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24388: Craig (pub) Haitian Police Open Fire... (fwd)



From: Dan Craig <sak-pase@bimini.ws>

March 1, 2005
Haitian Police Open Fire on Thousands of Marchers Calling for Return
of Aristide


• Listen to Segment - Download Show mp3 - Watch 128k stream :
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=05/03/01/1520246

Transcript

In Haiti, police opened fire on thousands of demonstrators who
marched through the Bel-Air neighborhood of Port-au-Prince Monday to
mark the anniversary of the coup that ousted President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide and call for his return. We go to Haiti to speak with
attorney Bill Quigley who attended the march. [includes rush
transcript]

As we continue our coverage of the anniversary of the coup in Haiti,
which was carried out one year ago this week. In a moment, we will go
to Port-au-Prince where police opened fire on a group of peaceful
demonstrators who were calling for the return of President Aristide.
But first, we turn to President Aristide himself. For months, he has
been living in exile in South Africa and has maintained a very low
profile. But a few days before the anniversary of the coup, Aristide
granted a rare interview to the famed Afro-French journalist Claud
Ribbe.


• "Aristide, 1 Year Later" - excerpt of documentary by French
journalist Claude Ribbe.

Aristide says, "I am the President of Haiti, even if I am not in
Haiti. I finish my term. I want to return to my country before time
goes by on the basis of a negotiated agreement or a dialogue so that
free, honest and democratic elections could be held, as stated by the
Constitution."

Arisitide also names two high level French emissaries who he says
threatened him in the days before his ouster to either resign or be
killed. He identifies them as Veronique de Villepin - the sister of
French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin and the French Foreign
Minister's appointee, Regis Debray.

Aristide maintains he was overthrown what he called a "modern-day
kidnapping" in the service of a coup d'etat backed by the United
States.

Meanwhile, in Haiti, police opened fire on thousands of demonstrators
who marched through the Bel-Air neighborhood of Port-au-Prince Monday
to mark the anniversary of the coup.

Chanting "Aristide for life," the thousands of protesters marched
peacefully to demand Aristide's return. As the demonstrators rounded
a corner at a Bel-Air intersection, police opened fire killing as
many as three people. In response, Democratic Congressmember Maxine
Waters of California sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleeza
Rice that expressing "shock and outrage" and urging and investigation
into the incident.


• Bill Quigley, a volunteer attorney in Haiti with the Institute for
Justice and Democracy in Haiti http://ijdh.org/ . He was at the march
yesterday in Port-au-Prince yesterday when police opened fire.

AMY GOODMAN: We go now to Port-au-Prince to speak with Bill Quigley.
He's there as a voluntary attorney with the Institute of Justice and
Democracy in Haiti. He was at the march yesterday when police opened
fire. Bill Quigley, welcome to Democracy Now!

BILL QUIGLEY: Thank you, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: It's good to have you with us. What happened?

BILL QUIGLEY: We had been marching with people through the
neighborhood, and it was a really joyous occasion, people singing and
dancing and jumping and shouting and holding up homemade signs and
chanting, "Bring back Aristide." And there was a lot of international
media there. There were U.N. troops that were every couple of blocks,
and it looked like it was going to be a very peaceful demonstration
and very safe. And then all of a sudden, about 30 minutes into the
demonstration, as thousands of people were coming down this street,
there was just a series of booms from the police and people scattered
and screamed. There were people down in the street. They showed
pictures on the television last night of somebody who had the back
half of their head blown off. There was other people who were beaten
by the police, but it was just shot after shot after shot, and these
booms just echoed through the streets as children were screaming and
crying and people diving for cover and running away, and it wasn't
actually ’til a lot of the U.N. troops came in that people felt even
safe enough to be able to venture back to the street to be able to
try to escape the neighborhood. It was a horrifying and totally
unprovoked massacre. People didn't have -- they had no guns, no bats,
no pipes, no rocks, no anything. They were holding up political signs
and dancing. There was a band. It was just a shocking display of an
attempt to repress human rights and democracy.

AMY GOODMAN: Bill Quigley, what about the U.N., as they call them,
the blue helmets? What were they doing?

BILL QUIGLEY: Well, they, really, before all this started, they were
just in the neighborhoods strategically placed, and people basically
ignored them, and the people felt that they were there, you know, to
ride herd on the demonstrators, but there were still many people, and
it was such a joyous thing. The people danced around the tanks and
waved the pictures to the blue-helmeted folks and their machine guns
and that, but it turned out that they are actually the ones who came
in to minister to the people who were shot, and they were the ones
that turned the neighborhood back safe enough from the police. The
police, there was a report of like a police tank-like truck running
down the street. There were the state police who were dressed all in
black and SWAT teams, helmets, ski masks, heavy guns, combat boots,
and the like, kicking people, shooting people and the like, and it
was just totally unprovoked. And as -- I was there with Father Gerard
Jean-Juste, who your listeners know well, and he said on the way
back, he said, “You see, Bill, you know, what we face trying to do a
nonviolent return of democracy in Haiti.” And he said, “The
challenges we face are just incredible. We need international support
to help us bring back our president, release our political prisoners,
and restore constitutional democracy in Haiti.” It was a horrifying
illustration of the abuses that are going on there right now with the
-- going on here right now back with the government that certainly
was selected by the United States.

AMY GOODMAN: Bill, who was the journalist who was shot?

BILL QUIGLEY: I am not sure who that person is, to tell you the truth.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Bill Quigley, I want to thank -- go ahead.

BILL QUIGLEY: I was going to say, there were people down in the
street, and they were dragging people away. It was mass, mass
confusion.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I want to thank you very much for being with us.
Bill Quigley, joining us from the streets of Port-au-Prince, talking
about the latest news out of Haiti: Police opening fire on
pro-Aristide demonstrators. If you want to go to our website at
democracynow.org, you'll see our comprehensive coverage of Haiti, the
first going through this year, particularly on the days immediately
following the coup.