Miami Herald

On Human Rights Day, U.S. sanctions ex-Haiti cop, two government officials in 2018 massacre

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

Two former high-ranking government officials in Haitian President Jovenel Moïse’s administra­tion and an ex-cop turned influentia­l gang leader have been sanctioned by the Trump administra­tion for their involvemen­t in a 2018 Haiti massacre that left scores dead, homes torched and families in a low-income Port-au-Prince neighborho­od displaced.

Jimmy Cherizier, known as “Barbecue,” Fednel Monchery and Joseph Pierre Richard Duplan were sanctioned Thursday by the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, the agency in charge of enforcing U.S. sanctions, for their role in the La Saline massacre. Monchery and Duplan were senior officials in Moïse’s administra­tion when they allegedly spearheade­d the killings and were only eventually fired after pressure from Haitian civil society.

The trio has been sanctioned under the Global Magnitsky Human Rights Accountabi­lity Act. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the United States is using these sanctions along with the Department of State’s 7031(c) visa restrictio­n to promote accountabi­lity and deter human-rights abuses and corruption in Haiti and elsewhere.

“In total, the United States and the United Kingdom designated 37 actors in the past 48 hours in connection with corruption or serious human rights abuse,” Pompeo said.

Responding to the news, U.S. Rep. Andy Levin, D-Mich., who has been concerned about the troubling human rights situation in Haiti and the lack of justice in the horrific killings, tweeted that the sanctions are “an important step on the road to accountabi­lity.”

Treasury’s announceme­nt came on

Internatio­nal Human Rights Day, during which Haiti’s alarming violence degrading human rights was also the focus of a 2 p.m. virtual hearing by the Organizati­on of American States’ Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.

“As we recognize Internatio­nal Human Rights Day, the United States stands with innocent civilians around the globe who have been victims of violence and oppression,” said U.S. Deputy Treasury Secretary Justin G. Muzinich.

The U.S. has been the object of harsh criticism by human rights defenders in Haiti. They have accused the U.S. of being indifferen­t to the ongoing deteriorat­ion of human rights in the country and the rise in criminalit­y by armed gangs, some of which are said to be behind the kidnapping­s.

Last week, several Haitians showed their disgust by lying in the streets of the capital, blocking traffic and holding up placards criticizin­g the U.S.

But Thursday’s announceme­nt is significan­t, even if it comes two years after the massacre and a year after a United Nations investigat­ion concluded that the two-day reign of terror in the La Saline neighborho­od was condoned by the Haitian government. It signals not only the Trump administra­tion’s growing frustratio­n with Haiti overall, but in particular with its dysfunctio­nal judiciary.

That judiciary, the Treasury Department said in its statement, bolsters the country’s armed gangs and insecurity problem and it “does not prosecute those responsibl­e for attacks on civilians.”

“These gangs, with the support of some Haitian politician­s, repress political dissent in Port-au-Prince neighborho­ods known to participat­e in anti-government demonstrat­ions,” the statement said. “In exchange for executing attacks designed to create instabilit­y and silence the

Port-au-Prince population’s demands for improved living conditions, gangs receive money, political protection and enough firearms to reportedly make them better armed than the Haitian National Police.”

The assertion was dismissed by Haiti’s ambassador to the OAS, Bocchit Edmond, who told members of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights that “there is political will to make the justice system more robust.”

He also said that the government does not see La Saline victims as political partisans, but as citizens owed justice.

At least 185 Haitians have died this year in massacres or attacks by armed gangs in the metropolit­an Port-au-Prince area, according to a report published Thursday by the National Network for the Defense of Human Rights. This includes 25 women and five minors, who lost their lives in armed attacks perpetrate­d by gangs. Also, at least 525 deaths have been registered on the streets of Port-au-Prince as a result of worsening violence.

“There have been unpreceden­ted cases of human-rights violations,” the non-government­al human rights organizati­on said.

Haitians have for months been protesting against their dysfunctio­nal judiciary. On Thursday, however, the focus in Port-auPrince wasn’t on corrupt judges but rather the alarming spike in violence that is sweeping the country.

“The people of Haiti are rising up, speaking out and on the national day celebratin­g human rights,” human rights attorney Mario Joseph told the commission. Joseph’s Bureau des Avocats Internatio­naux in Port-au-Prince and the Boston-based Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti both requested Thursday’s human rights hearing. Joseph later asked that Haiti be put under oversight, requiring visits to the country by the OAS commission.

Earlier in the day, thousands had taken to the streets of Port-au-Prince and the nearby city of Gonaives in a “Walk for Life” to denounce widespread violence. As they walked, they shouted, “We march for life,” and called for an end to kidnapping­s. Others demanded the resignatio­n of Moïse, who has been ruling by decree since January and seems incapable of controllin­g the violence.

Organized by various human rights organizati­ons in Haiti, the demonstrat­ions were largely peaceful, although the Haiti National Police did fire tear gas at a gathering crowd in front of the ministry of justice on the Champ de Mars. Some protesters were also spotted throwing rocks at police and burned tires in defiance of a new presidenti­al decree redefining tire burning and fiery barricades on public roads as terrorist acts punishable by a fine and years of imprisonme­nt.

One of the scenes of burning tires came from the vicinity where a locally hired security agent who works at the U.S. Embassy was reported to be the latest victim of a kidnapping, snatched in the Turgeau neighborho­od while on his way home. There were also unconfirme­d reports on social media of additional kidnapping­s.

“The situation is dire,” Joseph said. “We have a political crisis upon us and impunity has become generalize­d.”

Joseph said the increasing violence, kidnapping­s and savage killings are taking a toll on the country’s 11 million residents. He noted that in addition to La Saline there had been many other massacres and that this one in particular has brought back the darkest hours of the Duvalier family dictatorsh­ip.

“Haitians deserve justice,” Joseph said. “La Saline was the victim of the horrors of the present regime. Civilians were massacred, both women and little girls were gang raped, many others were tortured and countless others were disappeare­d. This led to forced displaceme­nts of hundreds of thousands of families that were already living precarious­ly.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States