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29499: Hermantin(News)Crime wave provokes vigilante killings in Haiti village (fwd)
From: leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
Posted on Tue, Nov. 14, 2006
HAITI
Crime wave provokes vigilante killings in Haiti village
As a crime spree hit a small Haitian village this summer, residents struck back
and lynched two suspects.
BY JACQUELINE CHARLES
jcharles@MiamiHerald.com
PLICHE, Haiti - The peasants bound the wrists of the neighbor they suspected of
two murders in this remote mountain village, and herded him to the side of a
deserted dirt road.
As the man wept, they grilled him about his alleged crimes. Then they handed
him a shovel, forced him to dig his own grave and hacked him to death with
machetes and picks.
''It was a lot of blows,'' recalled Renold Cherestant, 34, a Pliché resident
and radio reporter who witnessed the lynching, one of two in this region in
late July of alleged gang leaders suspected of leading a monthslong crime
spree.
The killings illustrate not only the growing outrage of Haitians with the
illegal armed gangs that have long terrorized the capital city of
Port-au-Prince, but the vulnerability of even remote and usually peaceful parts
of this troubled Caribbean nation.
It also points to the challenges facing President René Préval, six months in
power, as he struggles to return security to a country with a small and
ineffective police force, dysfunctional justice system and decades of political
and economic upheavals.
In the past two years, an unprecedented spate of for-ransom kidnappings and
other violent crimes has transformed life in the capital, where private
security firms now flourish and well-to-do businessmen and government officials
ride in bullet-proof vehicles with armed guards.
''What people want is peace,'' said Brinó Benice, 50, who moved from
Port-au-Prince to Pliché in hopes of finding the security that eludes both rich
and poor in the capital. ``There are areas in the country that are still
peaceful, but there are areas where we are seeing increased violence.''
Benice and others in the Pliché area believe their recent crime wave is related
to a summer spike in violence in Port-au-Prince that forced the Haitian
government and U.N. peacekeepers to beef up security in the capital. Neighbors
said the two Pliché lynch victims ran groups of young thugs who moved from the
capital.
U.N. FORCE
Scores of blue-helmeted U.N. troops were redeployed from the countryside to the
capital to help bolster the National Police, 32 additional street checkpoints
were established and 11 more armored vehicles were sent to patrol the capital,
said Edmond Mulet, overall head of the U.N. mission here.
The focused attention appears to be paying off. Police have entered previously
no-go parts of Cité Soleil, the capital's main slum and stronghold of gangs
well armed from the spoils of Haiti's political upheavals. Kidnappings are
trending down, and a campaign to disarm the gang members has netted about 110
people who turned in guns in exchange for food grants and job training.
But there remain occasional clashes between U.N. peacekeepers and residents in
Cité Soleil, as well as street protests by university students opposed to the
presence here of some 9,000 U.N. military and police personnel. Friday night,
gunmen killed two Jordanian peacekeepers.
''This is still a very fragile situation; it's wait-and-see,'' Mulet said.
Préval says the September lynching of a suspected kidnapper in the
Port-au-Prince slum of Bel-Aire, and the two in Pliché, show Haitians are fed
up with the ``weakness of the justice system.''
''If there was a justice system, it would not have arrived at this point,'' he
told The Miami Herald in an interview.
But fixing the problems won't be easy.
The National Police claims it has 7,476 agents -- others estimate 4,000 -- in
the nation of eight million. New York City, which has the same number of
residents, has 37,000 police officers.
All agree that police are under-equipped, poorly trained and often corrupt.
A report last week by the Washington-based International Crisis Group (ICG), an
independent think tank monitoring Haiti, called for vetting police officers and
urged the U.N. force here be expanded from 1,700 to 1,900 officers and include
anti-gang, SWAT and organized crime experts.
It also noted that millions of dollars have been spent in the past decade on
reforming Haiti's justice system, still mired in corruption and a huge backlog
of cases. Meanwhile, the country's laws are antiquated and the judges are
underpaid.
''You cannot do a stand-alone police reform. You have to do it parallel to a
justice reform so when the police do pick up people for violating the law,
there is a judiciary that is going to deal with the cases on the merits and not
based on who knows whom, or who paid whom,'' said ICG Haiti analyst Mark
Schneider.
Crime, he added, is not going to go away. But the government can restore the
population's faith so that ``they can look at the police and the justice system
as the answer.''
The residents of Pliché, 85 miles southwest of the capital, know all too well
the reality of Haiti's understaffed police force. When the crime spree in their
village began, they say, they met with police and a government prosecutor.
''The insecurity was bad. The people could not sleep at home, they were afraid.
They could not come to church,'' said The Rev. Ignace Coissy, a Catholic priest
who took part in the meetings.
PATROL REQUESTED
Residents asked for a police patrol in the Pliché area and perhaps even their
own police station. They were told neither was possible.
''I don't have a car, a motorcycle or even a bicycle,'' said Tertilian Adelson,
the officer in charge of the police station in Cavaillon, responsible for
Pliché and its surroundings. Cavaillon is a several-hours walk from Pliché on a
mountain road.
''There are times I borrow money, or take my own money to borrow a motorcycle
to go to the mountain to check on the population,'' Adelson said, adding that
his station has only six officers, including himself.
Adelson, who confirmed the two vigilante killings in Pliché, said that after
the incidents authorities immediately opened an investigation. It has gone
nowhere, he said.
''They've hidden the information,'' he said. ``They are afraid to talk. They
believe if they talk, there will be arrests and the bandits will return.''
Residents say one of the men lynched was a prison escapee known as Theophile.
He and the other victim, known as Rigaud, led several gunmen. In the killings'
aftermath, other gang members have left and peace has returned to this cocoa
and coffee farming community.
But Coissy, the priest, cautioned that the situation can quickly change.
''It's a dynamite that can explode at anytime,'' he said. ```The situation in
the country is out of control. The misery, the crime. Things like this will
happen more and more as long as people's conditions don't improve.''
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