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22690: (Chamberlain) Haiti-Caribbean (later story) (fwd)
From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>
By PETER PRENGAMAN
PORT-AU-PRINCE, July 14 (AP) -- Five Caribbean foreign ministers said
Wednesday they were satisfied with Haiti's pledges to hold elections and
uphold justice, indicating the way had been cleared for resuming diplomatic
ties.
The delegation will make a report soon to the 15-member Caribbean
Community, Barbados Foreign Affairs Minister Billie Miller said. It
remained unclear how soon the regional bloc could decide on restoring ties
suspended since the ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide four months
ago.
"We hope that this impasse will come to an end soon," Miller told
reporters, standing beside interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue at
Port-au-Prince's airport.
They shook hands and embraced, a sign of warming relations since
Aristide left the country Feb. 29, claiming the United States had kidnapped
him and masterminded a coup.
The United States has denied the allegation, but the Caribbean Community
has persuaded the Organization of American States to investigate.
The Caribbean bloc -- of which Haiti is the most populous and poorest
member -- has laid out several conditions, including new elections and
disarming rebels who led an uprising against Aristide.
"We have been reassured by Latortue that in 2005 there will be elections
-- parliamentary, presidential and local elections -- and then in February
of 2006 a new president will take power," Miller said. "We've been assured
of clean elections, no reprisals, and that known criminals will be
persecuted."
Asked if there were any sticking points, she said no.
There is no longer a rift between the two sides, said Raymond Lafontant
Jr., Latortue's chief of staff.
"Relations should be smooth now," Lafontant said. "The delegation has a
better idea of what happened in February with Aristide, and of what this
transitional government is trying to do."
Miller said before departing that the delegation made clear the
community will not try to "impose its will on Haiti."
She was accompanied by counterparts from Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago,
Antigua and Barbuda and the Bahamas.
The delegation also met leaders of Aristide's Lavalas Family party, who
expressed concern about the detention of Aristide's former prime minister,
Yvon Neptune. Neptune turned himself in last month to face accusations of
orchestrating political killings. He claims innocence.
"Prime Minister Latortue assured us that he had visited Neptune and
assured him of justice," Miller said.
Lavalas Party spokesman Gilvert Angervil said the community shouldn't
recognize a "de facto" government "incapable for planning fair elections."
"We can't talk about elections until the repression stops," Angervil
said, citing Neptune's imprisonment.
Latortue had suspended membership in the Caribbean Community in March,
angry that Jamaica gave temporary refuge to Aristide, who moved to South
Africa on May 30 to begin a temporary asylum there.
Caribbean leaders then refused to recognize his government.
The delegation's visit came as a new report by the World Bank and other
agencies said Haiti will require $1.3 billion over the next two years to
rebuild and fight poverty. So far $440 million is available, including
government funds and financing from international lenders.