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Staff at Cambodia’s Khmer Rouge tribunal demand overdue wages

A Cambodian woman reacts and gestures as she looks at portrait photos of victims of the Khmer Rouge regime displayed for tourists at the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Phnom Penh on June 4, 2013. Tang Chhin Sothy (AFP)/Getty Images

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – Nearly 200 staffers at Cambodia‘s U.N.-backed Khmer Rouge tribunal have gone on strike to demand wages that are several months overdue, a court spokesman said Monday.

A majority of the court’s Cambodian employees, including interpreters and translators essential to the court’s functions, did not come into work Monday because their wages have not been paid since June, spokesman Neth Pheaktra said.

Budgetary shortfalls, along with the defendants’ advanced age and poor health, have raised concerns the trial may grind to a halt before any verdict is reached.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called last week for more international donations to the tribunal, warning that its “very survival” is under threat.

A U.N. spokesman at the court, Lars Olsen, said the strike threatens to delay proceedings at the tribunal, which is tasked with seeking justice for atrocities committed by the Khmer Rouge in the late 1970s. An estimated 1.7 million Cambodians died under the Khmer Rouge regime due to forced labour, starvation, medical neglect and execution.

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“We are very concerned about the possible risk of disruption to the judicial process through the strike by national staff,” Olsen said in an email Monday. “The U.N. is also concerned for the welfare of the national staff and their families.”

The tribunal has met with resistance from the Cambodian government, where many top officials are former Khmer Rouge members. The Cambodian government is officially responsible for paying the salaries of the court’s Cambodian employees, but has often failed to supply adequate funds, leaving international donors to pick up the slack.

“We call on the Royal Government immediately to meet its obligation to pay the national salaries so that the strike can be averted,” Olsen said. “The U.N. is also working closely with the principal international donors to explore all possibilities for averting the crisis.”

The Cambodian-run section of the court currently faces a $3 million shortfall for its operations, including wages, from June through the end of the year, Neth Pheaktra said.

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