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13144: Chamberlain posts (news item) : Report on Brignol Lindor murder enquiry (fwd)
From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>
(10 Sept 02)
Zero tolerance for the media : an enquiry into the murder of journalist
Brignol Lindor
Reporters Without Borders today deplored the failure of the authorities in
Haiti to arrest those responsible for last year's brutal murder of
journalist Brignol Lindor and said the government of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide appeared to be covering up for the killers.
It called on Aristide to "explicitly condemn all public lynchings" and
urged the European Union and the US Congress to impose sanctions on four
Haitian officials, including Aristide, who it said were responsible for
obstructing the murder enquiry.
The call came in a report by a two-member investigation team from Reporters
Without Borders and its sister organisation the Damocles Network which
recently went to Haiti to look into the murder of Lindor, news editor of a
radio station Echo 2000. He was beaten to death on 3 December last year
near the southwestern town of Petit-Goâve by supporters of Aristide's Fanmi
Lavalas party, encouraged by local officials.
The report said neither the killers nor the instigators of the crime had
been picked up and that the local investigation of the murder was seriously
hampered by the chronic lack of police and legal resources in Haiti.
It said the investigating judge and the police had not made any enquiries
at the scene of the killing, that arrest warrants for suspects had not been
carried out even though these people were freely moving around in public,
and that the judge had taken evidence from very few witnesses during his
enquiry.
The report said these serious failings recalled similar ones in the
currently-stalled investigation of the April 2000 killing of Haitian radio
journalist Jean Dominique, where a cover-up is also suspected. This
suspicion in the Lindor case was strengthened by President Aristide's
failure to clearly condemn public killings done in pursuit of his call for
"zero tolerance" of crime.
Apart from the serious attack on press freedom that Lindor's murder
represented, the report said, what was shown up was the whole policy of
"zero tolerance" and the legitimisation of summary executions carried out
by the population or para-legal groups.
The two organisations made various recommendations for action to the legal
authorities, police and prison officials, and called on Aristide to
"explicitly condemn all public lynchings and to state clearly that his
policy of 'zero tolerance' is strictly subject to the limits of the law."
It urged the European Union and the US Congress to take individual
sanctions against the four named officials, who it said were by their
"action or inaction" obstructing the enquiry into the murder. The sanctions
included refusal of entry and transit visas for them and their families, as
well as the freezing of any bank accounts they had abroad.
The four officials were President Aristide, prime minister Yvon Neptune,
justice minister Jean-Baptiste Brown and the head of the national police
investigations department, Jeannot François.
____________
For full text of report, see: www.rsf.org/article.php3?id_article=3755