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24202: Esser (news): Haiti: the Western World's Worst Crimes (fwd)



From: D. Esser <torx@joimail.com>

The Narcosphere
http://narcosphere.narconews.com/

February 3, 2005

Haiti: the Western World's Worst Crimes
By Benjamin Melancon


I feel guilty every time I use my limited time to post on Guantánamo.
 The U.S. media have started to cover that travesty.  The world
media, with the notable exception of Australia, are nearly unanimous
in their condemnation of the interrogation camp.

On far, far worse crimes in Haiti – including paramilitary death
squads, killings by police, and jailing without legal cause or
counsel – crimes committed with the conscious and active aid of U.S.,
French, Canadian, and Brazilian governments – the media silence is,
as they say, deafening.

Tom Reeves, discussing a recent human rights report, and Reed
Lindsay, reporting for Free Speech Radio News - http://www.fsrn.org/
from Port-au-Prince, provide a partial corrective...

Investigators saw and include photos of boys as young as twelve lying
in pools of their own blood in the General Hospital, where doctors
refused to treat them, Reeves described the report by the Center for
the Study of Human Rights (CSHR) at the University of Miami
(available as a 7MB PDF document -
http://www.ijdh.org/CSHRhaitireport.pdf).  Other photos show bodies
left in the street and dozens of bodies rotting and piled high at the
morgue after police and UN invasions of Port au Prince's poor
neighborhoods.  Interviews with police and others make clear a
systematic campaign of political repression and assassination aimed
at Aristide's Lavalas Party, often committed directly by the Haitian
National Police (HNP), and in some cases by the UN forces (MINUSTAH)
accompanying them.

Free Speech Radio News reports that the U.S.-installed Latortue
government announces elections only for the end of this year– at best
nearly two years after the coup.  Already Fanmi-Lavalas, Aristide's
party with large majority support, says it will not participate
because of the terror and assassination against its members.

Reed Lindsay in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, reported Monday that the
residents of a cinderblock-house neighborhood faced a 4 a.m. police
raid Sunday morning.  A man said police tied the hands of his
17-year-old son, dragged him into the sheet, and shot him dead.
 Another man said police executed his 45 year old brother in front of
his house.  The police chief confirmed that police did stage an
operation Sunday, but said no-one died.  Residents say there had
already been two police attacks in the past month, burning houses and
killing at least 8 people.

UN peacekeepers are investigating a string of summary executions
allegedly committed by police in Port-au-Prince's poor neighborhoods,
where support still runs high for Aristide, Lindsay said.

Yesterday Lindsay reported on the death of Haitian journalist  Abdia
Jean, a correspondent for a Miami radio station.  The top official of
the United Nations called the killing an intolerable attack on
democracy and rule of law.

According to witnesses, Jean was executed by police last month near
his home in a Port-au-Prince slum known as God's Village– ten days
after residents there reported summary executions by police.

Dictator Gerard Latortue has publicly denounced journalists who
report the crimes of his government, raising fears of more violence
against working reporters.

The manipulation of Haitian non-governmental organizations (NGOs) by
U.S. organizations supported by the U.S. government reveals how
governments prepare for mass murder and the crushing of democracy.
 Reeves summarized the CSHR report's details on the effect of aid
from the USAID-supported International Foundation for Electoral
Systems (IFES):

Extensive interviews with staff of CARLI, a Haitian human rights
organization, revealed that IFES funded CARLI during the lead-up to
the ouster of Aristide--  with technical support and as much as
$54,000 during 2003.  CARLI  staff revealed that it was instructed to
provide lists of alleged  Lalavals human rights violators, which were
then read out on  Haitian commercial radio.  (Twenty of the
twenty-five commercial stations and several of the Haitian daily and
weekly newspapers are owned by members of the "184" anti-Aristide
coalition.)  It is now feared that these lists have been used since
the coup to target Lavalas leaders for summary arrest, attacks on
property, and even death.  With IFES funding slowly removed during
2004, CARLI began to report on fraudulent human rights cases put
forward by the government, and on violent campaigns against Lavalas
and other community groups who refused to endorse the removal of
Aristide.  It investigated the claim of Latortue that Lavalas had
ordered decapitation of police officers in a campaign dubbed
"Operation Baghdad."  These accusations were picked up and spread
uncritically by Haitian and U.S. media.  CARLI now says no such
campaign by Lavalas existed, and that the only two decapitations of
police were committed by former Haitian army officers, not Lavalas.

Cause, and effect.  Lies and a complicit media, and death and the
destruction of self-rule.

This isn't in the past, this continues to happen right now.  We must
stop it.  The first step: telling the truth, and spreading it.  And
facing its horror.  The second will have to be mass action.  Thank
you, Lindsay and Reeves, and others like Randall White at
HatiAction.net - http://haitiaction.net/ and Marguerite Laurent of
the Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network, -
http://www.margueritelaurent.com/law/haitianlawyers.html for pushing
us into that first step.

source:_____________________________________
Haiti-news mailing list
Haiti-news@listhost.uchicago.edu
https://listhost.uchicago.edu/mailman/listinfo/haiti-news
(--includes an archive of Haiti News--)