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27171: Craig (news) USA Today: Death of U.N. leader comes amid growing instability (fwd)
From: Dan Craig
Posted 1/8/2006 10:19 PM
Death of U.N. leader in Haiti comes amid growing instability
By Danna Harman, USA TODAY
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Business leaders called for a general strike Monday,
two days after the commander of the U.N. peacekeeping force in Haiti was found
dead of an apparent suicide.
The strike, orchestrated by Haiti's largest business association, was organized
before the death of Lt. Gen. Urano Teixeira da Matta Bacellar on Saturday. It
was called to protest growing lawlessness and to pressure the multinational
United Nations force under Bacellar's command to get tough with gangs.
Bacellar was found slumped over on the balcony of his Port-au-Prince hotel
room. His gun was found by his side.
A senior U.N. official told the Associated Press that Bacellar, 58, suffered a
self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity because he wasn't authorized to disclose information to the media.
The Brazilian commander's death comes amid growing anarchy in the capital,
particularly in the sprawling Cité Soleil slum. Bacellar took command of the
9,000-member U.N. force on Aug. 31. Security has deteriorated under his watch.
The U.N. mission, comprising troops and police from more than 40 countries, has
been under pressure to act more forcefully to confront armed gangs responsible
for a wave of recent kidnappings.
Seven peacekeepers have been killed in action in Haiti since the force was
deployed in June 2004, the United Nations says.
Bacellar's death also comes amid increasing tensions here over efforts to hold
national elections for the first time since President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
was ousted in a rebellion and fled the country nearly two years ago.
Haiti's interim government has postponed elections four times. On Sunday, the
Provisional Electoral Council set a new date — Feb. 7 — for first-round
balloting and a possible second round on March 19.
Thirty-five presidential candidates are running, along with 1,300 hopefuls
vying for 129 seats in parliament. Three-and-a-half million Haitians are
registered to vote. Campaign jingles have been running on the radio for months.
But other preparations are in shambles:
• Only half of those registered have received their voting cards, the election
commission says.
• At least a dozen politicians, including Charles Baker, one of the
front-runners, have complained that the 803 voting stations are too few and far
apart to meet demand.
• Tens of thousands of voters are listed at the wrong addresses, the election
commission says.
Security fears have soared as the number of kidnappings has spiked to an
average of 20 a day.
"The best you can say is that this process has been a political, technical,
logistical and financial fiasco," says Mark Schneider, senior vice president of
the International Crisis Group, a Washington-based group that monitors global
conflicts.
Harman is Latin America bureau chief for USA TODAY and /The Christian Science
Monitor.
Contributing: Wire reports.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2006-01-08-peacekeeper-death_x.htm