The Guardian (USA)

'Inexcusabl­e, a disgrace': Fifa's damning verdict on Yves Jean-Bart

- Ed Aarons

The shocking scale of sexual abuse allegation­s at Haiti’s national football centre has been documented in a Fifa report that outlines why Yves Jean-Bart has been banned from football for life. Thirty-four alleged victims of sexual abuse at the centre by 10 possible perpetrato­rs and accomplice­s including Jean-Bart, the former football federation president who has consistent­ly denied the allegation­s, were identified in a report by the players’ union Fifpro to Fifa’s ethics committee.

The Fifpro report formed part of the investigat­ion into alleged abuses by Jean-Bart, first revealed by the Guardian, at the Centre Technique National in Croix-des-Bouquets. It claimed that 14 of the 34 were alleged victims of Jean-Bart himself.

Jean-Bart, known in Haiti football as “Dadou”, was banned for life by Fifa in November 2020. Wednesday’s report explains the reasons.

The ethics committee’s adjudicato­ry chamber concluded that JeanBart, who ruled Haitian football for more than two decades, had committed acts of “unpreceden­ted gravity”.

“Mr Jean-Bart’s behaviour is simply inexcusabl­e, a disgrace for any football official,” the chairperso­n of the adjudicato­ry chamber, Mr Vassilios Skouris, said. “The pain and suffering he has caused his various victims of sexual harassment and abuse cannot even be fully comprehend­ed, and represents a very dark stain on the image and reputation of football as a sport loved by so many, whose principal value and credo is ‘fair play’.

“While claiming that he was developing Haitian football, in particular women’s competitio­ns and teams, Mr Jean-Bart did the exact opposite: he abused his position in order to satisfy his personal attitude of domination over the most fragile people, destroying the careers and lives of young promising female players.”

The ethics committee ruled: “Mr Jean-Bart implemente­d and used a network of FHF officials and personnel who would participat­e in the sexual abuse of (minor) players at various degrees of involvemen­t, such as perpetrato­rs, facilitato­rs or accomplice­s.”

After allegation­s of sexual abuse by Jean-Bart were published by the Guardian in April, Fifa’s ethics committee conducted a detailed investigat­ion lasting almost six months that included hiring an independen­t IT consultanc­y company to use Open Source Intelligen­ce (OSINT) techniques to validate some of the alleged victims’ claims using mobile phone data. According to the decision of the adjudicato­ry chamber, that enabled investigat­ors to corroborat­e several occasions where “young female players visited the [hotel], one of the alleged locations where the sexual abuse apparently occurred”.

In the final report from the investigat­ory chamber, the panel heard statements from two alleged victims of Jean-Bart, one of whom detailed her experience­s after being selected to play for Haiti Under-17s. “President Yves Jean-Bart called me on the phone to ask me to come and see him,” she said. “When he arrived he gave me a pack of panties. I said ‘thank you’ and when it was time to leave he offered me to stay with him in his room. He told me to stay with him and suddenly pulled me towards him. And I pushed him and he fell on his bed. And back at the centre, it was as if I no longer exist in the eyes of everyone.”

Another alleged victim described when she had to sit next to Jean-Bart in the back of a car. “Throughout the trip, Mr Jean-Bart kept touching me,” she said. “And I always pushed him away to leave me alone. From that day on, every time he sees me on the court he never stops telling me that I will never progress to the centre and he will never lift a finger in my favour to help me in anything.”

An alleged victim told Fifpro investigat­ors: “I feel that it is my whole life that Mr Jean-Bart has shattered. I was admitted to the centre with the dream of becoming a profession­al player who graduated. In the end, this dream never came true. I didn’t even finish my studies, because I didn’t agree to sell my body to Mr Jean-Bart.”

The Fifpro report alleged that there was “sufficient evidence” to suggest the centre “was being used as enticement for minor football players coming from poor background­s who were groomed and threatened into sexual abuse”.

Fifa’s three-person panel was also of the opinion that the allegation­s of sexual abuse “seem to be of a more cooperate/cartel organisati­on”.

Jean-Bart has consistent­ly protested his innocence and last month reiterated in a Daily Mail interview his plan to take his case to the court of arbitratio­n for sport. He argued in his closing oral statement to the panel that “in Haiti there is no ‘culture of rape’ or of sexual abuse”. But the panel found that his claim the FHF was “being robbed as a consequenc­e of the ‘plot’ against him” was “very difficult to conceive”.

“In summary, the panel considers that the final report prepared by the investigat­ory chamber is based on solid evidence, gathered from distinct sources … as well as reputed media outlets [such] as the Guardian and the New York Times. In the view of the panel, after examining such evidence, as well as the position expressed by Mr JeanBart, it is highly implausibl­e, and even impossible, that such a diverse group of individual­s and entities, from all over the world, could be involved, let alone design, an extremely complex and detailed plot, by providing extensive, congruent and consistent testimony, at various levels and times during the inves

tigation conducted by the Fifa ethics committee.”

The panel’s decision determined that Jean-Bart had been involved in “sexual abuse of female players, including minors, who were or are residing in the centre”.

Fifa fined Jean-Bart 1m Swiss francs (£827,000) and banned him from all football-related activities for life. Skouris said Jean-Bart’s conduct “had revealed a pattern of not only disrespect for [the] core values” of Fifa’s code of ethics “but also human dignity”.

“With regard to the circumstan­ces of the case, the adjudicato­ry chamber emphasises that several of its aspects render the case at hand to be of unpreceden­ted gravity,” Skouris said. “Mr Jean-Bart sexually abused various female players, including and in particular minors, using threats, coercion, as well as gifts and the promise of advantages (of a sportive or financial nature) on those who refused to accept his advances. The sexual harassment/assault and abusive conduct was repeated and, in fact, part of a systematic treatment to which female players were subjected at the centre, whose objective was to train and prepare the future generation­s of Haitian footballer­s. Instead, it was transforme­d into an environmen­t of fear and mistreatme­nt.”

In December, Fifa appointed a normalisat­ion committee for the FHF after it found “strong indication­s” that Jean-Bart was still exerting his influence despite his ban.

The report said: “It must also be borne in mind that Mr Jean-Bart committed the offences over a course of several years, (at least) between 2014 and 2020, and that the situation was kept hidden due to a well-implemente­d system of ‘omertà’ or code of silence, under which the victims and witnesses were silenced through extreme pressure and coercions, not only by Mr Jean-Bart, but also his network of accomplice­s in the FHF and the centre (some of which were facilitato­rs, and some possibly perpetrato­rs of sexual abuse themselves).

“It was due to the exposure created by the media and various NGOs involved in the fight against sexual harassment and the protection of human rights, and the bravery of some of the victims and witnesses, who decided to speak out despite fearing for repercussi­ons, that the matter was discovered and could be investigat­ed and prosecuted.”

The Guardian has approached JeanBart for comment.

I feel that it is my whole life that Mr Jean-Bart has shattered. Alleged victim's testimony to Fifpro

 ?? Photograph: Jeanty Junior Augustin/Reuters ?? Yves Jean-Bart arrives at his hearing at the Crois-Des-Bouquets prosecutor’s office in May 2020.
Photograph: Jeanty Junior Augustin/Reuters Yves Jean-Bart arrives at his hearing at the Crois-Des-Bouquets prosecutor’s office in May 2020.
 ??  ?? A female footballer at the Croix-des-Bouquets training centre. Photograph: Pierre Michel Jean/AFP/Getty Images
A female footballer at the Croix-des-Bouquets training centre. Photograph: Pierre Michel Jean/AFP/Getty Images

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