Monday, 20 September 2010

KRT bribery allegation


Photo by: Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
President of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal Trial Chamber, Nil Nonn, during the closing arguments of case 001 in 2009.

via CAAI

Sunday, 19 September 2010 20:41 James O'Toole

LAWYERS for former Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary have filed a motion to disqualify the president of the Trial Chamber at Cambodia’s war crimes tribunal, alleging that he admitted to accepting bribes as head of the Battambang provincial court.

In a filing dated Friday, co-lawyers Ang Udom and Michael Karnavas said the admissions demonstrated that Trial Chamber President Nil Nonn had “compromised and forfeited his judicial integrity”.

“Judge Nil Nonn appears to have publicly admitted to taking bribes,” the lawyers said.

“This is exactly the sort of conduct that prevents a judge from executing his judicial affairs independently and impartially.”

The comments in question appeared in a report by PBS Frontline journalist Amanda Pike, who interviewed Nil Nonn in March of 2002 for a documentary film project.

According to a partial transcript of the interview quoted in the filing, the judge allegedly said he accepted payments from litigants on a regular basis.

“It happens to me as it does to others as well, but it is not through any effort on my part.

However, if after a trial people feel grateful to me and give me something, that’s normal, I don’t refuse it,” Nil Nonn is quoted as saying.

“I’ve settled the case for them and people feel grateful. Living conditions these days are difficult for me,” he allegedly added, noting that he earned just $30 per month in salary at the time.

“But if you are talking about pressuring people for bribes – no.”

Nil Nonn declined to comment yesterday.

Court spokesman Reach Sambath said he had no information on the filing, but he affirmed that Nil Nonn and other jurists took seriously their responsibilities at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, as the court is formally known. ...read the full story in tomorrow’s Phnom Penh Post or see the updated story in online from 3PM UTC/GMT +7 hours. (New York 4AM, Los Angeles 1AM, Chicago 3AM, Paris 10AM, Toronto 4AM, Sydney 6PM, Bejing 4PM, Tokyo 5PM, London 9AM, Johannesburg 10AM, Riyadh 11AM, Mumbai 1:30 PM)

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