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28819: Ayiti Chanje (news) Storm of Killing in Neighbourhood Has Wide Implications (fwd)
From: Ayiti Chanje <ayitichanje1804@hotmail.com>
HAITI
Storm of Killing in Neighbourhood Has Wide Implications for Nation
By
Michael Deibert
http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=34213
GRAND-RAVINE, Haiti, Aug 2 (IPS) - In this neighbourhood overlooking the placid
bay of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, a ghostly silence wraps itself around
the burned tin shacks, concrete hovels gutted and scorched black by flames, and
jagged rocks that form the paths of the hillside slum, spattered with blood.
"Go down there and you can see for yourself," says Brunet Pierre, a
silver-haired resident who lifts his orange t-shirt to reveal a fresh bullet
wound in his side. "There is nothing but death in this neighbourhood, no life
at all."
He motions toward a dirt path surrounded on all sides with still-smouldering
shacks, shell casings littering the ground, and scorched animals lying among
the ruins.
Across the mountaintop slums that ring Port-au-Prince's southern quarter,
collectively known as Martissant, hundreds of homes lie burned and abandoned.
A steady stream of refugees head daily down the Avenue Bolosse, their
belongings piled on their heads, fleeing the violence. Some 300 have taken
refuge in a nearby Baptist mission, where women and young children sleep on the
concrete floor of a steaming conference hall, sheltered from the summer rains.
"They were shooting a lot of people and everybody had to run," says Marie
Julien, a 44-year-old who fled Grand-Ravine with her six children and now sits
under the blazing sun in the mission's parking lot. "They burned our house. I
don't know why they are doing this."
Some residents say that gangs operating from the neighbouring zones of Ti Bois
and Déscartes have launched a campaign to purge the area of supporters of
Haiti's former president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was ousted amidst armed
revolt and street protests in February 2004.
After a period of calm following the February election of President René
Préval, a one-time Aristide ally who also served as Haiti's president from 1996
until 2001 and has since become estranged from the former priest, the violence
that often wracks the impoverished Caribbean nation of eight million appears to
have returned.
Neither Haiti's Police Nationale d'Haiti (PNH) police force, nor the 6,500
strong United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) peacekeeping
force seem able or willing to stop it. At least 30 people have been reported
killed in the past two weeks, though the true total could be higher.
In front of a shuttered 'borlette' (lottery bank) in Grand-Ravine, a group of
fierce-looking young men, pistols bulging from underneath some of their shirts,
sit swilling rum from a champagne glass.
"You can see what the gangs from Ti Bois have done," says the group's leader,
who says his name is Wilkens and is dressed in a New York Knicks basketball
jersey and a baseball cap pulled down over a scar that criss-crosses one
eyebrow. "They have killed people, burned down their houses, some police are
giving them weapons," he adds.
Many Grand-Ravine residents blame rogue elements within the PNH for involvement
in the killings, specifically charging a former police official with financing
and organising a gang known as Lamè Ti Machet (The Little Machete Army).
Residents charge that Carlo Lochard, who served as PNH director for the West
Department, of which Port-au-Prince is a part, under the interim government
(March 2004-May 2006), is involved in the recent violence. Lochard had been
dismissed from the PNH for alleged human rights abuses under the first Préval
administration, and reintegrated into the force under Aristide, where he served
as director of the police commissariat of the adjoining neighbourhood of
Carrefour, later transferred to the affluent Petionville suburb.
Lochard had been arrested for his alleged involvement in an August 2005 attack
on a football match in Martissant which saw over a dozen people killed, but he
was released from prison on the orders of Haitian judge Jean Perez Paul in
March of this year. Attempts to locate Lochard for comment in his
Carrefour-Feuilles neighbourhood proved unsuccessful.
"The situation started getting worse in Martissant in June," says Pierre
Esperance, executive director of the Réseau National de Défense des Droits
Humains (RNDDH) human rights group, whose organisation sent a letter to Haitian
Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis in late June denouncing the incipient
violence and warning the authorities not stand by and watch "the transformation
of these conflicts into war between the zones."
"Leaders of armed groups secretly (recommenced) their operations over the
weekend of June 3-4, 2006," the letter read. "Given the precedent of pervious
conflicts between (the neighbourhoods)...We deplore that no concrete action has
been implemented by the UN forces in collaboration with the PNH, up to this
date, to apprehend the leaders of these armed groups."
However, the people of Ti Bois and Déscartes have their own tales of woe.
"We have children and we are very afraid," says Ti Bois resident Destine
Jocelyn, as she nervously peers out from a square, concrete home on an
otherwise largely deserted path. "Those gangs from Grand-Ravine come to kill
us."
"We are suffering. They burn houses, they kill people with guns and machetes,"
says a young man amidst a group loitering at a small, abandoned bandshell
further up the path, marking the apex of a hill covered with gutted homes. He
throws a blue tank-top over his head to shield himself from the blazing son.
His leg sports a recently healed bullet wound.
Residents who gather around produce crude colour photos of at least half a
dozen bloody corpses, including that of a pregnant woman, whom they say the
gangs from Grand-Ravine have killed in the last year. Locals also tell of a
secret grave in a coconut palm grove where the gangs dump their victims'
bodies.
Recently, a gang leader named Dymsley "Ti Lou" Milien, who had been arrested in
connection with the murder of Haiti's most prominent journalist, Jean
Dominique, in April 2000, but who escaped from prison in February 2005, was
said to have been leading a gang based out of Grand-Ravine. The Lycée Jean
Dominique, a high school built in tribute to the journalist and straddling the
border between Grand-Ravine and Ti Bois, is now abandoned and riddled with
bullet holes, as if in mute testament that the violence that felled the
reporter is still a part of daily life.
Numbering fewer than a dozen, the Sri Lankan UN soldiers, interspersed in
groups of threes throughout Martissant, are unable to communicate with the
population as they lack a common language. No Haitian police personnel were
visible anywhere in the district.
"We cannot prevent that. We don't have an executive mandate," explains Edmond
Mulet, Head of Mission for MINUSTAH. As of yet, there has been no request made
by the Préval government for UN forces to support PNH personnel to stop the
violence in Matrissant. "We are here to support the government and we always
have to go in accompanying or supporting PNH actions."
The districts have a history of violent conflict between politico-criminal
elements and the politicians who act as their patrons. In June 2001, a gang
based out of Grand-Ravine and led by a local boss named Felix "Don Fefe"
Bien-Aimé, killed more than a dozen people in the adjoining Fort Mercredi slum.
Bien-Aimé was later appointed as director of the Port-au-Prince cemetery by
Aristide and was subsequently seized by Haitian police from a car he was
driving in September 2002, never to be seen again.
Some observers in Haiti view the violence in the district as a direct challenge
to Préval's authority and the security team he has surrounded himself with.
"President Préval's honeymoon was a short one and there is no doubt that there
are forces that want him to fail," says one member of Haiti's business elite
who has been largely supportive of the president since his return to office.
"Andresol is doing some cleaning up and there are some forces saying 'Over my
dead body.'"
Haiti's police chief Mario Andresol, who has a reputation of integrity in an
institution not otherwise known for the trait, had served as the head of the
country's judicial police during Préval's first tenure, charged with, among
other things, investigating high-profile crimes such as the Dominique murder,
and that of Jean Lamy, a former army officer thought likely to one day head the
PNH.
During his years in the force, Andresol survived at least two assassination
attempts, and was jailed for nearly a month without trial after Aristide's
return to office in 2001. Upon his release, Andresol went into exile in
Florida, and only returned to head the police last year.
Préval's closest advisor during his electoral campaign, former police official
Robert Manuel, served as Secretary State for Public Security in Préval's first
government, and was forced to flee the country in 1999 under direct threat from
thugs representing Aristide's Fanmi Lavalas Party. The man who now holds
Manuel's old job, Luc-Eucher Joseph, had previously served as Inspector General
of the PNH, before fleeing Haiti under pressure from Aristide-linked groups in
2000.
"We think he (Andresol) is an excellent professional," says MINUSTAH chief
Mulet. "He knows what he wants, he's a decent person (and) he's very committed
to fight against corruption within the police force at large and in Haiti
overall."
In the struggle for power, though, the population of Matrissant continues to be
caught in the middle -- defenceless victims of a battle they did not want and
cannot stop.
"We can't sleep, we are very hungry because we have nothing to eat," says Avile
Pierre, an elderly woman, as she sits among the exhausted refugees at the
Baptist mission. "Our homes are gone, and we don't have any money to go
anywhere else."
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