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    Khmer Rouge chief jailer gets life in prison

    PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) — A U.N.-backed tribunal's Supreme Court lengthened the sentence for the Khmer Rouge's chief jailer to life imprisonment on Friday because of his "shocking and heinous" crimes against the Cambodian people.

    The surprise ruling increased a lower court's 19-year sentence for Kaing Guek Eav, known as Duch. Prosecutors had appealed the sentence as too lenient, and outraged survivors had feared the man who oversaw the torture and killing of thousands could one day walk free.

    Duch was the first defendant to be tried by the tribunal. He was commander of Phnom Penh's top-secret Tuol Sleng prison, code-named S-21. He admitted to overseeing the torture of his prisoners before sending them for execution at the "killing fields."

    A coalition of 23 local civic groups, the Cambodian Human Rights Action Committee, welcomed Friday's decision and said Duch's victims had finally received justice.

    In July 2010, the tribunal's lower court convicted Duch (pronounced DOIK) of war crimes, crimes against humanity, torture and murder.

    He was sentenced to 35 years in prison but had 16 years shaved off for time served and other technicalities. The sentence was appealed both by prosecutors, who called for life imprisonment, and by Duch, who argued it was too harsh because he was merely following orders.

    Judge Kong Srim, president of the Supreme Court Chamber, said Friday that the upper court felt the penalty should be more severe because the former jailer was responsible for the brutal deaths of so many.

    "The crimes of Kaing Guek Eav were of a particularly shocking and heinous character based on the number of people who were proven to have been killed," the judge said. The tribunal says Duch oversaw the deaths of at least 12,272 victims but estimates have placed the number as high as 16,000.

    The court said the high number of deaths and the extended period of time over which they occurred — from 1975 to 1979 — "undoubtedly place this case among the gravest before international criminal tribunals."

    Duch, 69, stood calmly without emotion as the sentence was read. He then pressed his palms together and drew them to his chest in a show of respect to the judge, before being led away by court guards. The ruling is final with no other chance for appeal.

    Andrew Cayley, the British co-prosecutor, said Duch can request a pardon after serving 20 years, or about seven years from now.

    Duch trained, ordered and supervised his staff to conduct "systematic torture and execution of prisoners" and showed "dedication to refining the operations of S-21, which was the factory of death," the court said in a separate statement.

    Prosecutors called the ruling a long-awaited victory.

    "We can say that justice has now been served after more than 30 years," Chea Leang said. "To us and to the victims, this is a great success."

    The tribunal is seeking justice for an estimated 1.7 million people who died from torture, starvation, exhaustion or lack of medical care during the Khmer Rouge's rule in the 1970s.

    Three senior Khmer Rouge figures are currently on trial in what is known as Case 002. Unlike Duch, who admitted his role and asked for forgiveness, the others claim no wrongdoing.

    They are 85-year-old Nuon Chea, the Khmer Rouge's chief ideologist and No. 2 leader; 80-year-old Khieu Samphan, an ex-head of state; and 86-year-old Ieng Sary, the former foreign minister. They are accused of crimes against humanity, genocide, religious persecution, homicide and torture.

    In its ruling Friday, the court said Duch did not deserve a lighter sentence just because he was not a senior Khmer Rouge official, and there was no rule that reserves the highest penalties for those at the "top of the chain of command."

    That position reflects a key area of contention involving possible future trials. Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has insisted the tribunal should end its operations after the current trial of the three senior leaders.

    Human rights groups and international prosecutors, however, favor an extension of the proceedings to a third and fourth trial, where defendants would be second-level Khmer Rouge officials suspected of heinous crimes.

    The matter has not yet been settled and has led to tension between the tribunal and the Cambodian government.

     
    • Rhyno  •  Richardson, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Why is it so many people nowadays lack having empathy for other human beings completely?I'm starting to believe that there are people born with no soul at all. I'm not even religious at all and still couldn't do such things to people regardles of what their crimes may have been. #$%$ is wrong with the world. Can someone please explain?
      • Medwardl 3 mths ago
        Empathy for people with a bad string of luck is one thing empathy for someone like this is another. I also have no empathy for crooks, lazy or stupid people who are usually one in the same.
      • Yorick Hunt 3 mths ago
        @Rhyno - oh stop it! People have ALWAYS been just the way they are now - no better, no worse. There's been RAMPANT apathy in the past. People have shivered to death on streets for millennia. Countless millions have starved for want of care and love. You wanna go back to the 1700 and 1800s when certain behaviors got you locked up in asylums and sanitoriums? Wanna go back to th 1600s and be locked in stocks for public drunkenness or fornication? How about the 1950s, when lynchings in the South had hundreds in attendance. It's all about what you care to focus on, and you're focused only on what's bad.
      • Steven 3 mths ago
        How could one without "empathy" ever truly explain him/herself to one who's every waking breath is filled with thoughts of nothing else but what his subjective notions of morality deem to be right or "fair". Or, How can someone polarized towards their logical nature ever relate to someone so configured for emotion? I think the word you meant to use was "sympathy", by the way. For example I have an abundance of empathy towards my fellow animals, but absolutely no sympathy. Some can understand the emotions of others to a profound extent, but feel no moral obligation to cater to said feelings. You will never understand this man, though I would wager that he, in contrast, would understand alot more about you than you would feel comfortable with. As for your question, the answer is: Its simple to feel no sympathy for others, as all morality is based on the concepts of reward and punishment. No belief in an afterlife equals no lasting consequences for actions, which in turn equals no sympathy and in some extreme cases even no empathy. Atheists will tell you this is not the case and that there is a case for morality without belief in an afterlife, but this is merely a survival strategy, as they know they would be targeted if people viewed them in their true light. There, does that clear things up?
    • Diane zabbarino  •  3 mths ago
      He got what he deserved. He should have the same treatment he gave.
      • j 3 mths ago
        So your answer is to do exactly what your punishing him for?
      • Karloff 3 mths ago
        NO. Killing that bastid would be justice properly served, unlike his genocidal rampage. Even the worms will vomit at the presence of his foulness.
      • Diane zabbarino 3 mths ago
        J, yes it is!! Perhaps you can join him?
    • Eddie  •  3 mths ago
      One of the cruelest forms of torture ( and I believe it was under this guy) was a concrete "cell", not long enough to lay down in and not tall enough to stand up in. Think about that!
      • Barclay 3 mths ago
        The English have such a cell in the Tower of London.
      • andy 3 mths ago
        Then he should have that kind of cell.
      • linda 3 mths ago
        Mankind will never be kind to each other, they have to torture and kill.
    • terry booth  •  3 mths ago
      The horror this man put countless innocent people through should never be forgotten. Anything they could do to him would never be enough. He is representative and responsible for one of the most tragic periods in the annals of the human race.
      • Victor 3 mths ago
        I was OK to the American public for the US to go to Europe to liberate and stop the Nazis from killing the Jews. But it was not OK to be in Vietnam to stop the communists and stop this genocide that killed 2 million Cambodians. Americans are hypocrites.
      • terry booth 3 mths ago
        Victor, how are Americans hypocrites by attempting to protect the Vietnamese from subjugation from the North Communists? And, since we never had ground troops in Cambodia, how would it not be okay to "stop this genocide that killed 2 million Cambodians"? If you are saying we should have gone into Cambodia to stop the Khmer Rouge from genocide, you have to consider the times. America had essentially been defeated in Vietnam, and had withdrawn. Young people (mostly) but plenty of older citizens too, demanded an end to the conflict as well as our presence there. They would never have put up with a re-entry for any reason. Besides, as far as I know (and I was there) we had no concrete information and knowledge of the depths of the Communist deprivation in Kampuchea. Had I known. I and many of my friends at the time would have volunteered to go back to stop it. What other countries and people are you comparing Americans to when you say we are "hypocrites"? That we went and failed is not the same thing as never going in the first place. Americans in general are the most giving, self-sacrificing people in the world. Fifty thousand dead and countless wounded (of which I am one) in Vietnam say a lot for the people of America. Your comment about Americans is crass and undeserved. Remember, we have no obligation to fight for other people around the world, but our hearts tell us to.
    • إسماعيل ياسين  •  Irvine, California  •  3 mths ago
      And how many years was it that the UN (using US vetos) continued to recognize the Khmer Rouge government, simply because the US couldn't bring themselves to accept that the Vietnamese came in and liberated the Cambodian people from the genocide of Polk Pot?
      • Andrew 3 mths ago
        Our government was the same. #$%$ the lot of them.
      • D-man 3 mths ago
        Polk Pot?
    • Orang-Utan  •  Santa Rosa, California  •  3 mths ago
      The original school buildings were transformed into prison cells and blocks, I know one cell where he'd be 'comfortable' to pass his remaining days. Only has a food pass through and nothing else.
    • Victoria Two  •  3 mths ago
      That verdict did not take long.
    • christopher  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  3 mths ago
      Now THIS is a real monster. When these idiot American politicians (on both sides) and righteous yahoo commentators refer to their favorate enemy (liberal or conservative) as nazis or dictators, it makes my skin crawl. When you come on here and write about how America is on it's way to being a third world nation because of president so and so or senator whats his name or this candidate, you are being an ignorant jack a**! We dont have this!
    • My opinion counts  •  3 mths ago
      I am so sorry for the Khmer people that have had to wait so long for justice.
    • luvakgal  •  3 mths ago
      I can't wrap mind around a handful of people commanding the torture and deaths of so many thousands. Has nothing been learned from the holaucost? It's too late for the victims, but one day these murderers will face an eternity in hell far worse than any pain they ever inflicted.
    • Jenny S  •  3 mths ago
      At least he didn't lie about his crimes like the rest of them. Perhaps now his victims can have peace.
    • From New York  •  New York, New York  •  3 mths ago
      A great victory for the families of those that were tortured and murdered. It's too bad he wasn't executed.
    • John T  •  Nonthaburi, Thailand  •  3 mths ago
      I have been to his Hi- School/torture prison 4 times now. Each time it sinks in more and more.
      Watching the tourist reaction is odd, they get off the tour bus and after the 2nd or 3rd room they are either crying or puking up that lunch they had.
      Over 2000 photos of dead people staring back at you, children, young teens, grandmothers, grandfathers, whole familys. Even westerners were not exempt. A box of pants/shirts of the dead that only Hitler could enjoy. Another room of skulls with bullit holes in then, just empty sockets looking back at you. The cells that were 2 feet by about 5 feet with blood still in some
      along with the items that were used to torture. The babies that were thrown into the air for bayonet practice.
      Alas his responce of "I was only following orders" OK now we order you to comite suicide for what you have done. Remember you have to follow all orders that you are given.
      Might get out n 7 years................. I would be willing to be one of the 1st. ones to greet him as he emerges from prison......................with 5 gallons of gas and a new Bic lighter.
    • dean  •  Prattsburg, New York  •  3 mths ago
      Too bad they can't be tortured in the manner they tortured their victims by someone who is
      'just following orders".
    • Nikos  •  Alexandroupoli, Greece  •  3 mths ago
      Why did they wait until those monsters were 80 years old? The crimes were commited 40 years ago! Life imprisonment means 5 years for them now. Not enough punishment for the people who used to kill babies by battering their heads against trees so they wouldn't grow up to seek revenge for their parents murdering by the khmer rouge regime. It sickens me just to write about it...
    • Sleep Tech  •  3 mths ago
      Really!!!???
      Buy a pound of Mary Jane and get life in prison. Kill 844,848,373,737,290,502,857 people and get a slap on the wrist. Its all about principles people
    • 阿扁無罪  •  3 mths ago
      If wasn't the Viet Cons save the Cambodians in 1979. The Cambodians probaly already been wipe out of this planet.
    • your r nutz  •  3 mths ago
      my opinion thats not justice , if i were the judge on that case i will punish him as the same way he punish his victims ,,
    • vorn  •  3 mths ago
      Henry Kissinger's doctrine enabled this man to do what he did. Operation Menu helped put the Khmer Rouge into power, which gave Duch the power to commit these acts. The Khmer leaders before the Khmer Rouge were no angels either but it might have been a better outcome than what occurred.
    • R E D O X  •  3 mths ago
      He should have got what he gave but this will do in a pinch .
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