Ottawa Citizen

BARBECUE’S ‘REVOLUTION’

In Haiti, coronaviru­s and a former police officer testing the rule of law

- INGRID ARNESEN AND ANTHONY FAIOLA

PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI Jovenel Moise is president of Haiti, but ask the people of the terrified shantytown­s who’s in charge in this impoverish­ed Caribbean capital, and they’ll point to a man called Barbecue.

A former police officer who portrays himself as the saviour of the streets, Jimmy (Barbecue) Cherizier has come to symbolize the accelerati­ng erosion of Haiti’s already challenged rule of law during the coronaviru­s pandemic. Accused of orchestrat­ing massacres that left dozens of men, women and children dead, he has succeeded in accomplish­ing the once unthinkabl­e: Uniting the warring gangs of Port-au-Prince into a powerful new confederat­ion aimed at what he calls “revolution.”

Cherizier announced the alliance on YouTube in June in a powder-blue three-piece suit. His newly formed G9 Family and Allies paraded triumphant­ly through the streets of the capital last month, led by gang leaders and dozens of armed men — both a flagrant violation of coronaviru­s rules and a warning to all.

On a recent afternoon, Cherizier led a reporter through the rundown neighbourh­ood of La Saline, stomping over festering piles of garbage, barging into one corrugated shack after another, bellowing, “You see the conditions they live in?” as residents cowered.

“This is an armed revolution,” Cherizier told the Washington Post at his headquarte­rs in Delmas 6, a no-go zone where he is hailed as a protector. “We will put guns in the hands of every child if we have to.”

But critics say he’s not targeting the government — he’s going after its opponents. Human rights activists and political opponents say the U.S.-backed Moise has done little to check the rise of Haiti’s anarchic gangs, at least in part because their growing influence has appeared to serve the president’s interests.

With an apparent goal of becoming the strongman of the streets, Cherizier and members of his consolidat­ed gang are extorting businesses, hijacking fuel trucks and kidnapping profession­als and business owners for exorbitant ransoms as high as $1 million.

As he brings Port-au-Prince to its knees, Cherizier is also terrorizin­g poor neighbourh­oods where opposition to Moise runs deep — potentiall­y neutralizi­ng any challenge to his party’s continued rule.

Barbecue expanded his turf through the alliance, controllin­g all of Port-au-Prince’s downtown and critical cross sections leading to the north and south, and the dense, opposition-dominated slum Cite Soleil that is now living a gang-fuelled reign of terror.

Cherizier denies an alliance with

Moise. But in Cite Soleil, victims and human rights groups say G9 gang members have looted and burned down shacks and stalls, systematic­ally raped women, killed at random and dismembere­d or torched bodies.

When Cherizier’s men took to the streets in July, witnesses claimed to have seen them ride in the same armoured vehicles used by the national police and special security forces. Justice Minister Lucmane Delile denounced the gangs and ordered the national police to pursue them; within hours, Moise fired him.

Moise’s office initially agreed to an interview but then did not respond. The president has denied ties to the gangs, which he has described as Haiti’s “own demons.” His government says it is seeking a disarmamen­t accord with them.

“We prioritize dialogue, even in our fight with bandits and gangs,” Moise said in March. “I am the president of all Haitians, the good and the bad.”

There’s a standing warrant against Cherizier for alleged possession of illegal arms and failing to report for duty — the reason police gave for firing him last year — but it has not been served. Cherizier denies his gangs have committed violence in the slums. He has not been charged in the 2018 massacre that left dozens dead in La Saline, or any other killings.

But for his long-suffering countrymen, Cherizier’s G9 is evoking the horrors of the Tontons Macoutes, the government-backed paramilita­ries that terrorized Haiti for decades under dictator Francois (Papa Doc) Duvalier and his son Jean-Claude.

“The government has said nothing about (Cherizier’s rise), and the internatio­nal community has turned a blind eye,” said Pierre Esperance, director of Haiti’s National Human Rights Defense Network. “There is no rule of law anymore. The gangs are the new Macoutes. It feels like there is a manifest will to install a new dictatorsh­ip.”

Government­s across Latin America have used the coronaviru­s to harass their opposition, delay or manipulate elections and consolidat­e power, underminin­g democracy in a manner not seen in the region in decades.

“Coronaviru­s is the perfect excuse for a power grab and authoritar­ian measures to crack down on political opponents,” said Michael Shifter, president of the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington-based think-tank. “This is a regionwide trend, but the consequenc­es are worse in the countries already facing the most-dire situations.”

Moise, 52, won the 2017 presidenti­al election after a 14-month standoff over alleged fraud in a previous vote. Analysts say his base of support is thin amid allegation­s of government corruption in the petrodolla­rs that flowed for years from Maduro’s Venezuela.

The former business executive was the target last year of protests by students and opposition groups that led to a three-month Peyi Lok, Creole for “country shutdown.” Businesses were burned, hotels and restaurant­s shuttered and thousands of Haitians left jobless. By January, the underpaid national police joined the protests, burning their own vehicles and blocking traffic on the capital’s main arteries.

Moise has postponed legislativ­e elections indefinite­ly. The opposition says his term ends in February, but he says he can stay in office a year beyond that.

“There’s no possibilit­y of holding elections while he’s in power,” says Andre Michel, spokesman for an alliance of opposition parties.

U.S. officials have urged Moise to call new elections. But critics say they’ve largely turned a blind eye to his government’s alleged links to the gangs because they value his support for the Trump administra­tion’s hardline policy against Venezuela’s Maduro.

Rep. Maxine Waters, D-Calif., sent a letter to U.S. Ambassador Michele Sison in May denouncing what she called Cherizier’s “politicall­y motivated” death squad.

“There is no real concern for the plight of the Haitians, whether they are being beaten and killed by the president of Haiti,” Waters told The Post. “As long as the president is in our pockets, everything is OK.”

David Mosby, head of the State Department’s Bureau of Internatio­nal Narcotics and Law Enforcemen­t Affairs, met with Haitian police officials this month to discuss the wave of gang violence.

Sison called on “all of Haiti’s actors” to engage in dialogue.

“Rather than pointing fingers,” she told the Post, “our point is to encourage all actors ... to think about the most vulnerable who continue to bear the brunt of these challenges.”

Few nations are as vulnerable as Haiti. The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere has lumbered through decades of misery, finally shedding the yoke of the Duvaliers in the 1980s only to spiral into a gyre of lost potential and repeatedly failed efforts to lift its population out of dehumanizi­ng poverty.

The 2010 earthquake that killed more than 200,000 Haitians and left 1.5 million homeless crystalliz­ed the country’s plight, bringing, for a time, an avalanche of internatio­nal organizati­ons and promises, finally, of transforma­tive aid. But many of the charities have since departed.

Health analysts feared the coronaviru­s would devastate Haiti. Most believe numbers are higher than the official count of 7,810 infected and 192 dead, but the country’s relative isolation seems to have spared it the worst of the pandemic so far. Still, the outbreak has made chronicall­y underfunde­d health care here worse — medical staff, lacking protective gear, have failed to show up for work, leaving hospitals operating short-handed or closing altogether.

Rumours, particular­ly in rural areas, that symptomati­c Haitians are being used as experiment­s for unproven vaccines have led some to avoid treatment. Doctors say parents are now rejecting regular vaccines for their children in alarming numbers.

“People fear they are being guinea pigs,” said William Pape, head of the government’s COVID-19 task force.

The coronaviru­s crisis has opened a window of opportunit­y for Barbecue. As a police officer, Cherizier, whose nickname stems from his mother’s locally famous grilled chicken, allegedly led a feared gang that for years was involved in murder, rape, extortion and kidnapping.

While Haitians were locked down, he helped unify street gangs under the G9 Family and Allies umbrella. Gang members began rolling into antigovern­ment hotbeds in sophistica­ted armoured vehicles with automatic weapons and tear gas. The National Network for Defense of Human Rights and witnesses say homes were torched, weapons fired and at least 34 people killed.

Police say they are unable to explain why their vehicles appear to have been used in the operation. They say they are investigat­ing.

In a narrow alley between ramshackle two-storey dwellings, Cherizier paced, alternatel­y shouting or laughing into a succession of cellphones rushed to him by a posse of eager-to-please youth.

He insisted he was not working for the government, but to liberate the Haitian people.

“The bourgeoisi­e, the opposition, the government, they are the problem,” he said. “They call us gangs — they are the gangs! We’re defending the ghetto. It’s live or die here.”

The Washington Post

The bourgeoisi­e, the opposition, the government, they are the problem. They call us gangs — they are the gangs!

 ?? PHOTOS: PIERRE MICHEL JEAN/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? “We will put guns in the hands of every child if we have to,” Jimmy (Barbecue) Cherizier says.
PHOTOS: PIERRE MICHEL JEAN/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST “We will put guns in the hands of every child if we have to,” Jimmy (Barbecue) Cherizier says.
 ??  ?? Leogane portail, at one end of the Grand’ Rue, leads to one of two main highways out of Port-au-Prince.
Leogane portail, at one end of the Grand’ Rue, leads to one of two main highways out of Port-au-Prince.
 ??  ?? Jimmy (Barbecue) Cherizier, left, shows living conditions inside a resident’s shanty in the rundown slum of La Saline.
Jimmy (Barbecue) Cherizier, left, shows living conditions inside a resident’s shanty in the rundown slum of La Saline.

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