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Second Report of
the Haiti Accompaniment Project
Human Rights Conditions in Haiti’s Prisons
July 30 – August 16, 2004
I. Introduction:
From July 30 to August 16, the Haiti Accompaniment Project (HAP) sent
a second delegation to Haiti to continue our investigation into the
current human rights situation and to provide international solidarity
to Haitian grassroots organizations. We found that despite enormous
pressure and intimidation, Haiti’s citizens remain firm in demanding
international respect for their sovereignty and the return of the constitutional
government.
The trip coincided with major
August 14th popular demonstrations in Port au Prince and Cap Haitien,
commemorating the beginning of Haiti’s 1791 revolution. These
widely reported events mark over 200 years that Haitians have fought
to defend their liberty.
Our human rights investigations in Port au Prince indicate that hundreds
of political prisoners, including elected government officials and members
of Fanmi Lavalas, continue to be held in prisons without legal justification.
90% of those we interviewed were arrested without a warrant. Many were
arrested by US troops or paramilitary forces. Many had been held for
four to five months without a court hearing. No prisoner with whom we
spoke had been tried and convicted of a crime, nor had anyone we spoke
with been given a trial date.
The treatment of these Lavalas officials and activists stands in stark
contrast to the treatment of FRAPH death squad leader and convicted
assassin Jodel Chamblain. In the early morning hours of August 17th,
Chamblain was acquitted of the 1993 murder of pro-democracy activist,
Antoine Izmery. During the brief overnight trial, one of eight known
eyewitnesses to the killing testified that he saw nothing; no other
witnesses appeared. The prosecution made no effort to present the wealth
of available evidence in this widely-known and documented case.
HAP concludes that arbitrary arrest and prolonged detention have been
used as instruments of political repression since February 29th. We
note with grave concern that in the three months since our trip, police
persecution of human rights critics has escalated, marking the worst
violence and increase in arrests since the February coup.
On October 2nd, 2004, Haitian police forcibly entered Haiti’s
Radio Caraibes and arrested two Senators and a former Deputy from the
Fanmi Lavalas party who had criticized the interim government during
a radio program. The warrantless arrests were in clear violation of
the detainees’ freedom of association and of expression. On October
13, 2004, Fr. Jean-Juste Gerard was dragged from his rectory at St.
Claire’s Catholic Church in Port au Prince by masked heavily armed
men. While no formal charges have been brought against Fr. Jean-Juste,
he has been held in prison for “disturbing the peace.”
We have every reason to believe that there are now hundreds more political
prisoners being held in Haitian jails. All reports indicate that the
patterns we observed – illegal arrest, prolonged detention without
trial – continue and in fact are worse. We hope this report will
serve to illuminate the nature of Haiti’s repressive judicial
regime.
II. Overview:
Our team recorded testimony from: 1) internally displaced persons in
Haiti, i.e. people who have been forced from their homes out of fear
for their lives and who are now living in other areas of the country
where they remain largely anonymous or have adopted false aliases; 2)
survivors, family members and witnesses of human rights violations,
including torture and summary execution; 3) political prisoners.
A HAP team which visited Haiti from June 29-July 9 found overwhelming
evidence of what can only be characterized as a human rights disaster
inside Haiti. Our findings reinforce these earlier findings, and in
particular detail a systematic pattern of politically motivated imprisonment.
We encountered and interviewed many people inside of Haiti’s lock-up
units and prisons who appear to be political prisoners – people
who have no legal justification for detention in their files and who
were involved in legal pro-democracy activities. All were either suspected
or actual Aristide supporters and/or members of Fanmi Lavalas. As with
death squad victims and internally displaced persons, it is difficult
to know just how many political prisoners there are in Haiti today,
especially because it is difficult to determine the numbers of prisoners
in general. However, based upon our prisoner interviews in Port au Prince,
we estimate the number of political prisoners is at least in the hundreds.
Among them are some of Haiti’s most well-known and respected political
leaders, artists and grassroots activists. At the time of our visit,
the main prison in Port au Prince, the National Penitentiary, housed
the following former officials of the Constitutional government: Prime
Minister Yvon Neptune, Interior Minister Jocelerme Privert, Mayor of
Port au Prince Herold Severe, General Director of Sanitation Paul Keller,
Director of Airport Security Rospide Petion, Chief of Presidential Security
Force Anthony Nazaire, Southern district delegate Jacques Mathelier,
and Parliament member Amanus Maette, to name a few. Annette Auguste,
a folksinger and grassroots organizer arrested illegally by US Marines
and held on spurious charges, had been transferred from the National
Penitentiary to the women’s prison at Petionville.
III. The Criminal Justice System
Our delegation focused on human rights conditions within Haiti’s
prison system. We concentrated our efforts on the prisons and lock-up
units in the capital, Port au Prince, where we visited the National
Penitentiary (NP), designated for men; Petionville Penitentiary (PV),
for women; and Delmas 33 (D-33), for juveniles.
We toured lock-up units in the police stations connected to PV and D-33.
At lock-up units and in the women’s prison at PV, we were able
to talk with prisoners while we stood on the tiers and they stood in
their cells. The prisoners at these locations could only talk to us
within the presence of other prisoners. This, potentially, limited their
ability to share information and ours to pose questions. At the juvenile
prison, we were closely accompanied by prison officials during our attempts
to talk with the children.We made at least half-a-dozen visits to the
National Penitentiary where we conducted private interviews and less
formal discussions with prisoners in the yard.
Altogether, we carried out 30 formal interviews at three facilities
with individual prisoners who represent a broad spectrum of Haiti’s
population, including a farmer, mechanic, shopkeepers, engineer, police
officer, dockworker, civil engineer, musicians, as well as government
delegates and heads of constitutional government departments. Their
ages range from 15 to 60 years old.
Four objectives guided our tours and prisoner interviews: 1) investigate
the extent to which constitutional requirements and due process are
being followed from arrest, detention, court and incarceration; 2) investigate
the nature of arrests and criminal charges; 3) develop an overview of
the size and social-economic-political composition of the prison population;
4) inspect the conditions of detention and incarceration.
A. Haitian Judicial System Lacks Due Process, Fails To Meet Constitutional
Requirements, and Serves to Detain Political Prisoners.
Haiti’s police and criminal justice system operate, in theory,
according to the laws and procedures established by Haiti’s 1987
Constitution. This Constitution was designed, in part, as a response
to the arbitrary and brutal exercise of State power under the Duvalier
dictatorship. The Constitution thus contains very precise limitations
on the powers of the State to arrest, detain, and incarcerate. Following
are the constitutional mandates that we examined:
* people may not be arrested between the hours of 6 PM and 6 AM, except
if the police see a crime being committed or are in hot pursuit;
* arrests must be accompanied by a written warrant, with a copy given
to the arrestee;
* detainees may not be held beyond 48 hours unless they are brought
before a judge who determines that there is legitimate cause (prosecutors
must make the argument) for ongoing detention and for a formal police
investigation;
* within 90 days of their incarceration, citizens must be scheduled
for trial or released;
* indigent citizens are guaranteed legal representation by the State;
* citizens cannot be prosecuted for crimes that are not specifically
defined by Haiti’s criminal code.
In our meetings with prisoners, family members and human rights organizations,
HAP developed an extensive and detailed understanding of each step in
the Haitian Justice System: from arrest, to formal hearing, through
inspection, to release or trial – or as in most cases –
prolonged detention. We found significant evidence of illegal arrests.
Even when arrest warrants were presented, they often contained an array
of arbitrary charges. In many cases, no charge was made at all during
or after arrest. Virtually no prisoner received a hearing (the equivalent
of an arraignment) within the constitutionally mandated 48 hour period
following arrest. Most prisoners had made at least one appearance before
an investigating magistrate during their months in detention. Often,
the pattern of questions before the investigating magistrate did not
correlate to given charges. HAP learned of several cases where the investigating
magistrate ordered a prisoner released, only to have such orders blocked
by the Ministry of Justice or Haitian Police (PNH).
1. Arrests target leaders of Fanmi Lavalas and supporters of
President Aristide
Arrest and detainment in the period following February 29th targeted
peasants; the chronically under- and unemployed; residents of marginal
communities; and the politically active. Moreover, a number of prisoners
we interviewed were former members of the constitutional government.
They include former government ministers, members of Parliament, former
mayors and other civic officials, former police, and individuals alleged
to have a personal connection with President Aristide.
Given the wholesale absence of trials for prisoners since February 29th,
it is logical to conclude the de facto government intends to keep these
political prisoners under prolonged detention. Indeed, the disparity
between the highly irregular re-trial and acquittal of former FRAPH
leader Jodel Chamblain for the murder of Antoine Izmery, versus the
dozens of former officials who do not even have a trial date underscores
the partisan approach to “justice” by the de facto government.
2. Arrests violate the Constitution
We documented a number of illegal arrests, based on two clear violations
of the Haitian Constitution of 1987: absence of arrest warrants and
arrest at unconstitutional hours.
Arrest warrants were presented in only three out of the twenty-nine
cases where we were able to make a determination. The three arrest warrants
were reserved for officials in the highest levels of government –
ministers and deputies. Thus, 90% of arrests we examined were executed
without a legal warrant from a Prosecutor or investigating magistrate.
Six out of thirty prisoners reported their arrests were conducted in
the middle of the night. While night-time arrests may not offend the
sensibilities of the casual reader, the Haitians we talked to were uniformly
outraged at this violation of their constitution. It’s not hard
to appreciate the significance of this provision in the constitution,
given Duvalier’s brutal Tonton Macoutes, who often operated in
the dead of night.
3. Foreign Soldiers and Irregular Forces Make Arrests Along
With Haitian Police
In our survey of men at the National Penitentiary, HAP documented an
array of forces making arrests. While regular police forces of the Haitian
Police (PNH) were involved in the majority of cases (at least 20), special
forces were employed in the arrests of at least three higher level government
officials. In some of these arrests, the PNH was accompanied by foreign
troops, such as US Marines, Canadian or other UN soldiers. In other
arrest situations, foreign or irregular forces conducted arrests themselves,
including US Marines and paramilitary forces. One arrest, that of Presidential
Security Chief J. Anthony Nazaire, is noteworthy because he initially
revealed his location to US federal agents in order arrange a meeting
with them, only to be greeted by members of the Front (Front pour la
Reconstruction Nationale), the political party of coup leader, Guy Phillipe.
The circumstances surrounding Nazaire’s arrest suggests coordination
among US, foreign and Haitian security forces.
4. Prisoners Were Often Brutalized and Sometimes Tortured Following
Arrest
There are incidents of official terrorism against political prisoners
which are noteworthy because they suggest a level of cooperation between
regular police and irregular paramilitary forces (i.e. the Front). Former
police officers (now incarcerated) with whom we met confided that the
DCPJ (Directeur Central de la Police Judiciare) served as a clearing-house
for torture and assassinations.
In some cases, security forces terrorized arrestees by threatening to
kill them. Amanus Maette, a former Lavalas deputy from St. Marc, reported
that he was picked-up at his house by masked men wearing black uniforms.
They cuffed his hands, chained his legs and put a bag over his head.
They drove him around and threatened to kill him unless he gave-up the
names of Lavalas members. They deposited him at the offices of the Director
of Judicial Police (DCPJ) where he was questioned by Director Michael
Lucius. Four hours after his initial arrest, Maette reports he was re-cuffed,
re-chained, again hooded, and taken away in a truck. Security forces
again threatened to kill him for not talking, before eventually taking
him to the Petionville police station.
Roland Dauphin, former customs worker from St. Marc, was “kept
off the books” of Delmas 33 police lock-up unit for four days
after what he described as a kidnapping by paramilitary troops. He states
he was twice taken out of the jail in the middle of the night during
this period, cuffed and hooded, and driven around. He assumed he would
be killed. The car stopped and he was ordered to get out and lay on
the ground. Shots were fired at the ground around his body without actually
striking him.
5. Police Use Arbitrary Charges
Arbitrary charges were widely used by arresting authorities. In two
cases, we identified prisoners who were told their detention was not
an “arrest.” Deputy Amanus Maette was told his detention
was an “interpolation.” Five months later, he had yet to
make his first appearance before a judge. The Director of Sanitation
for Port au Prince was initially told his case was “under study,”
and no specific charge could be given at the time. Another was shown
a blank warrant, with his name but no charge listed. In five of the
cases we studied, individuals were swept off the street and later accused
of “gang affiliation.” The “gang affiliation”
charge was also applied to Anthony Nazaire, Chief of Presidential Security,
and Harold Severe, Mayor of Port au Prince. In five other cases, prisoners
still had no knowledge of the charges pending against them, even after
months in prison.
Others have been charged with unsubstantiated crimes like arson, kidnapping
and murder - a farmer accused of assassinating a man he doesn’t
know, a businessman accused of kidnapping a man who is alive and well
in the Bahamas, a musician charged with ransacking a money transfer
office whose owner disavows the charge. The failure of the Haitian Judiciary
to provide carefully-considered, formal and legal warrants in so many
cases seems to contribute to the propagation of bogus charges.
6. Trial by Media
A number of prisoners commented on evident media bias and the phenomenon
of “trial by media” in which radio stations propagate rumors
and criminal accusations against political activists. These media outlets
tend to be owned by or connected to members of the anti-President Aristide
forces like the Group of 184. Typically, a caller makes an unsubstantiated
charge against someone on a call-in radio show. This happened to Annette
Auguste when a Haitian national called in to RadioVision2000 with the
sensational story that she had witnessed Auguste sacrifice a baby in
a ceremony back in March 2000. Though the story contained significant
contradictions, and unsubstantiated facts, the allegation was widely
repeated in the media, and became the pretext for the Minister of Justice
to enforce her detention.
Another imprisoned Lavalas supporter, musician Bruno Jean Renald (“Ti
Pay”), described a media campaign in which he was accused over
the radio of having ransacked a money transfer station. Despite the
owner’s disavowal of the media account, the accusation stood,
and the campaign continued unabated for some three months eventually
leading to his arrest.
Both the Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior reported that radio
stations spread rumors about their alleged role in violent disruptions
in St. Marc, 45 miles northwest of the capital city Port au Prince,
in mid-February in which members of the opposition and Fanmi Lavalas
were killed. First they were accused of being the “intellectual
authors” of the violence. As accounts mushroomed, the story was
amended to say the Minister of the Interior participated in the killings.
Media stories virtually accused, tried and convicted these political
activists for crimes which either never occurred or for which there
was no evidence.
7. Prisoners Do Not Receive a Formal Hearing
Prisoners have rarely been afforded a formal hearing within the constitutionally
mandated period of 48 hours. Of the twenty three cases where HAP got
sufficient information to compare arrest date with first court appearances,
only three met this time requirement. The average time from arrest to
prisoners’ first appearance before a judge was 30 days (with a
range of 1 to 151 days). This average does not include the six individuals
who report having never made an appearance. Thus, 20% of our sample
had not yet seen a judge. These individuals had been incarcerated for
an average of 120 days.
8. Prisoners Held Beyond the Period of Inspection
Half of our sample group had been incarcerated more than 90 days, and
thus had exceeded the period of investigation -- the time given to the
judge to investigate the case and determine whether sufficient evidence
exists to proceed to trial, or whether the prisoner should be released.
In no case did we meet a prisoner who had been tried and convicted,
who was in the process of trial, or who had even been given a trial
date.
9. Orders for Release Blocked by Police and Ministry of Justice
HAP heard testimony from three prisoners who had received an order of
release from a judge -- only to have their release blocked by the police
or judiciary. In a case dating back to early February, Judge Bredy Fabien
ordered dockworker Gabriel Excellent released, citing the absence of
an arrest warrant. Excellent was re-arrested by police as he left the
prison. Twice more, he appeared before different judges who ordered
his release, but each time the order was blocked. Musician Bruno Jean
Renald, known as “Ti Pay” was ordered released in mid-May
for lack of evidence, but his release was blocked by Prosecutor Pierre
Daniel Audain. A month later, Renald went before the same judge, who
again recommended his release. At the time of our interview, Renald
remained in prison and had no further court appearances scheduled.
Political prisoner Jacques Mathelier, former Lavalas government delegate,
was questioned at the end of June about an alleged arson. Mathelier
states the judge informed him a few weeks later that there was no basis
for the charge and he would be released. Mathelier believes the de facto
Attorney General blocked the release at the behest of his boss, Bernard
Gousse, de facto Minister of Justice. Exant Pierre Sylvain also had
an order for release, but stated that it’s “impossible”
for the interim government to let him go. Judge Bredy Fabien reportedly
told former Presidential Security Chief Anthony Nazaire, former Sanitation
Director Paul Keller, former Airport Security Director Rospide Petion
and former Port au Prince Mayor Harold Severe he could find no evidence
of criminal activity. However, Fabien indicated political pressure prevented
him from ordering their release. “It’s not up to me. You
must remain in prison.” The main obstacle for political prisoners
would appear to be political opposition from the interim government.
10. Judge’s questions appear to be a Political Witchhunt
In their various appearances before Judge Bredy Fabien, prisoners relate
that the line of questioning bears little if any relationship to their
charges. For example, Nazaire was asked the following questions:
“Were you born in Port Salut?” [President Aristide’s
hometown]
“Is it true you are Aristide’s cousin?”
“Did Aristide employ you to deal drugs from the National Palace?”
“Who gave money to have the demonstration in the street?”
At no time did Fabien question him about “gang affiliation”
-- his alleged “crime.”
Judge Fabien asked similarly broad questions of Harold Severe:
“Who in the National Palace used to give money to the chimere
to be part of the rally?”
“Did Aristide ever give you weapons to distribute to people?”
“Where were you on 5 Dec?”
Severe indicated that all prisoners receive the same line of questioning
from Fabien. This line of questioning confirmed our impression that
a political witchhunt was underway.
11. US military forces, federal agents and the US Embassy participate
in illegal arrests, interrogation and threats against political prisoners
The testimony of prisoners exposed disturbing details about the US role
in arresting political prisoners. The influence and involvement of US
authorities persisted in the days, weeks, and months following the coup,
up to the present date.
US Marines were deployed to arrest Haitians and deliver them to prison.
The best known example was the illegal warrantless midnight arrest of
Annette Auguste (So-Anne). US Marines broke into her home, put hoods
on family members including four children, and made them lay down on
the floor. The marines ransacked rooms, took possessions, and even shot
pet dogs dead in the yard. Auguste was initially taken along with other
family members to the US barracks.
US Marines took custody of other prisoners, sometimes for extended periods.
Four key government officials reported they were maintained under the
authority of US Marines in highly irregular detention on an offshore
boat for 20 days. Assistant US Ambassador Luis Moreno along with Police
Director Leon Charles reportedly supervised the arrest and detention
of these four men (see Appendix, Prisoner Narratives).
According to prisoner accounts, the DEA and FBI interrogated prisoners
regarding allegations of drug dealing. US Marines reportedly controlled
a portion of the National Penitentiary where one prisoner was isolated
and interrogated for an entire month.
12. Allegations of inappropriate and illegal behavior by human
rights organization
In our first report, HAP described the role played by the National Coalition
for Haitian Rights (NCHR) in the arrests of members of Fanmi Lavalas.
This delegation found in addition that NCHR played a role in the interrogation
of political prisoners.
The delegation spoke with prisoners who were visited by Marie Yolene
Gilles of NCHR. Gilles allegededly visited several prisoners on the
pretext of protecting their human rights. She inquired about their injuries,
especially in cases where they were beaten during arrest. When she arrived
at the Petionville police station to interrogate the Director of Airport
Security, Rospide Petion, after his arrest, Petion states that she said
in the presence of reporters, “We know you crashed the radio tower.”
According to Roland Dauphin, customs worker, Gilles sought him out at
the Delmas 33 police station, offering a deal for information. She reportedly
urged him to implicate the Prime Minister and Minister of the Interior
in an alleged massacre of Aristide opponents in St. Marc, promising
him money and safe haven in the US. When he balked, Dauphin reported
that Gilles made a phone call to show she had the authority to deliver
the deal. According to Dauphin, Gilles spoke English during the telephone
call and identified the other party as a US Embassy official. Dauphin
had nothing to say, and Gilles left her business card in case he “changed
his mind.”
Deputy Amanus Maette told us that Gilles offered him a similar bribe.
According to Maette, she pledged to secure his release, provided he
would “name names.”
B. Prison Conditions
1. Police and Guard Brutality
In separate interviews with prisoners, we uncovered testimony that reveals
the possibility of institutional links between the Haitian police force
and death squad activity. We interviewed one former police officer who
had been part of elite anti-terrorist and presidential security units
and who had been trained by the US State Department. This officer was
arrested, he argued, because of his extensive experience on the force
and because he worked for Aristide. He disclosed to us that DCPJ officers,
operating out of a station near the Port au Prince airport, were involved
in political arrests and killings utilizing black bags placed over people’s
heads. Another prisoner reported that police officers abducted him,
placed a black bag over his head, and terrorized him while they shot
and killed others in his presence. He further stated that he, along
with other prisoners, endured extensive torture at the hands of Anti-Gang
unit police, including the head officer, in the Central Police Station
in Port au Prince. He identified two of these police (not the head officer)
as being part of the group of “arresting officers” who terrorized
him and killed others. He stated that other prisoners—including
former police officers-- could verify this claim. Other prisoners also
reported beatings by guards at the NP and the PV lock-up unit. Prisoner
testimony later in this report recounts details about some of these
incidents.
It is not encouraging to learn that the US State Department initially
selected a US prison consultant, Terry Stewart, to oversee reform of
Haiti’s prisons. Mr. Stewart’s previous position was consultant
to Abu Ghraib. During the time he served as director of Arizona’s
prison system (1995-2002), the US Justice Department brought a suit
charging male prison guards with rape, sodomy and assault against fourteen
female inmates.
2. Overcrowding
After the February 29th coup, prisoners throughout Haiti were released
when armed factions opposed to the constitutional government laid siege
to police stations, lock-up units, and prisons. Estimates place the
prison population at that time at over 3,000. At the time of our visit,
we found the prisons were full. Very few persons in detention before
had been re-apprehended. Instead, the prisons (-- those not damaged
in the coup) were filled to capacity with an astonishing number of former
constitutional government officials as well as ordinary citizens who
had been rounded up and jailed for months, many without warrants or
hearings. Reports out of Port au Prince for the months September and
October 2004 indicate that hundreds more arrests have occurred since
our visit.
Overcrowding was rampant in both the lock-up areas and prisons. In NP,
there were reportedly 730 prisoners as of August 2004. This population
was housed in 26 “dormitories,” cells about 12 by 20 feet
in size. Some twenty to thirty men were being held in these cells. While
we walked through the cell blocks, we saw men so tightly packed that
people were forced to sleep in shifts. There was not enough space for
everyone to lie down simultaneously. Many did not have a bunk bed, let
alone a mattress. Prisoners are locked up from 4PM until 9AM daily.
Ventilation was atrocious and the heat intense. In one cell block, we
saw an older man whose extreme emaciation and physical symptoms suggested
that he had tuberculosis.
Similar conditions of overcrowding were evident in the juvenile prison.
There, we found 24 boys distributed in three small cells that opened
directly via barred doors onto an outside dirt compound surrounded by
walls topped with barbed wire. Their ages ranged from 14 to 17 years
old. The cells had no toilets, lights or windows. We saw no water. The
sun beat down on the open cells. Most of the children lacked mattresses
and blankets; they were sleeping on bare floors. There were small “pee”
jars on the floor in the corner. The smell of urine and waste was pervasive.
The boys are released two hours a day into the enclosed area outside
the cell where there are concrete benches and a table.
These children have no hope of release without advocacy. They are either
orphans, or their family is unaware of their circumstances. They have
no visitors and no legal support. The system itself prevents them from
having a court hearing because currently there is no juvenile judge.
Conditions at the women’s prison at Petionville were similar.
During a tour of the facility, we spoke with political prisoner Annette
Auguste (“So Anne”), outside her cell. She told us about
conditions for the 48 women prisoners. Until two weeks prior to our
August 11th visit, the prison housed both men and women. Women slept
seven to a cell designed for four occupants. After all but three men
were transferred to another facility, there are four women to a cell,
but conditions remain difficult. The cells have no toilets, no windows,
no water and no electricity. It is very hot. The women are locked down
from 5PM until 5AM. No outdoor recreation is permitted. Visiting is
two hours, twice a week, but children cannot visit. There were women
who had been jailed for up to four to five months without a hearing
or representation by attorneys. Some report they were not able to make
phone calls because guards refuse them access to a telephone.
3. Absence of Work and Educational Programs
Recreation time at each facility varies from two to four hours outside
the cells each day.
There were no work programs at the facilities we visited. According
to prison administrators, prior to the February 29th coup, such programs
were offered. The juvenile cells at Delmas 33 face a small courtyard
containing a blackboard and a few chairs, but there is no educational
program. The elected government built a separate holding facility for
juveniles and increased funding for juvenile detainees, but during the
coup, this facility was ransacked and destroyed. Since the coup, a part
of Delmas 33—which had not formerly been a site for juvenile detention--
was designated for incoming juvenile arrestees at the recommendation
of the UN Human Rights Officer.
Delmas 33 staff member Jude Polone stated that since February 29th,
the de facto government had reduced funding for these juveniles by 50%.
Currently, the State provides approximately 20 cents per day for each
juvenile detainee. This funding is all that is available to cover costs
of juvenile incarceration (education, social programs, etc.) except
for food.
3. Inadequate Nutrition and Health Care
At the juvenile facility, prison staff showed us the weekly menu. Meals
are served twice a day, consisting of rice and/or corn meal and beans.
Meat is served twice a week. Similar food is provided at all facilities
we visited. The prison staff said they could not afford to provide the
juveniles with fruit, vegetables, milk or juice.
Safe drinking water was an important health issue in all facilities
visited by the delegation. Prisoners are provided the same tainted water
for drinking and bathing. Only those whose families can afford to purchase
and bring bottled water have access to clean water. At the juvenile
prison, guards showed us stores of bottled water in the storage facility,
but we saw no evidence the water was being distributed to the children.
In several sites, prisoners told us that they received what appears
to be the same pill for medical “treatment,” regardless
of the problem. Moreover, we encountered evidence of prisoners not receiving
appropriate treatment for serious wounds and health ailments.
IV. Conclusion: Haitian Judiciary Succeeds as an Instrument
of Political Repression
The preponderance of evidence demonstrates the failure of the interim
government in the arena of the judiciary. The police administrators
we met with blamed this on the chaos following the events of February
29, concluding that the judiciary is overloaded with cases. If this
judiciary were merely overloaded, we would expect to find at least some
cases at each step of the judicial process, as the system worked within
its limited capacity. That was not the case. Rather we found case after
case stalled (or blocked) in the early stages of the judicial process.
HAP found a disturbing lack of due process. Few prisoners had received
a formal hearing, several prisoners had been ordered released but were
in fact detained, and no one we interviewed was in the process of trial.
Furthermore, the concentration of political prisoners, as well as prisoners
who represent the base of Fanmi Lavalas, is persuasive evidence of a
highly biased judicial system. HAP concludes that arbitrary arrest and
prolonged detention have been used as instruments of political repression
since February 29th.
Appendix: Prisoner Narratives
Part of our mission is to tell the stories of prisoners who would otherwise
be silenced. Some are political prisoners, persons who have been arrested
and detained because of their political views, activism and/or role
in the constitutional government; others are representative of Haiti’s
poor - political victims randomly targeted by violence and repression.
They agreed to speak with us, to use their names and stories, in order
to expose the unconstitutional and illegal circumstances of their arrests
and detention and to move the international human rights community to
action.
These accounts are instructive of the level of coordination that existed
between a variety of US and Haitian agencies. US embassy officials,
US Marines, Haitian police and paramilitary forces, de facto government
officials, Haitian media and human rights groups associated with the
Group of 184 have all played a role in the political repression.
The Four Boat “VIPs”
Two weeks after the coup, four members of President Aristide’s
government were arrested, all within about 48 hours. None was served
with a warrant or legally charged with a crime at the time of their
arrest. All are united by a harrowing tale of detention and psychological
torture while in US custody. All consider themselves political prisoners.
The first is Jacques Anthony Nazaire, Chief of the Presidential Security
Force, who stated that he received a message to contact US federal agents
on Friday, March 12th, less than two weeks after the coup. Nazaire arranged
to meet US agents, but instead encountered members of the Front and
Haitian police who placed him under arrest. His car and cash were taken.
He was later shown a warrant charging him with “gang affiliation.”
Around midnight, Nazaire reports that Assistant US Ambassador Luis Moreno
interrogated him at the Petionville police station, attempting to get
information about alleged drug dealing, demanding “Which drug
dealer used to give you money? How was the deal done?” The Assistant
Ambassador allegedly punched Nazaire on his badly injured hand before
leaving.
The following morning, Paul Keller, General Director of Sanitation,
was detained by Haitian Special Forces police at Toussaint L’Ouverture
Internationale Aeroport, on his way to a dermatological appointment
in Boston, MA. Keller told us that after clearing the airline check-in,
he was stopped at the boarding gate by officers who informed him, “You
can’t leave, because you’re the Director General.”
Though no arrest warrant was presented, the police explained, “We’re
just starting a case against you – it’s a study case.”
Then the officers mentioned 5 Dec, and asked if he knew Zap Zap (“Zap
Zap” leads a RahRah band which had been hired to play on the streets
outside the State University during the protest there). They confiscated
Keller’s passport, cash, identification papers and US Green Card.
Keller was also taken to Petionville police station.
Rospide Petion, who headed Airport Security, told HAP interviewers that
he was captured Sunday morning, March 14th, while in hiding, by a group
of approximately 15 CIMO (SWAT team) officers. Petion reports that they
forced him to the ground, beat him, and loaded him into one of their
two vehicles. They put a black sack over his head and demanded $50,000
to set him free. De facto Police Director Leon Charles was informed
by phone that Petion was in custody. At the police station, Charles
interrogated Petion, saying he would be given a chance if he informed
authorities where Lavalas members were hiding. Petion replied that he
didn’t know, whereupon Charles threatened him with prison. Petion
protested that he was arrested without a warrant, to which Charles scoffed,
“Aristide is gone now.” Eventually, Petion reports he was
taken to another room where he was told to speak with a representative
of NCHR and the media. When he refused, Leon Charles reappeared, demanding
to know, “Why are you refusing to speak to them? It’s for
your own good.” Marie Yolene Gilles, NCHR, then took over the
interrogation, saying, “We know you crashed the radio tower.”
At a later point, journalists approached him, inquiring about his alleged
role in the case of the radio antenna. Petion refused to speak with
them, asserting his rights as a prisoner.
Harold Severe was elected Mayor of Port au Prince in May 2000, and strongly
identifies with Fanmi Lavalas. He reported that he was picked-up at
the airport by members of the civil police Sunday afternoon en route
to Miami to visit his mother. No arrest warrant was produced. Instead,
he was told his charge was, “Being a member of the Aristide Government.”
Severe told HAP interviewers that police asked him for a bribe, and
later took his cash. Shortly thereafter, four masked men in black uniforms
carrying M-16 rifles took custody of Severe and brought him to Petionville
police station.
Within an hour, a convoy of nine vehicles pulled up. All four prisoners,
who at the time of their arrests had in common only their respective
positions in the Constitutional government, report that they were handcuffed
and summoned from their cells to leave the prison. They counted seven
cars bearing Corps Diplomatique plates from the US Embassy. Two PNH
vehicles completed the line-up. A helicopter hovered overhead. The men
recognized Assistant US Ambassador Luis Moreno and Police Director Leon
Charles. US Marines and Haitian police provided security. All four were
put in the same Embassy vehicle. They were not told their destination,
and they feared for their safety. The convoy took off, followed by the
helicopter buzzing low overhead. At first, they guessed they were headed
to the National Penitentiary in downtown Port au Prince. When the car
took the wrong turns for the penitentiary, they assumed they might be
going directly to the US Embassy. But the convoy continued out of the
city towards Carrefour. The men believed they would be killed. Eventually,
they arrived at the Coast Guard Station, and the car drove all the way
out to the end of the dock. The men estimate 200 armed militaries were
stationed on the dock. An announcement was made, reminding the militaries
that these prisoners should be considered “dangerous.” As
they were taken out of the car, they report that Assistant US Ambassador
Moreno instructed them to leave behind their passports and any remaining
documents, commenting cryptically that they “wouldn’t need
them.”
Guards led the four prisoners onto a 21 foot yacht, waiting at the end
of the pier. The men were kept handcuffed and placed in the cabin under
the guard of Haitian “marines.” The boat left the Coast
Guard Station and cruised to a distance offshore, where it remained.
Two smaller crafts constantly circled the larger boat, manned by US
marines. These patrol boats had large caliber M-60 machine guns mounted
on front and back. Security was very tight. No fishing boats were allowed
to get near the yacht. US Marines even threatened to shoot Haitian police
bringing food to the Haitian guards on the main boat. The prisoners
report that US Marines continually asserted their authority, each night
boarding the boat to check that they were securely handcuffed. At random
times, the marines would aim their laser sighting devices from their
M-16 rifles on both the prisoners and Haitian police. The prisoners
felt this tactic was intended to terrorize them.
Initially, the prisoners report that US Marines ordered they be kept
without food, without water for bathing, and without sleep. After three
days of this harsh treatment, the Haitian guards implored them to let
up. The prisoners were given rations (”American food, which we
didn’t care for”) and a single, 5 gallon bucket of water
with which to wash. Although they were allowed to sleep, conditions
in the cabin were so cramped that they had little room to lie down and
had to sleep in shifts. Eventually, the prisoners were taken back to
the dock to shower twice a week. During this brief time, they were allowed
to visit with family members. Each time the yacht returned to its previous
offshore location. The prisoners were never questioned or interrogated
on the boat. They believe the strategy was intended to torture them
psychologically and to break their will. The regimen continued for twenty
days. Eventually the men were transferred to the National Penitentiary,
where they remain today.
All four prisoners were called before Judge Bredy Fabien in April. Fabien
asked Nazaire whether Aristide had employed him to deal drugs in the
National Palace. Fabien called him back a month later (following the
arrest of Annette Auguste) to ask the same questions. Nazaire reports
that Judge Fabien admitted he could find no evidence of criminal activity
on his part, but explained, “It’s not up to me. You must
remain in prison.”
Keller was called before Fabien nearly 30 days after his arrest. Fabien
questioned him about the events surrounding 5 Dec. Not having any information,
Keller had nothing to say. Keller’s last appearance before Fabien
was May 12th, when there still were no formal charges made against him.
When Severe went before Fabien, he learned that someone from his neighborhood
had accused him of involvement in the December 5th attack on the State
University faculty building. Fabien asked him, “Who in the National
Palace used to give money to the chimere? Are you aware of So Anne distributing
weapons and money to the chimere?” Did Aristide ever give you
weapons to distribute to the people? Was Zap-Zap involved in attacking
the rectory of the university on 5 Dec? Where were you on 5 Dec?”
The prisoners fear for their own safety, as well as those of family
members. The mother of Nazaire’s child was reportedly tipped-off
by a cousin of Guy Phillipe that she was the target of a kidnapping.
By moving, she escaped the kidnapping, but lost her vehicle. Petion
recounts with emotion that police went to his home while he was in hiding
and forced his young children (4 years and 17 months) to lay on the
floor while they interrogated their mother about his whereabouts. When
they left, they took his wife’s car and jewelry. To this day,
Petion is haunted by the thought of his terrified children crying for
their father under these circumstances.
Antoine Daoud
Antoine Daoud is a small
farmer from just outside Port au Prince. He was at the bus station at
about 7AM the morning of June 28th when two agents grabbed him, cuffed
and bound him, and took him to Commissariat de Port au Prince where
he was charged with assassination. When he denied the charge, police
told him to shut up or they would tape his mouth. While in custody,
he was beaten by other prisoners. Six weeks after his arrest, he had
not been served a warrant, had not appeared before a judge, and had
no attorney. His wife and five children didn’t know where he was,
and were without resources to support themselves. He was wearing the
pair of shorts he had at the time of his arrest, and a shirt given him
by another prisoner. He had effectively been “disappeared.”
Roland Dauphin
Dauphin was a customs worker in Port au Prince. He reported that he
was kidnapped by members of the Front on March 1, 2004 at the Delmas
33 police station where he went to see friends. There were 150-200 armed
soldiers, among whom he recognized Guy Philippe. He was accused of gang
affiliation. Later, he was charged with the alleged “massacre
at La Scierie” in St. Marc. He told us he was twice taken from
his cell at night for interrogation. The second time, Front members
wearing masks came for him. They put a hood over his head, cuffed him,
and drove him around. They forced him to lie on the ground. He thought
they would kill him. While imprisoned, paramilitary forces burned down
his house. His father was inside and died in the fire.
Marie Yolene Gilles of NCHR eventually interrogated Dauphin, claiming
that they knew he was a member of Balewouze, a pro-Lavalas popular organization.
Dauphin reports that Gilles offered him an American visa if he would
testify that Neptune and Privert were responsible for the alleged massacre
at La Scerie. The NCHR spokeswoman telephoned the US embassy, speaking
in English, and then indicated authorities were prepared to release
him immediately and secure his safety. She gave Dauphin her card and
said to think about the offer.
Bruno Jean Renald
Bruno Jean Renald, known as “Ti Pay” is a well-known singer
who is particularly popular with youth. He infuses his “roots”
music with a pro-social justice message. Like Peter Tosh and Bob Marley,
Renald sings about and for the poor majority. His band is called “Rev”
for revolution. Renald identifies himself as a political prisoner.
Renald was living with his wife in Port au Prince. After February 29th,
he reports that local media began a campaign accusing him of ransacking
a money transfer office. In response, the owner of the office called
into the radio and said that Renald was not involved. Despite this,
Renald was arrested at his home months later by Canadian soldiers and
members of the National Police. They told him that he was being arrested
for ransacking the office, but did not present him with a warrant. One
of the Canadians said to Renald, “they don’t like you.”
The detachment took his passport and conveyed him to the local police
station; he was later transferred to the National Penitentiary.
On May 14th, Renald went before Judge Bernard Saint Vil who reportedly
issued a recommendation for his release. However, Renald believes prosecutor
Pierre Daniel Audain blocked it. Over a month later, he returned to
court, where the same judge again recommended his release, but the recommendation
was again blocked. Renald has had no further contact with the judge
or the courts.
Jacques Mathelier
Jacques Mathelier was a government delegate from Les Cayes in southern
Haiti. He defines himself as a political prisoner and victim of the
political repression targeting Aristide supporters and Fanmi Lavalas.
Following the coup, his house was destroyed and he went into hiding,
eventually reaching New York where he stayed with his brother.
After returning to Haiti, Mathelier was arrested on June 26th on charges
of arson and attempted assassination. Mathelier saw Judge Ezechiel in
Les Cayes twice. On July 12th, Mathelier states that the judge declared
there was no basis for the charges against him and authorized his release.
However, Mathelier believes that Attorney General Eugene Joseph blocked
his release in conformity with the wishes of his boss, Bernard Gousse,
de facto Minister of Justice. He was transferred out of Judge Ezechiel’s
jurisdiction to the NP on July 14th where he has remained with no further
court appointments.
For more information on the Haiti Accompaniment Project:
Web: http://hometown.aol.com/haitiproject/
E-mail: lesliefleming@mindspring.com
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