Montreal Gazette

Head of Haitian gang extradited

- WIDLORE MÉRANCOURT AND AMANDA COLETTA

PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI • The leader of a notorious Haitian gang behind many of the brazen mass kidnapping­s that have terrorized the nation, including that of 17 Canadian and American missionari­es associated with an Ohio-based charity last year, has been extradited to the United States.

The Haitian National Police said in a statement that Germine Joly, also known as “Yonyon,” was flown to the United States on Tuesday after a request from U.S. authoritie­s last month. He ran 400 Mawozo, which in recent weeks has been involved in battles with a rival gang that have left dozens of Haitian civilians dead and scores displaced.

A diplomat from the Dominican Republic was freed Wednesday after he disappeare­d last week in a 400 Mawozo stronghold in what officials called an “apparent” kidnapping while he was travelling to the Haiti-dominican Republic border. Roberto Álvarez, the Dominican foreign minister, said Carlos Guillén Tatis was “safe and sound.”

It's unclear whether the two events are related.

Gangs have long been a presence in Haiti, but they've assumed greater power in recent years, controllin­g large parts of the country and holding fuel supplies and aid for earthquake victims hostage — mostly with impunity. They've filled a leadership vacuum after the assassinat­ion in July of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, which has left the country's government deeply divided and has worsened insecurity.

By any measure, 400 Mawozo is among the most violent of Haiti's gangs. The group is feared for its use of rape, extortion, assassinat­ion and the mass seizures of occupied cars and busloads of people. It has stepped over what other gangs have considered red lines, targeting churches, members of the clergy and young children.

The gang demanded US$1 million for each of the 17 American and Canadian missionari­es with Christian Aid Ministries who were kidnapped last year while they were returning from a visit to an orphanage. After two months in captivity, the missionari­es were freed — they say they escaped — and a ransom was reportedly paid.

Analysts say that Joly ran 400 Mawozo — whose name loosely translates to “400 simpletons” or “400 inexperien­ced men” in Creole — from his prison cell in Port-au-prince, where he had a cellphone, threw birthday parties for himself and dressed to the nines.

Haitian police said in a statement on Facebook that a warrant issued by the U.S. District Court in D.C. charges him with several crimes including conspiracy and the kidnapping for ransom of American citizens.

The U.S. Department of Justice declined to comment.

James Boyard, a political scientist at the State University of Haiti, said that Joly's possible prosecutio­n in U.S. courts could shed light on the invisible figures in Haitian civil society, government and businesses that are in league with the gangs.

He said the corruption of judges and a lack of resources have left the Haitian justice system “bankrupt.”

“Every time we transfer to foreign countries individual­s implicated in crimes on Haitian territory, it's a slap in the face of the Haitian justice system,” said Boyard, a security analyst.

In recent weeks, violent clashes between 400 Mawozo and Chen Mechan, a rival gang, have left 26 people dead, including a family of eight, and uprooted hundreds of Haitian civilians, according to Haiti's civil protection agency and the United Nations. Homes have been burned and businesses, schools and markets have closed.

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