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Death Watch for Human Rights in Haiti:
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IJDH states that "for most of the dead, their assassination was the last in a long string of human rights violations. Only one in fifty is likely to have actually been convicted of committing a crime. The vast majority were likely arrested illegally without a warrant and detained on vague charges with no evidence in their file and no chance of judicial review of the detention."
During the forced removal of the elected President of Haiti, Jean Bertrand Aristide, the jails and prisons of Haiti were emptied. The unelected government has been filling them up with people associated with Aristide. In fact, the Catholic Church's Justice and Peace Commission estimates that there may be as many as 700 political prisoners in Haiti.
My own recent experience in Haiti bears this out. I have been in the Haitian National Penitentiary several times in the past four months. It is a massive old concrete prison located right in the heart of downtown Port au Prince.
It was there that I visited with Prime Minister Yvon Neptune and Minister of the Interior Jocelerme Privert in their cells. I visited Harold Severe, the former Mayor of Port au Prince, in the prison yard. I met with my client, Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste, several times in the warden's office. The conditions in the prison are very bad. And there are many, many people there who have never seen, and likely never will see, a judge.
I have witnessed the prison population grow more than 20% in my short time in Haiti. When I first visited the penitentiary, in late September of this year, there were 868 people in the prison, 21 of whom had been convicted of a crime. Prison officials advised me that "most had never seen a judge and do not know when they will see a judge." (See full report of Pax Christi USA Fall 2004 Human Rights Visit to Haiti at www.paxchristiusa.org ). In early December, nine weeks later, the penitentiary held 1041 people, 22 of whom had seen a judge.
Excerpt from the IJDH Report
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Ted Nazaire, 26, displays injuries sustained during abuse by authorities on the evening of December 1.
Impeded Investigations IHG officials have systematically impeded independent investigations of the December 1 PN massacre by making untrue statements, refusing to release information and intimidating witnesses. Nazaire reported two separate incidents of intimidation. On the night of December 1, two men Nazaire believe to be recently terminated prison guards, brutally beat him in the PN. During the attack, they asked him what he had seen earlier that day. He has extensive injuries including lacerations on his arms and legs, a severe injury to one ankle, baton marks on the back, several bumps on his head, and a swollen eye. After a judge dismissed the case against Nazaire, PN officials threatened him, telling him that if he spoke to the press he would have no place to hide and that they knew where he lived. On several occasions following his release, threats were made against his life. He went into hiding, and on the night he left his home, armed men wearing civilian clothing came to his home at 9:30 pm and made threats against him. Nazaire remains in hiding and his family has been forced to leave their residence. |
Right now in Haiti there are many prison cells holding over 20 prisoners. Many of these same cells have no beds and no toilets. The people in those cells have little chance of ever seeing a judge. Right now there are hundreds of families in Haiti who do not even know if family members in the national penitentiary are dead or alive.
The IJDH is correct, when it concludes in the final sentence of their investigation: "An effective investigation of the December 1 events becomes, therefore, not a test of investigative skill and resources as much as a test of investigative will."
These prisoners and their conditions are not hidden. Many are out in the open. The United Nations knows about them. The Organization of American States knows about them. The United States government knows about them.
Human rights are dying in Haiti, who will do more than watch?
Dostoevsky's quote above that "the degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons" is not an indictment of Haiti only. Dostoevksy is also speaking to the UN, the OAS, and to our government in the US, and ultimately to us.
(For a complete copy of the report on the Massacre at the Haitian National Penitentiary
go to the website of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti www.ijdh.org ).
Bill Quigley, a law professor at Loyola University New Orleans School of Law,
has visited Haiti four times in the last three months as one of the attorneys representing the recently freed Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste.