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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 08:50 AM
Original message
Haiti situation still explosive
Posted on Wed, Mar. 09, 2005


Question: Haiti's justice minister on Saturday accused the United Nations peacekeeping mission of violating its mandate by preventing local police from observing a demonstration the day before in support of ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Is Haiti's political atmosphere becoming more polarized? Are current U.N. security arrangements sufficient to prevent an outright explosion of political-related violence?

... The country is due to hold legislative and presidential elections at the end of 2005, yet Haiti's political leaders and the broader international community remain woefully unprepared.

Large swaths of the country are under the control of the ex-military groups and their followers who ousted Aristide last year, while Lavalasaffiliated gangs continue to operate in the capital city of Port-au-Prince.

...

Most worryingly, the Bush administration's decision to outsource Haiti's security needs to Latin American nations has been shown to be a major miscalculation, with important implications for U.S. interests in the Caribbean. Without aggressively addressing core issues of disarmament and the reconstruction of the Haitian National Police, the eventual U.N. pullout will leave a failed state in Washington's lap for a second time during the Bush presidency.

Answer from Eddy Lagroue, chairman and CEO of Datasys Inc.: During the last 40 years, the establishment of paramilitaries working side by side with the Haitian army was commonly accepted by the international community as a way to control the expansion of communism in Haiti and also in the region. Consequently, after so many years of self-destruction and economic degradation, with the major social and economic players fleeing the country and the emergence of gang leaders and drug lords, Haitian society became ''narco-polarized,'' with all its consequences, and deeply overwhelmed. Few countries could undergo economic recovery because of civil wars and their collateral damages. Haiti has not been an exception, and after the abolition of the former army a solution to the problem -- the creation of an independent police force that could preserve democratic rights -- was the elusive next step. It is difficult to see this police force, after the stories of corruption attached to it and its members, channeled and financed by the ousted priest-president, take over security of Haiti. Regarding this specific event that occurred with the last demonstration in favor of ousted former President Aristide, it was understood by the United Nations that a decision had to be made in order to avoid the confusion and leadership problems that could be caused by the presence of two forces in the area.

... poverty and the misery -- the real threat to Haiti's democracy.
more
http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/11086078.htm
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 09:19 AM
Response to Original message
1. In the shadow of Aristide
A year after overthrow of Haiti's president, violence still rules the poorest nation in the hemisphere, by Aaron Maté


— events that should give Canadians pause to reflect on our role in Haiti's ongoing tragedy.

...

The demonstrators were calling for the return of Aristide and the fulfillment of the five-year mandate to which he was democratically elected in 2000 — a common refrain among Haiti's many impoverished slums, where support for Aristide and his Family Lavalas party is strongest.

...

The Martin government has refused to condemn Aristide's ouster in the pre-dawn hours of Feb. 29, 2004, choosing instead to back an interim government that enjoys almost no popular support.

Observers now widely agree that "the situation — politically, economically and in terms of security — has deteriorated dramatically," the head of the U.N. mission in Haiti from 1993 to 2000 told the BBC.

When I visited Bel-Air the day before Christmas, I found the once-bustling, vibrant community to be a veritable ghost town, its near-empty streets traversed only by scattered pedestrians and patrolling U.N. peacekeepers. The scene was testament to a largely ignored fact of life after Aristide: There has been not just a coup against the president, but a purge of the populist Lavalas party that elected him.

... while their victims "prefer to die at home untreated rather than risk arrest at the hospital."

...

The Catholic Church's Justice and Peace Commission estimates there are more than 700 political prisoners in Haitian jails. Visiting one of them, 70-year-old folksinger So Anne Auguste, a veteran of decades of struggle against the Duvalier dictatorships, was particularly unnerving. Not far from the Pétionville penitentiary where she has been held since last May without charge, Prime Minister Paul Martin had told reporters during his brief visit to the country in November that "there are no political prisoners in Haiti."

It is possible that the Martin government is simply unaware of the situation.

But the extent of its involvement gives reason to draw other conclusions.

During the final years of Aristide's rule, Canada followed the lead of Paris and Washington in reducing foreign aid to a trickle, offering a paltry $23.85 million in 2003.

By contrast, Martin recently pledged $180 million over the next two years.

...

Pettigrew has said nothing about the aggressive tactics of the Haitian police and little of the paramilitaries and former soldiers closely aligned with the wealthy Haitian opposition.


more
http://www.thestar.com/NASApp/cs/ContentServer?pagename=thestar/Layout/Article_Type1&c=Article&cid=1110281896700&call_pageid=968256290204&col=968350116795
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 11:49 AM
Response to Original message
2. Congresswoman Maxine Waters travels to Haiti
Edited on Wed Mar-09-05 11:57 AM by seemslikeadream
Congresswoman Maxine Waters travels to Haiti; visits former Prime Minister Neptune in prison; and demands that the interim government release him and all political prisoners.

Washington, D.C. -- Today, Rep. Maxine Waters (CA-35) traveled to Haiti to visit Haiti's former Prime Minister Yvon Neptune, who is being detained illegally in prison. She was met at the airport in Port-au-Prince by U.S. Embassy officials early this morning and immediately traveled to the National Penitentiary, where she met with Prime Minister Neptune, as well as former Interior Minister Jocelerme Privert and former delegate Jacques Mathelier. The Congresswoman spent an hour with Prime Minister Neptune, discussing his health and the treatment he has received in prison, after which she returned to the airport and held a press conference.

"I urge the interim government of Haiti to set Prime Minister Neptune free and release all political prisoners in Haitian prisons," said the Congresswoman. "The interim government's repression of dissenters like Prime Minister Neptune must end immediately. The whole world is watching."

Prime Minister Neptune has languished in prison in Haiti since June 27, 2004. His life has been endangered throughout his confinement. There were reports of a plot to assassinate him last November, a massacre in the National Penitentiary on December 1, and a revolt in the National Penitentiary on February 19. Prime Minister Neptune recently began a hunger strike and has vowed not to eat until the unjust, unsafe circumstances of his confinement are addressed.

"The conditions that I observed in the prison where Prime Minister Neptune is being held were deplorable," reported the Congresswoman. "Prime Minister Neptune was weak and could only speak in a whispering voice. He insisted that he had been jailed without justification and that he had committed no crime. He has not been allowed to go before a judge to challenge his confinement as required under the constitution of Haiti, and he believes he has been targeted to be killed."
http://www.haitiaction.net/News/MW/3_7_5.html


National Hispanic Civil-rights Group Honors Dodd
Advocacy For Early Childhood Education, Majan Jean Are Cited

By TED MANN
Day Staff Writer
Published on 3/9/2005

The nation's largest Hispanic civil-rights organization honored Sen. Christopher J. Dodd, D-Conn., on Tuesday for his efforts on behalf of the Head Start program and early childhood education, as well as his work to prevent the deportation of a Norwich teen.

Dodd and Rep. Chris Cannon, R-Utah, were honored by the National Council of La Raza at its annual awards dinner in Washington, D.C., along with the Llano Grande Center for Research and Development, which provides education along the Texas-Mexico border.

“Senator Dodd is one of the most loyal and committed supporters of the Latino community,” said Janet Murguia, the president and CEO of NCLR. “He has worked tirelessly to protect the civil rights of all Americans and has been a champion for early childhood education, leading the debate to expand the Head Start program and provide universal access to preschool.”

Dodd was also recognized for his efforts to prevent the deportation of a Norwich teenager, Majan Jean, who faced deportation to Haiti last year before the senator and Rep. Rob Simmons, R-2nd District, intervened on her behalf.

more
http://www.theday.com/eng/web/news/re.aspx?re=58A7AA69-A816-4788-9009-9B687F8A57C9
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 01:56 PM
Response to Original message
3. THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE RETURN OF THE FRAPH/FADH DOCUMENTS
Edited on Wed Mar-09-05 02:00 PM by seemslikeadream
by Brian Concannon
Bureau des Avocats Internationaux, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
The people of Haiti suffered under a brutal military dictatorship from 1991 to 1994. The Haitian Armed Forces (FADH) and the paramilitary Revolutionary Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH) were the principal organisations behind a reign of terror against unarmed civilians that included at least 3,000 murders, 300,000 internal refugees, 40,000 boat people, 7,000 homes destroyed, and countless tortures, rapes, thefts, and beatings. Since the return of democracy in 1994, the Haitian people have struggled to rebuild from this disaster. Among the most urgent needs articulated by the Haitian people is the need for justice for the victims of the coup years. The people of Haiti have not, for one moment, abandoned their struggle for justice. As other countries that have made the transition from dictatorship to democracy have discovered, it is always difficult to punish those responsible for human rights violations, and it is most difficult to punish those most responsible, those who gave the orders. In Haiti, although there are the usual difficulties, the persistence of the population's struggle for justice has created unusual successes: over thirty people accused of major human rights violations are imprisoned awaiting trial, and more are arrested every month. Those arrested include not just low level soldiers or thugs, but army officers and wealthy landowners as well. Warrants have been issued even against the military high command, although the generals are all in exile.

Although the US military was a factor in ending the dictatorship, the links between the dictatorship's criminals and US military, diplomatic and intelligence communities are both deep and widespread, as has been widely reported by the press, and acknowledged by both US officials and the criminals themselves. US troops arrived in Haiti in 1994, as part of the multinational force that ended the 3 year military dictatorship. They immediately and systematically gathered documents from the offices of military and paramilitary organisations, especially FADH and FRAPH. Approximately 160,000 pages of documents, as well as photographs, videocassettes and audiocassettes, were collected, and transported to the US. This was done without the knowledge or consent of Haiti, even though the documents were the property of Haiti under Haitian, international, and US law.

According to interviews with soldiers involved in the seizure, the documents included membership information, operational details, and photographs and videos of human rights violations. The Haitian government has a right to the return of the documents, and the victims have a right to the information contained in the documents. The documents are essential to Haiti's quest to establish the truth about what happened during the military regime. They would also be useful in prosecuting those responsible for the regime's human rights violations. In fact, they would be most useful where the most help is needed, establishing cases against the FRAPH and FADH leadership.

...

The response of the US has been to stonewall. For several months the government claimed that it could not find the documents. Then the US State Department proffered a series of reasons why it could not return the documents, none of them able to withstand scrutiny. In late 1995, the US, under pressure, announced it would return the documents to Haiti, and reportedly flew them down to its embassy in Port-au-Prince. Soon, however, the State Department demonstrated its intention to not return the documents, by placing conditions on the return that no sovereign nation would accept: the US would delete certain materials, according to its own whim, and Haiti would have to agree to use the documents only for specified purposes (that did not, for example, include exploring the already public links between US intelligence agents and the coup criminals).

...

Justice for human rights victims is one of the top priorities of the Haitian people. The failure of the US to return the documents is one of the largest obstacles to that priority, and is a further violation of the victims' human rights. Until they are returned in their entirety and without conditions, no one in Haiti will believe there has been justice, and no one in any country familiar with the situation will take seriously the US rhetoric on justice, democracy, or civil society.

The Campaign For the Return of the FRAPH/FADH Documents was launched by several Haitian human rights, victims', religious and women's groups in April, 1998. The Campaign has prepared a Petition, which has been translated into French, English, Spanish and Dutch, and signed by over 10,000 people world-wide. A broad network of organisations and individuals throughout the world have supported the Haitian groups in their initiative. The supporters in Haiti, the US, and the rest of the world are committed to persevering until the documents are returned.

more
http://haitisupport.gn.apc.org/concannon.html


CIA linked to FRAPH, coup
PORT-AU-PRINCE -- The link between the US government and the founding and running of the Haitian army's death squad and front group, FRAPH (Front pour l'Avancement et le Progres Haitien), was finally exposed in the October 24 issue of the US Nation magazine.

As long suspected, the Central Intelligence Agency created and has advised FRAPH. The link is Emmanuel Constant, a paid CIA employee and informant. Also, at least some FRAPH “members” were paid by the US-government-funded Centres pour le Developpement et la Sante (CDS), run by Dr Reginald Boulos and linked to FRAPH and to anti-democratic activities in the past.

As a result of the information -- which has been at the top of news programs and on the front page here as well as in the US -- the CIA and other government agencies have gone into “damage control” mode, saying Constant worked for them only until “spring” of 1993 (FRAPH was formed in August) and that the CIA was never “connected” to FRAPH. One of Constant's “handlers”, US Colonel Patrick Collins, a Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) attache in Haiti from 1989-1992 and who recently returned for the occupation, has reportedly been recalled to Washington for questioning.

In his article in the Nation, Allan Nairn detailed how Constant worked for both the CIA and the brutal intelligence service it created and ran, the Service d'Intelligence National (SIN), which spied on, brutalised and murdered up to 5000 members of the democratic movement between 1986 and 1991.
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/1994/165/165p21b.htm
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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 07:18 PM
Response to Original message
4. Security Council urges Haiti to devise beneficial projects, free ...
... unindicted prisoners

9 March 2005 – Members of the United Nations Security Council today welcomed the release of some political leaders in Haiti, but called on the Transitional Government of the Caribbean country to speed up pending cases and ensure due process for all.

In a press statement issued after a senior UN official in the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) described in a closed briefing the major events that have taken place since mid-November, the Council also urged the Government to develop "concrete projects that could effectively utilize the assistance provided." It appealed for prompt disbursement of pledged funds.

Council members welcomed the provisional release from jail of several leaders of Fanmi Lavalas, former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's party, and it "called upon the Transitional Government to expedite all pending cases and to ensure due process for all citizens." <snip>

http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=13592&Cr=haiti&Cr1=

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struggle4progress Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-09-05 07:24 PM
Response to Original message
5. Haiti's Aristide Says Will Return, Praises UN
Wednesday, March 09, 2005 3:41:58 PM ET

By Peter Apps

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Ousted Haitian leader Jean-Bertrand Aristide said on Wednesday he expected to return to his country as president, but added he did not know when and denied involvement in recent protests aimed at restoring him.

He said he was not in direct contact with protesters who have marched through the capital Port-au-Prince in recent days, but praised U.N. peacekeepers for protecting them after police killed at least three protesters last week.

"I will return. I don't know when but I will," Aristide told reporters after a lecture at Johannesburg's University of the Witwatersrand. "I am not involved in organising such things but I pray they will not kill them while they are demonstrating." <snip>

The former theology lecturer told reporters and students the rebellion was backed by drug dealers, criminals and the State Department, all of whom he said wanted to stop him holding democratic elections. <snip>

http://www.metronews.ca/reuters_international.asp?id=60716

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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Mar-10-05 11:54 AM
Response to Original message
6. THE DEW BREAKER


THE DEW BREAKER
By Edwidge Danticat.
244 pp. New York:
Alfred A. Knopf. $22.

Archimedes held that he could lift the earth if he had a lever long enough, and an extraplanetary fulcrum to rest it on. There are horrors so heavy that they seem untellable. To bear to tell them so that we can bear to read them, a writer must find somewhere outside -- peaceful, unmarked -- to project them from. Atrocity enters the imagination not as the violating point of the knife but as the fair flesh violated.

That is how the Haitian-American writer Edwidge Danticat has managed over the past 10 years to portray with such terrifying wit and flowered pungency the torment of the Haitian people. In one of the stories in ''Krik? Krak!,'' a National Book Award finalist, a maid to a rich Haitian family finds a dead baby, names it Rose, keeps it for days, washing it to dissipate the smell, and finally buries it. It is discovered by the gardener, her lover, who calls the police.

So much for horror; but what locks it in is the maid's irony: ''We made a pretty picture standing there, Rose, me and him. Between the pool and the gardenias, waiting on the law.''

Or in ''The Farming of Bones,'' a novel about Trujillo's 1930's massacre of Haitian workers in the Dominican Republic, no awful detail precipitates the bloody swirl so clearly as the lilting innocence of the word ''parsley.'' ''Pesa'' in Creole, ''perejil'' in Spanish; but Haitians can't manage the Spanish ''r'' and its guttural ''j,'' so those unable to say ''perejil'' were killed and parsley stuffed in their mouths.

The final and title story of ''The Dew Breaker,'' Danticat's new collection, makes a more direct approach to horror. Set in the 1960's during the reign of François Duvalier, it recounts, dry-mouthed, the hours spent by a Tonton Macoute (one of Duvalier's murderous agents) as he waits in his car for a dissident preacher to arrive at church.

The agent bursts in after the sermon, throws the priest into a truck, tortures him and takes him to headquarters to kill him. Word mysteriously comes -- the regime's terrors were always mysterious -- that he is to be released instead. Before the agent can obey, the priest gouges his face with a shard of wood; the agent shoots him dead.

Yet even this story, with its headlong darkness, has strangely flickering lights that permit us to see it by. Waiting, the agent sends a loitering schoolboy to buy cigarettes; when the boy returns, the man questions him paternally about his schoolwork. There is the street scene itself. Among the kiosks purveying tobacco, trinkets and food, the waiting car is one kiosk more, purveying death; and as much part of daily neighborhood life as the others.

When the priest is dragged into prison, bleeding and burned with cigarettes, his cellmates urinate on him. It is a work not of contempt but of corporal mercy, since they believe urine to heal and soothe. Haiti lives at depths where contempt cannot grow; down there, mercy straggles but persists.
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9507E0D6123EF932A15750C0A9629C8B63
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