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- From: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel)
- Subject: HAITI: HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS DENOUNCE INCREASE IN REPRESSION
- Message-ID: <1992Dec18.011100.26873@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Organization: PACH
- Date: Fri, 18 Dec 1992 01:11:00 GMT
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- Lines: 127
-
- /** reg.carib: 460.0 **/
- ** Topic: IPS: Haiti repression increases **
- ** Written 6:58 pm Dec 15, 1992 by caribdesk in cdp:reg.carib **
- From: Bob Thomson <caribdesk>
- Subject: IPS: Haiti repression increases
-
- /* Written 12:27 am Dec 13, 1992 by newsdesk@igc.apc.org in igc:ips.englibrary */
- /* ---------- "HAITI: HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS DENOUNCE" ---------- */
- Copyright Inter Press Service 1992, all rights reserved. Permission to re-
- print within 7 days of original date only with permission from 'newsdesk'.
-
- Reference: Human Rights
- Title: HAITI: HUMAN RIGHTS GROUPS DENOUNCE INCREASE IN REPRESSION
-
- port-au-prince, dec 10 (ips) -- over 1,800 people have been
- illegally executed in haiti between october 1991 and november
- 1992, according to human rights groups and other non-governmental
- organizations (ngos) in the caribbean country.
-
- and in recent days there has been an upsurge in repression and
- violence against civilians, spokespersons for the ''haitian
- platform for the defence of human rights'' and the ''private
- development organizations'' committee (inter-opd) said.
-
- the two organizations group nine human rights groups and some
- 30 ngos respectively.
-
- they presented a report on abuses committed during the
- 13-month period at a press conference here thursday, attended by
- the coordinator of the civilian mission of the organization of
- american states (oas) in haiti, colin grandison, and diplomats
- from canada and france.
-
- ''almost all the crimes committed in the past few days have
- been politically motivated,'' paul dejean, spokesperson for the
- 'platform' said.
-
- presenting the balance-sheet of violations committed by the
- military, rural police and armed civilians which, he cautioned,
- was not exhaustive, inter-opd's bernard etheart said that that
- 1,867 illegal executions had been documented up to november, but
- that the real figure might be closer to 3,000.
-
- a recent case was that of a young man, jean sony philogene,
- who was wounded when he and six others were rounded up and shot
- by a group of armed men about 20 kilometres north of the capital
- on the morning of dec. 6.
-
- philogene's companions died. left for dead, he was rescued by
- a truck driver and taken to the 'canape vert' hospital in
- port-au-prince, where two bullets were extracted from his thigh.
-
- hours later, five armed men burst into the ward where he had
- been placed and shot him dead before his horrified grandmother,
- according to jean craan, the hospital's administrator.
-
- like philogene, about 89 percent of the people known to have
- been executed were killed in and around the capital, according to
- the report.
-
- there were also 5,096 known cases of illegal arrests,
- including people abducted by armed civilian commandos which,
- etheart said, are directly linked to the military.
-
- the periods with the largest number of illegal arrests were
- october-november 1991 (1,146 documented cases) and may 1992 (914
- cases). (more)
- ----
-
-
- about 34 percent of the arrests were made in and around the
- capital and 16.3 percent in the artibonite region, in central
- haiti.
-
- moreover, detainees have often been victims of extortion.
- about 75 percent of those who have been released had to pay for
- their freedom. in the rural areas, the average sum is 250 dollars
- per person. in town, the ransom is usually higher.
-
- some 2,171 people are known to have sustained injuries of
- various types, whether gunshot wounds (mainly in the first few
- weeks after the sep. 30 military coup) or lesions inflicted
- during beatings.
-
- at least 30 victims of torture have died, either during
- detention or immediately after their release.
-
- inter-opd and the platform also documented 2,482 cases of
- illegal house searches, body searches accompanied by violence and
- destruction of property.
-
- young people have been the main targets of repression, the
- report said: 45 percent of the victims were under 25 years of
- age, including 15 percent who were under 15.
-
- but the repression also has other, less visible aspects.
-
- many people still suffer from the psychic effects of beatings,
- while, at night, hundreds of families from poor neighbourhoods
- sleep in the bushes on the hills that surround the capital and
- other major towns to escape house searches by armed civilians.
-
- families have also been separated, and thousands have had to
- leave their homes permanently.
-
- in the first weeks after the coup, 300,000 people fled
- port-au-prince for the rural areas.
-
- but soon after, hundreds of thousands, including many who had
- originally fled the capital, flocked to port-au-prince after
- repression increased in the countryside, the report stated.
-
- thousands more have attempted to seek refuge out of haiti,
- including about 50,000 who attempted, most of them
- unsuccessfully, to reach the united states by sea.
-
- many of those who have since returned home found their house
- emptied of everything of value.
-
- jobless, without possessions, they often have few alternatives
- but to try to eke out a living as informal traders or depend on
- handouts from humanitarian organizations. (end/ips/ic-kb/92)
- ----
-
-
- ** End of text from cdp:reg.carib **
-
-