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- <text id=94TT0908>
- <title>
- Jul. 11, 1994: Haiti:Incident at Baie du Mesle
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 11, 1994 From Russia, With Venom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 36
- Incident at Baie du Mesle
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Dozens drown as Haitian soldiers try to stop one of the hundreds
- of boats packed with refugees headed to the U.S.
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Michaels--Reported by Edward Barnes/Baie du Mesle and Ann M. Simmons/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Under a glistening moon, the 60-ft. sailboat St. Joseph, moored
- off a spit of land on the southern coast of Haiti, was quickly
- loading its human cargo. Suddenly the silence of the night was
- broken by the sound of an approaching military boat. At first
- the people on the sailboat froze in fear, hoping the patrol
- would pass. But when three shots rang out, the St. Joseph headed
- toward open water, its crew and passengers in panic. Rushing
- from one side to the other to get away from the gunfire, many
- people fell or were pushed overboard. Then, when the boat was
- a few hundred yards from shore, the sail's boom broke free and
- swept across the deck, knocking scores more into the sea. The
- four policemen who had tried to stop the voyage saw the chaos
- and sped away, leaving hundreds in the water.
- </p>
- <p> "I fell off when the shots were fired," said Viola Cuprian,
- 23. "I can't swim. I thought I was going to die. People were
- crying and screaming everywhere." Horrified villagers from nearby
- Baie du Mesle saved dozens with quickly dispatched dugout canoes.
- But the rescuers estimate that at least 65 people drowned, probably
- more. Jean Bercharles, 25, lost seven members of his family,
- including a brother, sister and several cousins. "We do not
- know how many are dead because the ship left so quickly we don't
- know who got on and who died," said 23-year-old schoolteacher
- Sanon Janot. "We found bodies along the shore all day, and many
- we know were taken by the currents out to sea. Some of the dead
- came from far away and have no families who can name them."
- </p>
- <p> It was the most terrifying episode in a week when Haitians fled
- their stricken country in record numbers. More than 5,000 refugees
- took to boats during the week; on Monday alone, 1,486 were picked
- up at sea, the largest single number in one day since the September
- 1991 military coup that overthrew President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
- With the current processing center on a Navy ship off Jamaica
- already jammed, President Bill Clinton was forced to reopen
- the old facilities at the Guantanamo Bay Naval Station in Cuba
- to handle the overflow. "This should have been anticipated,"
- said Ernest Preeg, a senior fellow at the Washington-based Center
- for Strategic and International Studies and a former U.S. ambassador
- to Haiti. "And I think the surge will continue to escalate."
- </p>
- <p> The exodus was triggered by the change in Clinton's refugee
- policy that went into effect three weeks ago. Rather than automatically
- being sent back to Haiti, refugees would be interviewed to determine
- whether they were entitled to political asylum. Word spread
- quickly in Haiti that those who could get a boat and make it
- a few miles out to sea would be picked up by the Americans and
- would stand a much better chance of making it to the U.S. So
- far, 1 out of 4 refugees interviewed at sea has been granted
- asylum, in contrast to just 10% for those applying for refugee
- status at the U.S. processing center in Port-au-Prince.
- </p>
- <p> This has given encouragement to poor Haitians, oppressed by
- the military regime and by the economic deprivation worsened
- by U.S. sanctions. In the area around the village of Baie du
- Mesle, more than 400 refugees were waiting in coves and along
- the barren hillsides for passage to America. Last week's ill-fated
- escape attempt was put together hurriedly over two days, using
- a boat that had been in the village for more than a year; four
- other refugee boats have been sent to sea in the past two years.
- "We know that if we take to the boats it will help Aristide,"
- says a villager. "No one told us this, we just know it is true.
- We are not afraid to die in the sea if it helps to return Aristide."
- </p>
- <p> Though for weeks they have touted the success of the trade embargo
- on Haiti, Clinton Administration officials were loath to blame
- the sanctions for the fresh flood of boat people. William Gray,
- Clinton's special adviser to Haiti, insisted that the principal
- cause of the exodus was political repression. "Do sanctions
- hurt? Yes, they do," he said. "But dictatorships kill." Still
- working to isolate the country's military leaders and force
- them from power, Clinton applied more pressure last week, revoking
- the visas of most Haitians hoping to travel to the U.S.--not
- just from Haiti but from other countries as well.
- </p>
- <p> Calling the mass exodus a political action, Haitian soldiers
- have been searching for and destroying boats that are being
- readied to carry refugees. In Washington, meanwhile, Aristide
- continued to speak out against Clinton's appeals to Haitians
- not to flee the country. "It would be immoral to ask people
- whose very lives are at risk to stay in Haiti," he said, "a
- Haiti I am compelled to describe as a house on fire."
- </p>
- <p> To handle the refugees, Clinton not only reopened Guantanamo
- Bay but also sent a second ship to Jamaica. Another processing
- center on Grand Turk Island, north of Haiti, is set to open
- as well. As Washington continues to look for other land-based
- centers in the Caribbean, U.S. officials are asking such countries
- as Canada, Australia and Britain to accept some Haitians for
- resettlement.
- </p>
- <p> In the meantime, boats are being prepared in nearly every village
- along the southern coast of Haiti, as people descend from all
- over the island, many having sold everything they own to raise
- the 300 gourdes ($100) to come to America. Their goal is to
- put more pressure on the U.S. to hasten the return of Aristide.
- "We cannot get arms to fight," says a villager. "The only way
- to fight is to get the Americans to keep their promises. The
- only way to do that is to do what they fear most."
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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