Edmonton Journal

Ex-Haitian senator tied to gangs, drugs sues Canada

Celestin wants to be removed from sanctions list

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI

• A former Haitian senator accused of having links to criminal gangs, drug traffickin­g, money laundering and corruption in Haiti is suing the federal government to have himself removed from Canada's sanction list.

In a lawsuit filed earlier this month in the Federal Court, controvers­ial former Haitian senator Rony Celestin says the government's decision to sanction him in late 2022 was “unreasonab­le” and based on “vague impression­s and perceived ambiguitie­s.”

Haiti's government has been dysfunctio­nal since at least 2020 and Celestin was one of the country's remaining 10 senators when their terms expired in January 2023. The leaderless country is currently engulfed in gang violence, chaos, and a growing humanitari­an crisis.

Last month, the United Nations denounced the rampant “deaths, hunger and gang rape” in Haiti as over 2,500 people have been reported killed, kidnapped or injured by ongoing gang violence across the country.

According to the Canadian and U.S. government­s, Celestin had a role to play in the rise of gang activity in Haiti.

On Nov. 17, 2022, Canada added Celestin to its sanction list alongside five other former or current high- ranking Haitian officials for his alleged role in grave breaches of internatio­nal peace and security.

In the Canada Gazette, the government said it had reason to believe Celestin and the five others had used their position “to protect and/or support the activities of criminal gangs, including through money laundering and other acts of corruption.”

"These gangs are committing unspeakabl­e violence and terrorizin­g vulnerable population­s with impunity,” read the Gazette at the time.

One month later, the U.S. government also sanctioned Celestin because it believed he engaged in internatio­nal drug traffickin­g activities.

“He has used his political position to orchestrat­e the importatio­n of drugs from Venezuela into Haiti, as well as the exportatio­n of drugs to the United States and The Bahamas,” reads the U.S. Department of Treasury release at the time.

The release also described Celestin and his former senate colleague Richard Fourcand as “corrupt Haitian politician­s” who abused their power “to further drug traffickin­g activities across the region” and destabiliz­e Haiti.

But Celestin denies any wrongdoing. Days after Canada sanctioned him in November 2022, he said he asked Ottawa to remove his name from the sanction list, all the while requesting a meeting with Global Affairs Canada (GAC) officials and all informatio­n used by the department to justify the sanctions.

In July 2023, his lawsuit says he received a letter from GAC noting that the decision to sanction was based on informatio­n that included open-source and media reporting that led it to conclude that “you have been involved in corruption and fraud.”

The lawsuit says he argued that the informatio­n was based on “rumours spread by political and economic adversarie­s” and reiterated that he should not be sanctioned.

On March 7, 2024, he said Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly issued a final decision rejecting his request to be removed from Canada's sanctions. His lawsuit says Joly's decision was namely based on the belief Celestin was involved in corruption, fraud and internatio­nal drug traffickin­g that had fed the gang violence in Haiti.

The decision also cited Celestin's wife's controvers­ial purchase in February 2021 of a sumptuous, $4.25 million lakefront villa in Quebec that seemed “disproport­ionate” to their known finances, the lawsuit says.

Celestin's wife's purchase of the lavish villa — located on a 66,000-square-foot waterfront property and featuring five bedrooms, four bathrooms, a wine cellar, pool and 10- car driveway — led to an investigat­ion by Haiti's anticorrup­tion unit after it was first reported by La Presse.

Celestin's lawsuit says months later the anticorrup­tion unit issued a certificat­e saying there were no irregulari­ties in the purchase of the home.

But the lawsuit and Haitian media reports also reveal that in March 2023 the same anticorrup­tion unit recommende­d charges against Celestin and other former senators for false declaratio­n of assets.

In response to Joly's refusal to remove his name from Canada's sanction list, Celestin turned to the Federal Court in the hopes of having the decision reversed.

“It appears that the minister's decision is not based on any verified or verifiable fact, which does not lead to the conclusion that ( Celestin) was involved in any matter of corruption or fraud, large scale or not, in Haiti,” reads the lawsuit.

“The minister's decision to include the applicant's name on the list of the sanctions ... is void ab initio, illegal and arbitrary, and requires the interventi­on of this court in order to prevent the plaintiff from suffering any further harm,” Celestin's lawyer noted.

Celestin's lawyer, Alexandre Bergevin, declined to answer questions on the lawsuit while it's in front of the court. Global Affairs Canada did not respond to a request for comment by deadline.

HE HAS USED HIS POLITICAL POSITION TO ORCHESTRAT­E THE IMPORTATIO­N OF DRUGS FROM VENEZUELA.

 ?? ?? Rony Celestin
Rony Celestin

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