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25408: (news) Chamberlain: How Haiti's Future May Depend on a Starving Prisoner (fwd)
From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>
(NYTimes, 16 June 05)
How Haiti's Future May Depend on a Starving Prisoner
By GINGER THOMPSON
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, June 11 - Once again, one man has become the center
of a political storm that threatens to foil this country's uphill struggle
for stability.
This time, it's not Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the former priest and
charismatic slum leader who was deposed last year by an armed uprising and
forced into exile. It is the man who rose and fell in Mr. Aristide's
shadow, his former prime minister, Yvon Neptune.
The former senator and radio talk show host has been jailed for a year
without charges under a new government installed by the United States and
is slowly starving himself to death in a minimum-security prison cell.
Last year, Haiti's new government arrested Mr. Neptune, 58, accusing him as
the mastermind of a massacre in a small northern town, St.-Marc. Prime
Minister Gérard Latortue argued that justice was the best way to heal
Haiti's wounds, and promoted the case as proof that no one, no matter how
powerful, could stand above the law.
But as the anniversary of Mr. Neptune's arrest approaches, his continued
detention has become an embarrassment to the Bush administration and a
symbol of the failures of what was supposed to be Haiti's transition to a
fully functioning democracy.
From prison, the former prime minister has denounced his case as a
"political witch hunt" aimed at seeking vengeance, not justice, against
those who supported Mr. Aristide. In February he started a series of hunger
strikes to demand that the government try him or set him free.
When a visitor went to the two-story house where Mr. Neptune is being held,
the former prime minister could not lift his bony body off a foam mattress
on the floor of his cell. He was wearing striped boxer shorts and listening
to music on a Walkman. His most striking feature was the lines of his rib
cage.
"I feel weak," he said barely above a whisper. "Some days I feel weaker
than others. But it was my choice to go on hunger strike."
The hunger strikes have sent Mr. Neptune twice to the hospital in critical
condition and brought expressions of concern, even outrage, about the
injustices that continue to plague Haiti's justice system. Only about 20 of
the more than 1,000 prisoners at the federal penitentiary have been
convicted of crimes; many have spent years awaiting trial.
But Jocelyn McCalla, executive director of the National Coalition for
Haitian Rights in New York, said much more is at stake than Haiti's justice
system.
Rather than a political achievement for Haiti's interim government, he
said, it has become a serious liability less than four months from the
start of important national elections.
And rather than uniting this violently polarized society, Mr. McCalla said,
the case against Mr. Neptune has seemed only to keep old political
hostilities festering, raising questions about the crimes of the past
government, and about the legitimacy of the current one.
"The Neptune case has raised hard questions about the legitimacy of the
United States' intervention in Haiti," Mr. McCalla said. "The intervention
was based on the premise that the United States was ousting a criminal
despot, namely President Aristide, who had used his powers to subvert
democracy, and that the interim government was going to establish rule of
law. That has not happened."
It is not easy to tell exactly what happened in St.-Marc. Estimates of the
dead range from 5 to 50. But according to rights investigators and reports
by the Haitian press, the violence had its roots in the upheaval that
ousted President Aristide.
That rebellion began in early February 2004 in Gonaïves, when a rag-tag
group of former soldiers attacked police stations and forced officers to
abandon their posts. Word spread rapidly to St.-Marc, where Aristide
opponents who called themselves Ramicos attacked the police station and set
up barricades.
Mr. Neptune arrived there in the presidential helicopter on Feb. 9.
Witnesses said he toured the city, summoned police officers back to their
stations and vowed in an angry speech that the government would not
surrender.
"What we are doing is to make sure that peace is re-established," he was
quoted as saying in a Haitian newspaper account. "We are encouraging the
police to get together with the population so that the cycle of violence
can cease. We ask all the population that wants peace to mobilize against
the spiraling violence."
In hindsight, some today see those words as giving the police a license to
kill. Others see them as a beleaguered prime minister's striving to give
confidence to his constituents.
Two days later, witnesses said, the presidential helicopter returned and
circled over the city. Police officers accompanied by pro-Aristide gunmen
called Bale Wouze (the Creole phrase describes a cleansing ritual) broke
through the barricades around a Ramicos stronghold, setting buildings on
fire and throwing people inside to burn alive.
No one claims to have seen Mr. Neptune. In fact, several days passed before
anyone dared to enter the area to search for survivors.
Terry Snow, a missionary from Tyler, Tex., who has worked in Haiti since
1986, recalled that the streets were littered with bodies. He was too
scared to take photos of them, he said, but he recalled seeing at least
seven in one house and three heads in an outhouse. Others told him there
were bodies on the hillside, being eaten by hungry pigs and dogs.
"By the time the police started looking for the bodies," he said, "they
weren't there anymore."
By then, neither was President Aristide. The growing instability in Haiti
brought immense pressure by the United States, and Mr. Aristide fled the
country for exile in Africa.
Mr. Neptune, however, refused to flee, and cooperated with the United
States by handing over power to Mr. Latortue, whose government repaid the
favor with a warrant for Mr. Neptune's arrest.
Three weeks ago, the emaciated prisoner was carried on a stretcher to his
first court hearing in St.-Marc and testified for several hours, the latest
sign that the interim government had begun to buckle under mounting
pressure and was seeking a way to expedite the Neptune case.
Months earlier, the government offered to fly Mr. Neptune for emergency
medical treatment to the Dominican Republic, but Mr. Neptune refuses to
leave Haiti until his name is cleared of wrongdoing.
[On Tuesday, Justice Minister Bernard Gousse resigned, a move that may
clear a final obstacle to Mr. Neptune's release.]
The Haitian government blocked numerous attempts by two reporters from The
New York Times to visit Mr. Neptune. Last Thursday, a reporter based in
Haiti who works for The Times posed as a family friend and was allowed to
visit him for seven minutes.
He was rail thin and could barely speak above a whisper. Still he was clean
and well groomed, his hair combed, his fingernails filed and his signature
goatee clipped in a neat line around his jaw.
He did not know for sure whether he was going to be released soon, he said.
But if he was, he said, he would go to the United States for a while to
recover with his wife and daughter. Still, he said he would not leave Haiti
for long.
"I will be back," he said. "I made the decision that I am never going to
live in exile. I am going to stay here. I think I can be a lot more useful
in Haiti than in the United States.
"Haiti needs me more."
(Régine Alexandre contributed reporting for this article)