topple the US-backed government and unleash a four-year reign of terror across the country.Sen was sent to
Kraing Ta Chan prison by the radical communists
He believes it was down to his father being a local official in the district they had just captured.Upon entering the prison, Sen quickly
realised the horrors that were unfolding there, including murder, torture and cannibalism
"I was climbing a palm tree in the afternoon and from the top I could see two children being taken away," Sen told the tribunal in
2015."They usually waited for me to bring down the palm juice, but that day I heard… the sound of the cracking of children against a palm
tree."One of the most brutal guards at the prison was Than, better known by his alias "Small Duch"
His namesake, a man known as Duch, ran the infamous Toul Sleng torture prison in Phnom Penh and was sentenced to life by the tribunal in
2012.He recalls an event that has stuck in his mind ever since
One day, Sen says, Than ordered him to clear up an area after he had just committed a horrific attack on two female inmates
"He was so cruel he tortured me," Sen said on Friday
"One day he raped two women with an M-79 missile by putting it inside them."Image copyrightAFPImage caption
Cambodians
pray for Khmer Rouge victims in Takeo province
Kraing Ta Chan was a prison focused upon during the second trial of Khmer
Rouge second-in-command Nuon Chea and head of state Khieu Samphan
Due to the defendants old age, the litany of charges against them were split across sub-trials to ensure a verdict on some crimes could be
reached.On Friday, the pair were convicted of crimes against humanity and genocide
both were given new life sentences to add to the life sentences they were already serving after the first trial that concluded in 2014.While
some victims' groups and the court's international backers speak of the importance of the tribunal in bringing leading Khmer Rouge to
justice over the deaths of an estimated 1.7 million Cambodians, it has faced widespread criticism over government interference, lengthy
trial and the fact only three people have been prosecuted in more than a decade.Prime Minister Hun Sen, himself a former Khmer Rouge
commander, has been outspoken in his opposition to further trials of mid-ranking cadre, claiming it could result in a return to civil war
Image copyrightReutersImage caption
The pair are already serving life sentences
One of the common
frustrations among victims is the fact lower-level Khmer Rouge like Srei Than have never faced any kind of justice for the crimes they
allegedly committed, with victims and perpetrators often living alongside each other
Speaking just after seeing Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan sentenced, Sen - who was a civil party at the court and travelled to Phnom Penh for
the verdict - was fairly apathetic about the decision
Now the verdict has come out but I'm not satisfied," he said
"We do not see any compensation for the victims
They had already been sentenced to life once, what's the point"It's not going to heal the deep wounds they inflicted upon us."However, Sen
did say that testifying at the court had released much of the anxiety he harboured regarding former Khmer Rouge still living near his home
"Before, I felt scared for my safety but not anymore
Before, I did not dare to point fingers because of my worries but after the [tribunal], I have stopped worrying.Image copyrightAFPImage
caption
The court has a mixed legacy - it has convicted three Khmer Rouge officials in 12 years
When I
interviewed Than in 2014 about the heinous crimes he stands accused of committing at Kraing Ta Chan, he denied them point blank
When he appeared at the tribunal in 2015 - the only witness to require his face be blurred on camera due to the accusations against him -
Than refuted Sen's claims that he was responsible for raping women and killing children
But he did appear to show signs of remorse
"At that time, I was young and I do not remember… the activities or any bad things that happened," Than told the court
"I don't remember everything and that's why I feel hopeless in myself."Sen is in no doubt that he would have liked to see his former
tormentors at Kraing Ta Chan face justice for the crimes they committed - including Than and another guard responsible for the murder of his
However, this is a hope he gave up on a long time ago
"We really want this but it's never going to happen."