Sathavy Kim was born in Cambodia in 1954. She had begun her law studies when her life abruptly changed when she was 21. Her family was forced to leave behind their home and comfortable lives in Phnom Penh. She was deprived of her freedom and interned in a camp for more than three years.[2]
After the fall of the Khmer Rouge, she was appointed as a judge of Siem Reap Provincial Court in 1982 and the vice-president of the Siem Reap Provincial Court from 1986 to 1993.
In 1998, she returned to the place where the labour camp once stood where she had once been held captive. From 1999 to 2002, she was a legal advisor to Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of InteriorSar Kheng.
From 2002 to 2005, Sathavy Kim was the founder and the Director of Royal School for Judges and Prosecutors. She has served as a Honorable Justice of the Supreme Court since May 2006.[3]
Judicial positions
Drugs
Kim Sathavy has adopted a strict lign in applying the law concerning the illegal use of drugs in Cambodia, as in the case in which she upheld the Appeal Court's verdict to sentence a woman to 30 years in prison for her involvement in trafficking over 3 kg of drugs, although the accused had a three-year-old son and a one-year-old daughter.[4]
Human rights and politics
Kim Sathavy has been accused of upholding decisions made against opponents of Cambodian Prime MinisterHun Sen.[5] While she was being accused of “make a ruling based on professionalism and not be politically influenced,” she dismissed this statement by reminding the court that the hearing was not about the facts of the case, but about the defendant's reasons for demanding bail.[6] Kim Sathavy also upheld a upheld a lower court ruling to fine the acting president of the country's now-dissolved opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party (CNRP) Sam Rainsy for defamation in connection with a lawsuit brought against him by Prime Minister Hun Sen.[7] However, Kim Sathavy has also taken decisions clearing opposing policies of the executive branch, for example ruling that there were flaws in the trial of Rath Rott Mony in June 2019 and ordered the Appeal Court to conduct another trial to relitigate the case.[8] Seeking to protect the independence of the judiciary of Cambodia, she has resisted not only local but international pressure, as in cases of extradition.[9]
Legacy
Founding the Royal School for Judges and Prosecutors
Heading the Directorate of the Royal School for Judges and Prosecutors, Kim Sathavy oversaw the recruitment of the first the intake of the 50 first student judges of the new school. Though it was not aimed to replace judges and prosecutors who were working in the courts, it aimed "to increase the number of judges and prosecutors in the judiciary because that number is notoriously insufficient to ensure administration of justice in this country".[10] Despite defamatory statements at the opening of the school, it has managed to trained a new generation of judges and court staff in Cambodia.[11]
Drafting the Cambodian Code of Criminal Law
Kim Sathavy accompanied the joint efforts of the Ministry of Justice and French criminal lawyers in the drafting of the Cambodian Code of Criminal Law, Kim Sathavy played a key role in the promotion in Cambodia of the civil law tradition inherited from France.[12]
Although the extent of what remains to be done can make one dizzy and often the path we must follow seems more like a dead end than a highway, we must also congratulate ourselves on the steps that have already been taking.
Kim Sathavy was the first Cambodian woman to become a magistrate.[14] Throughout her career, she has also endeavored to promote the place of women in the country and in its judicial system.[12]
Honors
On November 10, 2015, Jean-Claude Poimboeuf, Ambassador of France to Cambodia, presented the insignia of Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur to Mrs. Kim Sathavy, judge at the Supreme Court of Cambodia.[15]