Seeking Highly Qualified Applicants For One Consultant


Job Type Consultant
Ref Number EC-AN-16-09111
Closing Date October 3, 2016, 4:30 am

The Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) is seeking highly qualified applicants for one Consultant.

For more details of the TERMS OF REFERENCE (TOR), please visit the ECCC website at http: www.eccc.gov.kh/en/about-eccc/jobs

Submission of Applications

Qualified candidates may submit their applications, including a letter of interest, Curriculum Vitae indicating personal and technical skills, academic qualifications and experience in similar assignments along with the duly completed and signed ECCC Application Form for Employment available in the above website to:

Human Resources Section (National)
National Road 4, Chaom Chau Commune
Porsenchey District, Phnom Penh, Cambodia
The ECCC gate B or Email: personnel@eccc.gov.kh
P.O Box No.71

Please note that incomplete applications or applications received after the closing date will not be considered. Only those candidates that are short-listed for interviews will be notified.

Applications from qualified female candidates are strongly encouraged to apply.

Meeting held between Civil Parties and Civil Party Lawyers in Case 002


A meeting was arranged on Monday 6 October between the Civil Parties and Civil Lawyers of Case 002. The meeting was held by the Victims Support Section (VSS) of the ECCC and focused on informing Civil Parties of the outcome of case 002/01 and on developments of reparations in Case 002. The meeting also gave Civil Parties the chance to meet their lawyers and have discussions on issues related to case 002 in general.

Click here for further details of the meeting.

Trial date set for case 002/02


Evidentiary hearings in Case 002/02 will commence at 9am on October 17, the ECCC has announced. The case will begin with Co-Prosecutors making a brief statement, to which the accused (Khieu Samphan and Nuon Chea) will be given an opportunity to respond. The first witness testimonies are expected to follow on Monday 20 October.

Click here for more details on the process.

Women’s Hearings helped to address on-going struggle for accountability.


Three Women’s Hearings, carried out by the Cambodian Defenders Project (CDP) helped to address the on-going struggle for accountability for crimes committed during the Khmer Rouge, according to an article by the International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ).

ICTJ Vice President, Paul Selis pointed out that ‘ECCC trials have taken a very long time to prosecute very few people. Important as the trials are, the citizens of Cambodia need and deserve more.’ ‘In order to meaningfully address address past atrocities’, he adds ‘Cambodia needs to broaden the scope of its accountability efforts, going beyond trials to include creative and substantial measures to acknowledge the truth of what happened and to memorialize it in a way that assists in ensuring non-recurrence.’

CDPs Women’s Hearings gave victims of those who suffered gender based violence during the Khmer Rouge conflict the chance to share their experiences in response to the limited prosecutions for these crimes. ‘Not only did these hearings empower and honor the survivors who testified, but by breaking the silence around sexual violence crimes they also contributed an important accurate record, public awareness, and community healing,” said Amrita Kapur, Senior Associate of ICTJ’s Gender Justice program.

For more information click here to read the full article.

ECCC Trial Chamber sentences Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan to Life Imprisonment for Crimes against Humanity


On 7 August 2014, the Trial Chamber of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia (ECCC) found Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan guilty of crimes against humanity committed between 17 April 1975 and December 1977 and sentenced them to life imprisonment. Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan were found to have committed crimes against humanity of murder, political persecution and other inhumane acts during movements of the population; political persecution and other inhumane acts during movements of the population; and murder and extermination through executions of Khmer Republic officials at Tuol Po Chrey.

Click here for details of the sentencing.