[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

19671: (Hermantin)Miami-Herald-Lawyer: Aristide can't use telephone (fwd)



From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>

Posted on Wed, Mar. 03, 2004

Lawyer: Aristide can't use telephone

Supporters of former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide say his
kidnapping claims may have prompted Central African officials to take away
his phone.

BY MICHAEL A.W. OTTEY

mottey@herald.com


CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC

Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, exiled in the Central
African Republic, is being denied access to a telephone, Miami lawyer Ira
Kurzban said Tuesday.

Kurzban issued a statement that said authorities in the African country had
taken Aristide's telephone -- his main means of communication since he
resigned and went into exile Sunday.

The move came following Aristide's allegations that he had been kidnapped
and taken to the Central African Republic against his will -- charges that
U.S. and French officials vehemently deny.

Aristide's allegations Monday that he was being held hostage in the Central
African Republic have upset officials in that nation.

''He's already started to embarrass us,'' government spokesman Parfait M'Bay
was quoted as saying Tuesday by the French Agence France Press news agency.
``He's scarcely been here 24 hours, and he's causing problems for Central
African diplomacy.''

But M'Bay was also quoted as saying the publicity is much welcomed.

''The hard-sell coverage in the press over the forced resignation of the
former dictator has allowed Central Africa to brush up its image as a
country of refuge and help,'' the newspaper Le Confident reported.

''We can now claim that the Central African Republic ranks among the world's
great countries,'' the newspaper added in a story headlined ``An ousted
president in Bangui.''

HOSPITALITY

M'Bay said that Aristide and his wife, Mildred, have been treated well,
housed in a luxury villa and given access to a phone -- apparently the phone
he used to call journalists to complain about his ''kidnapping'' by U.S.
soldiers.

M'Bay and French Defense Minister Michele Alliot-Marie told reporters that
Aristide was free to leave.

French soldiers are guarding Aristide, but French and U.S. officials insist
the former president resigned the presidency and is not the hostage that he
and his supporters claim.

Interviewed by The Associated Press and CNN on Monday, Aristide said he was
forced to resign and board a U.S. aircraft bound for parts unknown. He
landed in the Central African Republic on Monday.

The Associated Press reported that officials in the Central African Republic
would press Aristide to decide soon whether he wants to stay.

''It's up to ex-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to say if he wants to stay
in Central Africa or if he wishes to go to South Africa,'' M'Bay said.
``That way we will know what moves we have to take.''

The government of Central African Republic had planned to meet Tuesday to
discuss Aristide's future in the country, but the meeting was postponed
because President Francois Bozize and Prime Minister Celestin Gaombalet were
away from Bangui, the capital.

Aristide's presence in the African nation, which experienced a coup d'etat
last year, is also causing internal upheaval.

GOVERNMENT CRITICIZED

Ange-Félix Patasse, the country's deposed president, said in a statement
issued in Paris on Tuesday that Bozize's government is using Aristide to
curry international favor. The United States and other governments have yet
to recognize Bozize's government.

Aristide has asked to be flown to South Africa because he's a close friend
of President Thabo Mbeki. But on Tuesday, Mbeki said there would be much
discussion in South Africa and with the international community before his
country opens its doors.

Panama has also been mentioned as a possible asylum nation, and officials
there have said they would consider taking in Aristide. Ironically, Panama
already hosts two of the members of the military junta that ruled Haiti
after Aristide was toppled in 1991 and went into exile themselves on the eve
of the U.S. invasion in 1994 -- Raoul Cedras and Philippe Biamby.

_________________________________________________________________
Learn how to help protect your privacy and prevent fraud online at Tech
Hacks & Scams. http://special.msn.com/msnbc/techsafety.armx