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28133: Hermantin(News)Film links Aristide to warlords (fwd)
From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
Posted on Mon, Mar. 20, 2006
Film links Aristide to warlords
A new feature documentary shows how gang members in Haiti allegedly became
former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's private army.
BY JOE MOZINGO
jmozingo@MiamiHerald.com
The images are raw as life in Haiti. Baby-faced teenagers rip through a slum in
SUVs, holding AK-47s out the windows. Gang chiefs put on police uniforms and
pile into a truck to defend the country's embattled president. They smoke
joints by candlelight and mull their conflicted feelings over what they are
doing.
The soon-to-be-released documentary, Ghosts of Cité Soleil, provides a
devastating on-the-ground look at how President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
allegedly enlisted and armed an array of slum gangs as his private militia.
Empowering the gangs set off a spree of killing and violence that not only spun
out of Aristide's hands and helped lead to his ouster two years ago, but
continues to overwhelm U.N. peacekeepers in Haiti and will likely be a
make-or-break issue for incoming President René Préval.
The documentary, directed by Danish filmmaker Asger Leth, was shot in the weeks
before and after Feb. 29, 2004, the day Aristide flew into exile while a
rag-tag band of insurgents closed in on Port-au-Prince.
Aristide, a former slum priest, first came to power in 1991 and was ousted by
the military seven months later. After U.S. troops restored Aristide to power
in 1994, he disbanded the army and allegedly armed gangs in the slum of Cité
Soleil to prevent another coup.
BROTHERS IN ARMS
The camera follows two brothers, 2pac and Bily, who were among Aristide's five
go-to warlords, and French relief worker Eleonore Senlis, who falls for 2pac.
Bily is an increasingly disillusioned follower of Aristide, who won reelection
in 2000 and remained a hero in Cité Soleil, near Port-au-Prince's seaport. 2pac
no longer trusts Aristide, but is scared to betray him.
''All of the chiefs work for him, you know, go [guard] his house,'' 2pac says
in one scene. ``And if I'm not going? I'm already dead. At this time, I don't
have no choice, baby, I have to go.''
In the next scene, he and at least eight other gang members wearing police
uniforms and black masks pull out of the slum waving their assault rifles from
the back of a pickup. Their mission that day is unstated.
Another scene shows 2pac rolling through the slum in an SUV, blasting his own
rap tape and greeting his neighbors like fans. In the back seat, a child, maybe
11 years old, clasps an AK-47. ''I have big boss in the government,'' 2pac
says. ``So they gave me this car to work in, you see?
He grabs a placard from the dashboard that says: Official Vehicle, Mayor of
Port-au-Prince.
''It's my pass,'' he says.
The intimate access that the two gang chiefs gave the cameraman, Milos
Loncarevic, a close friend of Senlis, was extraordinary, allowing for a rare
up-close and complex view of young men alternately portrayed as thugs or
defenders of Haiti's dispossessed.
It also all but shatters Aristide's claims that he never used the gangs to do
his bidding, and that he was kidnapped by U.S. troops on Feb. 29 and forced to
leave the country.
Senlis recounts that the gang members who regularly guarded Aristide's home
were told that night, for the first time, to go home just hours before he
boarded the plane.
''The clever ones knew what was happening,'' she said in a telephone interview
from Paris with The Miami Herald.
ORDERS FROM THE TOP
Senlis said orders to harass and attack Aristide's opponents usually came from
the president through his Interior Minister, Jocelerme Privert, and
Port-au-Prince police chief Hermione Leonard. The calls often came on Senlis's
own cell phone, she added.
She said she feels that Aristide exploited the gang members -- called chiméres
after a mythical monster or ghost -- and then left them to face the
consequences.
Ghosts captures this sentiment but leaves out some of the details, aiming at
mainstream audiences that may know nothing about Haiti's conflict yet might be
drawn by the powerful imagery and haunting score by former Fugee singer Wyclef
Jean. The producers, including Jean, are negotiating with a distributor to
release the documentary in theaters.
In the film, 2pac is 26 and pumped up with rap music and a glorified view of
war. He dreams of becoming a famous rapper like his icon Tupac Shakur. Bily is
more idealistic, once trying to be a legitimate activist for the slum but
ultimately running his own band of gunmen. He is coming to grips with the idea
that Aristide, who once gave a sense of hope and identity to Haiti's poor,
might betray them.
The brothers were orphaned as boys when their mother, a teacher, died.
Physically, they are not the jewelry-laden gangster-rappers they idolize, but
products of one of the most wretchedly poor areas in the world. They are tall
and thin, with arms dangling from wide-set shoulders. They shower with a
bucket, sleep in sweltering tin shanties and strut through the mud streets with
nothing more than flip-flops, shorts and their rifles.
They talk as if they were warriors. But they often come across as cocky
children.
Senlis is their only connection to the outside world, the one who warns them
that the rebels are coming and that Aristide might abandon them.
Tension grows between the brothers. When the gangs are distributing food from a
truck one day, a fight breaks out, and Bily shoots one of 2pac's soldiers in
the foot. In another scene, Bily rips a rifle from the hands of a 2pac
follower.
ORPHANED AGAIN
As Aristide's government collapses, their world grows more uncertain.
Senlis: ``So you want to fight to the end for Aristide?''
Bily, hesitantly: ``Yes, yes.''
But he knows the end is not far off.
Cruising the slum the week before Aristide's departure, Bily pulls up to one of
his fighters. ``Everything under control? he asks.
''We're just waiting to see what happens,'' the man says.
Bily tells him: ``I think the president might leave this week.''
Aristide left with his wife and their security guards, on a U.S. chartered
plane. The chimére were on their own. Since then, a war among gangs and then
firefights between gangs and U.N. Peacekeepers have ravaged Cité Soleil.
Nearly every character in the film -- including Winston ''2pac'' Jean Bart and
James ''Bily'' Petit Frere -- were shot to death.
A new feature documentary shows how gang members in Haiti allegedly became
former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's private army.
BY JOE MOZINGO
jmozingo@MiamiHerald.com
The images are raw as life in Haiti. Baby-faced teenagers rip through a slum in
SUVs, holding AK-47s out the windows. Gang chiefs put on police uniforms and
pile into a truck to defend the country's embattled president. They smoke
joints by candlelight and mull their conflicted feelings over what they are
doing.
The soon-to-be-released documentary, Ghosts of Cité Soleil, provides a
devastating on-the-ground look at how President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
allegedly enlisted and armed an array of slum gangs as his private militia.
Empowering the gangs set off a spree of killing and violence that not only spun
out of Aristide's hands and helped lead to his ouster two years ago, but
continues to overwhelm U.N. peacekeepers in Haiti and will likely be a
make-or-break issue for incoming President René Préval.
The documentary, directed by Danish filmmaker Asger Leth, was shot in the weeks
before and after Feb. 29, 2004, the day Aristide flew into exile while a
rag-tag band of insurgents closed in on Port-au-Prince.
Aristide, a former slum priest, first came to power in 1991 and was ousted by
the military seven months later. After U.S. troops restored Aristide to power
in 1994, he disbanded the army and allegedly armed gangs in the slum of Cité
Soleil to prevent another coup.
BROTHERS IN ARMS
The camera follows two brothers, 2pac and Bily, who were among Aristide's five
go-to warlords, and French relief worker Eleonore Senlis, who falls for 2pac.
Bily is an increasingly disillusioned follower of Aristide, who won reelection
in 2000 and remained a hero in Cité Soleil, near Port-au-Prince's seaport. 2pac
no longer trusts Aristide, but is scared to betray him.
''All of the chiefs work for him, you know, go [guard] his house,'' 2pac says
in one scene. ``And if I'm not going? I'm already dead. At this time, I don't
have no choice, baby, I have to go.''
In the next scene, he and at least eight other gang members wearing police
uniforms and black masks pull out of the slum waving their assault rifles from
the back of a pickup. Their mission that day is unstated.
Another scene shows 2pac rolling through the slum in an SUV, blasting his own
rap tape and greeting his neighbors like fans. In the back seat, a child, maybe
11 years old, clasps an AK-47. ''I have big boss in the government,'' 2pac
says. ``So they gave me this car to work in, you see?
He grabs a placard from the dashboard that says: Official Vehicle, Mayor of
Port-au-Prince.
''It's my pass,'' he says.
The intimate access that the two gang chiefs gave the cameraman, Milos
Loncarevic, a close friend of Senlis, was extraordinary, allowing for a rare
up-close and complex view of young men alternately portrayed as thugs or
defenders of Haiti's dispossessed.
It also all but shatters Aristide's claims that he never used the gangs to do
his bidding, and that he was kidnapped by U.S. troops on Feb. 29 and forced to
leave the country.
Senlis recounts that the gang members who regularly guarded Aristide's home
were told that night, for the first time, to go home just hours before he
boarded the plane.
''The clever ones knew what was happening,'' she said in a telephone interview
from Paris with The Miami Herald.
ORDERS FROM THE TOP
Senlis said orders to harass and attack Aristide's opponents usually came from
the president through his Interior Minister, Jocelerme Privert, and
Port-au-Prince police chief Hermione Leonard. The calls often came on Senlis's
own cell phone, she added.
She said she feels that Aristide exploited the gang members -- called chiméres
after a mythical monster or ghost -- and then left them to face the
consequences.
Ghosts captures this sentiment but leaves out some of the details, aiming at
mainstream audiences that may know nothing about Haiti's conflict yet might be
drawn by the powerful imagery and haunting score by former Fugee singer Wyclef
Jean. The producers, including Jean, are negotiating with a distributor to
release the documentary in theaters.
In the film, 2pac is 26 and pumped up with rap music and a glorified view of
war. He dreams of becoming a famous rapper like his icon Tupac Shakur. Bily is
more idealistic, once trying to be a legitimate activist for the slum but
ultimately running his own band of gunmen. He is coming to grips with the idea
that Aristide, who once gave a sense of hope and identity to Haiti's poor,
might betray them.
The brothers were orphaned as boys when their mother, a teacher, died.
Physically, they are not the jewelry-laden gangster-rappers they idolize, but
products of one of the most wretchedly poor areas in the world. They are tall
and thin, with arms dangling from wide-set shoulders. They shower with a
bucket, sleep in sweltering tin shanties and strut through the mud streets with
nothing more than flip-flops, shorts and their rifles.
They talk as if they were warriors. But they often come across as cocky
children.
Senlis is their only connection to the outside world, the one who warns them
that the rebels are coming and that Aristide might abandon them.
Tension grows between the brothers. When the gangs are distributing food from a
truck one day, a fight breaks out, and Bily shoots one of 2pac's soldiers in
the foot. In another scene, Bily rips a rifle from the hands of a 2pac
follower.
ORPHANED AGAIN
As Aristide's government collapses, their world grows more uncertain.
Senlis: ``So you want to fight to the end for Aristide?''
Bily, hesitantly: ``Yes, yes.''
But he knows the end is not far off.
Cruising the slum the week before Aristide's departure, Bily pulls up to one of
his fighters. ``Everything under control? he asks.
''We're just waiting to see what happens,'' the man says.
Bily tells him: ``I think the president might leave this week.''
Aristide left with his wife and their security guards, on a U.S. chartered
plane. The chimére were on their own. Since then, a war among gangs and then
firefights between gangs and U.N. Peacekeepers have ravaged Cité Soleil.
Nearly every character in the film -- including Winston ''2pac'' Jean Bart and
James ''Bily'' Petit Frere -- were shot to death.