Getting Away With Genocide: Cambodia's Long Struggle Against the Khmer RougePluto Press, 2004 M10 12 - 327 pages This book covers the history of Cambodia since 1979 and the various attempts by the US and China to stop the Cambodian people from bringing the Khmer Rouge to justice. After Vietnam ousted the hated Khmer Rouge regime, much of the evidence needed for a full-scale tribunal became available. In 1979 the US and UK governments, rather than working for human rights justice and setting up a special tribunal, opted instead to back the Khmer Rouge at the UN, and approved the re-supply of Pol Pot's army in Thailand. Tom Fawthrop and Helen Jarvis reveal why it took 18 years for the UN to recognise the mass murder and crimes against humanity that took place under the Killing Fields regime from 1975-78. They explore in detail the role of the UN and the various countries involved, and they assess what chance still remains of holding a Cambodian trial under international law - especially in the light of the recent development of International Criminal Tribunals for Rwanda and the Former Yugoslavia. |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... Criminal Court . The International Criminal Court had been envisaged even before the Second World War , but had fallen by the wayside - a victim of cold - war suspicions . In the 1980s the concept was resurrected and years of detailed ...
... Criminal Court . The International Criminal Court had been envisaged even before the Second World War , but had fallen by the wayside - a victim of cold - war suspicions . In the 1980s the concept was resurrected and years of detailed ...
Page 207
... Criminal Court . It was a testimony to Cambodia's weakness that it felt obliged to make such an undertaking when less than a year earlier , in its capacity as the first southeast Asian signatory of the International Criminal Court and ...
... Criminal Court . It was a testimony to Cambodia's weakness that it felt obliged to make such an undertaking when less than a year earlier , in its capacity as the first southeast Asian signatory of the International Criminal Court and ...
Page 317
... Criminal Court ICTR , see International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda ICTY , see International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Ieng Sary , 29 , 35 , 37 , 52 , 65 , 152 , 219 , 265 and US , 60 , 63 and peace talks , 86 , 98 at ...
... Criminal Court ICTR , see International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda ICTY , see International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Ieng Sary , 29 , 35 , 37 , 52 , 65 , 152 , 219 , 265 and US , 60 , 63 and peace talks , 86 , 98 at ...
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Keeping Pol Pot in the UN Cambodia seat | 24 |
The Worlds First Genocide Trial | 40 |
Copyright | |
11 other sections not shown
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Getting Away With Genocide: Cambodia's Long Struggle Against the Khmer Rouge Tom Fawthrop,Helen Jarvis No preview available - 2004 |
Common terms and phrases
agreement ambassador amnesty April Asean Bangkok Beijing border Cambodian government Center of Cambodia CGDK China Chinese coalition Committee Corell court crimes against humanity defendants delegation Democratic Kampuchea deputy diplomatic Documentation Center Draft Law East Timor Extraordinary Chambers Fawthrop forces Genocide Convention Hans Corell Helen Jarvis human rights Hun Sen Ieng International Criminal Tribunal international law international tribunal interview issue January judges Khieu Samphan Khmer Rouge Law Khmer Rouge leaders Khmer Rouge regime Khmer Rouge trial Khmer Rouge tribunal Kiernan Kofi Annan lawyers leng Sary mixed tribunal National Assembly negotiations NGOs Norodom Sihanouk Nuon Chea Office organisations Pailin party People's Revolutionary Tribunal Phnom Penh Post Pol Pot Pol Pot regime political Pot's Prime Minister Prince Norodom prison prosecution prosecutors resolution responsible Rwanda Secretary Security Council Son Sen Ta Mok Thai military Thailand Thomas Hammarberg Tuol Sleng UN's United Nations UNTAC Vietnam Vietnamese vote