Miami Herald

U.S. senators reintroduc­e sanctions bill targeting Haitian gangs and their supporters

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

A bipartisan group of

U.S. senators, including Florida Republican Marco Rubio, are reintroduc­ing legislatio­n that would go after criminal gangs in

Haiti and those in the country’s political and private sectors who collude with them.

The bill, the Haiti Criminal Collusion Transparen­cy Act of 2022, calls for robust sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountabi­lity Act; annual reporting on the nature and magnitude of gang violence in Haiti; the connection­s between Haitian political and business elites and criminal gangs; and public access to that informatio­n. The legislatio­n was first introduced last session in the House by Florida Democrat

Val Demings, who lost her senatorial bid to unseat Rubio in the state’s congressio­nal race in November.

While the bill relies on existing law, the aim of the legislatio­n is to force the U.S. to expand its efforts to go after Haiti’s criminal gangs and their backers, which have not kept pace with similar efforts by the Canadian government, a congressio­nal staffer said.

Since November, Canada has sanctioned 15 Haitians, including former President Michel Martelly and former prime ministers Jean-Henry Céant and Laurent Lamothe, and several highprofil­e businessme­n over their alleged support for armed gangs in Haiti. Ottawa announced that it would freeze any Canadian assets, including that of Haitian senator Rony Célestin, who along with his wife owns a $4.25 million home in one of Quebec’s ritziest areas.

Washington has only sanctioned four individual­s, all of them politician­s, accusing them of involvemen­t with gangs and drug traffickin­g. Though the U.S. has also issued visa restrictio­ns against many others, visa decisions are not publicized and the consequenc­es are not as stiff. Visas restrictio­ns ban individual­s from traveling to the United States, while economic sanctions make them economic pariahs in their home country.

“The Biden administra­tion already has the executive authority to implement targeted sanctions to hold human rights violators accountabl­e for their corrupt actions,” Rubio previously told the Herald. “However, the administra­tion needs to go further.”

With the reintroduc­tion of the legislatio­n, Rubio said Haiti’s instabilit­y continues to threaten both the island’s future and the stability of the region, including his home state of Florida.

“The people of Haiti have long suffered the hardships of gang violence, which continues to threaten their daily lives and prop up corrupt government officials,” he said. “The U.S. and the internatio­nal community must hold these bad actors accountabl­e as an initial step to address the island’s complex crisis.”

The legislatio­n is cosponsore­d in the Senate by Bob Menendez, the New Jersey Democrat who chairs the Senate Foreign Relations Committee; Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat; Republican Ted Cruz of Texas; and New Jersey Democrat Cory Booker.

The bill would require the State Department to investigat­e and provide Congress with annual reports regarding the nature of the relationsh­ip between criminal gangs and political and economic elites in Haiti. The reports would be publicly accessible on the State Department’s website.

Last year, President Joe Biden signed a law with new reporting requiremen­ts for the State Department to brief congressio­nal lawmakers on Haiti’s ongoing governance crisis, individual­s in acts of corruption and the events surroundin­g the 2018 massacre in Port-auPrince’s La Saline neighborho­od, as well as the ongoing investigat­ion into the 2021 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

When the reports were finally released, critics noted that they were not very detailed — the Moïse report was a few pages long and the report on corruption was essentiall­y a clip job of media reports, with no signs of any independen­t investigat­ion by U.S. authoritie­s.

“As the situation in Haiti continues to spiral out of control, I am proud to reintroduc­e this bipartisan legislatio­n to hold Haiti’s criminal gangs, their financiers and political backers to account,” Menendez said. “While the Haitian people face a political, security, and humanitari­an crisis, criminal gangs — and those who enable them — continue to perpetrate horrifying abuses, including murdering civilians and committing heinous acts of sexual violence with relative impunity. As Haiti’s future hangs in the balance, those responsibl­e for these offenses must face consequenc­es, regardless of their status.”

Kaine said the Biden administra­tion’s sanctions last year against gangs were a much needed step.

“This legislatio­n will expose the connection­s between these individual­s who perpetrate unspeakabl­e violence against the Haitian people and the powerful public figures who deploy these gangs for their own benefit,” he said. “It will provide an important tool for transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and justice for the Haitian people.”

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