October 13, 2004
Catholic Priest arrested in Haiti
Haiti Information Project (HIP)
Port au Prince, Haiti (HIP) Heavily armed units of
the Haitian National Police (PNH) arrested Catholic
priest Gerard Jean-Juste today at his parish of St.
Claire in the poor neighborhood of Petite Place
Cazeau. The U.S.-backed government of Gerard Latortue
accused Father Jean-Juste of importing arms and
harboring gunmen in his parish. Jean-Juste spoke by
telephone minutes prior to his arrest and denied any
involvement in the violence that has rocked Haiti
since September 30th when police opened fire on a
peaceful demonstration. “Everyone who knows me knows
that I do not support violence. This is a desperate
move on the government’s part to frighten people into
silence who they believe do not support them. This is
sad day for democracy in Haiti because without freedom
of speech there can be no democracy. I will pray for
them from my prison cell” Jean-Juste said before being
taken by police to an undisclosed location. Residents
reacted with anger and began throwing rocks and
bottles at the police as they left with the priest in
custody.
Jean-Juste’s arrest came hours after armed members of
the former military entered the capital of Port au
Prince in force. According to spokesmen for the former
military they have an undisclosed number of units
already in place in the capital and are planning
actions against “Lavalas bandits.” The United Nations
allowed the former military to enter the capital
without a challenge leading to charges by members of
Lavalas that “the United Nations is complicit in a
defacto political coup returning the former military.”
The arrest of Father Jean-Juste and the arrival of the
former military in the capital comes one day before
the 10th anniversary of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide’s return to Haiti in 1994 after spending
three years in exile. Former President Bill Clinton
dispatched 20,000 U.S. troops in “Operation Restore
Democracy” in 1994 and Aristide disbanded the military
that overthrew him in a coup on September 30, 1991
after his return to office.
Violence erupted in Haiti on September 30th after
police opened fire on unarmed demonstrators demanding
the return of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and
condemning political persecution of his Lavalas
political party. Aristide was ousted last February
29th amid charges he was kidnapped by U.S. Marines and
is living as guest in the Republic of South Africa.
On September 30th the police opened fire on unarmed
demonstrators provoking an attack against a unit of
the Unite de Securite Presidentielle (U.S.P), a
special security detail assigned to Interim President
Boniface Alexandre. Witnesses say members of the
special police unit were seen firing on demonstrators
and collecting bodies before masked gunmen returned
fire killing three and wounding a fourth who later
died in the hospital. Representatives of Aristide’s
Family Lavalas party have reiterated it was the police
who provoked the violence by firing on the unarmed
demonstrators.
The U.S.-backed government claims that the headless
bodies of three policemen were recovered and that
Aristide backers have launched a campaign imitating
Iraqis called “Operation Baghdad.” Representatives of
Aristide’s Family Lavalas party have denied the
allegations and the U.S.-backed government only
released the identities of the headless policemen at a
funeral held for them earlier this week. The bodies of
the headless men were reportedly cremated before
journalists and human rights groups were given an
opportunity to perform an independent examination of
the corpses to confirm the government’s claims.
Earlier this week UN soldiers and Haitian police
conducted numerous joint raids in several poor
neighborhoods in the capital known for their support
of Aristide. Hundreds have been arrested and few
weapons have been confiscated as the violence
continues for a second straight week.
=====
The Haiti Information Project (HIP) is a non-profit alternative news service providing coverage and analysis of breaking developments in Haiti.
Contact: haitiinformationproject@yahoo.com