DC-Cam Training Police in KR Probe Tactics

 

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

By Douglas Gillison and Yun Samean

 

The Documentation Center of Cambodia on Monday began train­ing Ministry of Interior police offi­cers in methods for investigating the crimes of the Khmer Rouge regime and interviewing victims and suspects, officials said.

 

Twelve police officers designated to work with the prosecutors and judges at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia are being trained, DC-Cam response train leader Sour Bunsou said. “They are being trained on how to investigate, how to interview victims and suspects and how to examine graves,” he said. “They have to co­operate with prosecutors when prosecutors need them,” Sour Bunsou said.

 

He added that police reports will be necessary for the tribunal. “When anyone commits a crime and is a suspect, prosecutors need police to help make reports for them and to investigate,” he said.

 

The officers are being given training by a former US police officer from the city of Seattle and a British legal expert from London, he said.

 

If the pilot project is successful, police in other provinces will receive similar training.

 

Mao Chandara, deputy national police commissioner and the security chief for the ECCC, said that the officers will follow the orders of the prosecutors and judges.

 

Thun Saray, director of local rights group Adhoc, said the ECCC should be careful to include international investigators and judicial officials on its fact-finding mission, and not just members of the Cambodian police.

 

“If there are foreigners will [the police] it will help to encourage victims, witnesses and suspects,” he sad. “If we had confidence in the Cambodian courts, we would not need foreign prosecutors and judg­es. It is the same with the Cambodian police.”

 

Ministry of Interior Secretary of State Em Sam An dismissed Thun Saray’s concern, adding that Cambodian police are of upright moral character.

 

Copyright 2006

The Cambodia Daily