Miami Herald (Sunday)

Canada slaps sanctions on a powerful Haitian businessma­n, gang leaders

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

Three gang leaders and a high-profile Haitian businessma­n who once demanded a social contract among Haitians, have been sanctioned by the governsanc­tions ment of Canada.

André “Andy” Apaid — a longtime industrial­ist who once produced products for the U.S. Department of Defense and who launched the “Social Contract” movement in the early 2000s that sought to remove then-elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide from office amid allegation­s of corruption — is among the four people blackliste­d, Canadian Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly announced Friday.

Apaid, known for his abrasive demeanor and his leadership of Group of 184, a group of Haitian individual­s and civil society groups that once united against Aristide, could not be reached for comment.

Once close to late Haitian President Jovenel Moïse, he continues to be in the apparel business but today operates an industrial free zone project in the expansive, unpoliced Savane Diane, a huge plane of 79,073 acres northeast of Port-au-Prince that crosses several Haitian regions.

Joly, as with the previous 22 people from Haiti who have been sanctioned by Ottawa, didn’t provide specifics about the allegation­s leading to sanctions against Apaid or the others. She announced the sanctions on Friday while hosting a meeting of CanadaCari­bbean Community Group alongside Jamaica Foreign Minister Kamina Johnson Smith, during the 53rd General Assembly of the Organizati­on of American States in Washington.

Both Ottawa and Washington have been pursuing against Haitians who they believe are linked to kidnapping armed gangs and Haiti’s ongoing instabilit­y. But while Canada has so far issued 26 economic sanctions, the United States has lagged, issuing more visa bans as opposed to the tougher sanctions from the U.S. Department of Treasury, which are often considered to be a “civil death.”

France, meanwhile, just managed to get a “common European policy” adopted, which means that soon European nations will also be issuing sanctions against Haitian individual­s as investigat­ors with the United Nations continue to work to issue global sanctions that would prevent those blackliste­d from seeking refuge in any country that is part of the U.N.

“Our message for zero tolerance for corruption and impunity will be much louder if we send it together,” Joly said recently as she welcomed regional foreign ministers to a meeting about Haiti’s security where she also announced sanctions against wellknown singer and former senator, Gracia Delva, and Prophane Victor, a member of Haiti’s Lower Chamber of Deputies.

She called on other countries to follow suit, saying that Haitians will no longer tolerate corruption and impunity. The country’s growing list of sanctioned individual­s in Haiti includes two former presidents, two ex-prime ministers, well-heeled businessme­n and once powerful senators. Two of those former senators — Youri Latortue and Joseph Lambert — have not only been sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury Department but on Wednesday, an investigat­ive judge in Haiti, Marthel Jean Claude, ordered their arrests for “embezzleme­nt of public property,” and obstructio­n of justice.

The charges against Latortue stem from nine checks from the public treasury that were issued to his mother during his time in office, and later allegedly cashed by him. The judge has also ordered that he be taken to civil prison of Port-au-Prince, the country’s daily, Le Nouvellist­e reported, while Lambert is being accused of refusing to turn over documents in his role as president of the Senate to help the investigat­ion by the anti-corruption unit.

The FBI is offering a reward of up to $1 million for informatio­n leading to both Lanmou Sanjou and Innocent’s arrests in connection to their alleged roles in the Christian missionari­es’ kidnapping.

Also added to Canada’s sanction list is Johnson André or Izo, who heads the 5 Segonn/5 Segond gang in Port-au-Prince’s Village de Dieu slum. The gang leader has gained notoriety not just for his infamous kidnapping lair where several police officers were killed during an anti-gang operation in March 2021, but also for his wannabe rap career.

 ?? ANDREW HARNIK AP ?? President Biden, during a recent trip to Canada, had hoped to persuade Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to lead a military interventi­on in Haiti, which Trudeau rejected.
ANDREW HARNIK AP President Biden, during a recent trip to Canada, had hoped to persuade Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to lead a military interventi­on in Haiti, which Trudeau rejected.

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