This week at the ECCC, hundreds of people – monks, civil parties, survivors, former Khmer Rouge cadres, police officers, students, and guests from various parts of the world – packed the Court’s public gallery between 21 and 23 November 2011 to hear the Opening Statements in Case 002 against Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Khieu Samphan.
Read the report:
KRT Trial Monitor Issue No. 5 – Opening Statement (21-23 November 2011) corresponds with Facing Justice Episode 1 and Episode 2
English - Khmer
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Posted in Case 002, Case 002 Reports, Episode 1, Episode 2, Opening Statements, Weekly Reports | Tags: 17th April 1975, 21-23 November 2011, 6 January 1979, agricultural cooperatives, AIJI, Alexander Dumas, Andrew Cayley, Ang Udom, Asian International Justice Initiative, Brother No. 2, Cambodia history, carpet-bombing of Cambodia, Case 001, Case 002, Case 002/01, Chea Leang, CIA, Civil Party Participation, Claudia Fenz, Closing Order, Committee 870, communist movement, Communist Party of Kampuchea, Crimes Against Humanity, Democratic Kampuchea, disqualification of judges, Double Jeopardy, Duch, East West Center, ECCC, ECCC Internal Rules, enslavement, Extraordinary Chamber in the Court of Cambodia, first mini-trial, first phase, Flavia Widmer, forced marriage, Forced Movement of Population, Genocide, grave breaches of the 1949 Geneva Convention, ICCPR, Ieng Sary, Ieng Thirith, Indochina, informal ex parte meetings, internal purges, International Criminal Law, international human rights law, International Humanitarian Law, Jacques Verges, Joint Criminal Enterprise, Judge Silvia Cartwright, Kaing Guek Eav, KGB, Khieu Samphan, Khmer Mekong Film, Khmer Rouge Leaders, Khmer Rouge Trial monitor, killing fields, Kimsan Soy, King Norodom Sihanouk, KMF, Knut Rosandhaug, Kong Sam Onn, Krama, KRT Trial Monitor Issue No. 5, Laos, Lon Nol, Mary Kristerie A. Baleva, mass deportation, massacre, massive slave camp, Michael Karnavas, Michiel Pestman, ne bis in idem, Noyel Ry, Nuon Chea, Office 870, Opening Statement, Penelope Van Tuyl, Pich Ang, President Nil Nonn, Princess Principe, religious persecution, royal pardon and amnesty, S-21, Samuel Gilg, Scheduling Order, seizing the people, Severance Order, smashing the enemies, targeting or persecution of specific group, the Cham Muslims, the first segment, the revolution of Kampuchea, the right against self-incrimination, the right to a counsel, the right to a impartial judiciary, the right to adequate time and means, the right to remain silent, the Soviet Union, the Vietnamese minorities, torture, Tou Samuth, Trial Management, Tuol Sleng, UC Berkeley War Crimes Studites Center, US bombardment, Vietnamese spies, work sites