The Guardian (USA)

Quebec man charged with terrorism over alleged Haiti coup plot

- Leyland Cecco in Toronto

Canadian police have charged a Quebec man with terrorism over allegation­s he conspired to overthrow the government of the late Haitian president Jovenel Moïse, who was later assassinat­ed in a separate plot.

Gerald Nicolas, 51, stands accused of leaving Canada to facilitate a terrorist activity, facilitati­ng a terrorist activity and providing property for terrorist purposes, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police said on Thursday.

The federal force said that the investigat­ion was not related to Moïse’s assassinat­ion in 2021, when a team of Colombian mercenarie­s attacked his residence in the Haitian capital, Portau-Prince.

Instead, police say the charges stem from an investigat­ion that began after the local police service in the city of Lévis, outside Quebec City, contacted federal police.

“What is alleged … is that Mr Nicolas actually travelled to Haiti and to other Central and South American countries – we’re talking about multiple countries – in order to recruit, finance and acquire some weapons for his armed revolution,” Sgt Charles Poirier, an RCMP spokespers­on, told the Canadian Press.

“He not only wanted to overthrow the government in place, but also seize power.”

Nicolas and his co-conspirato­rs were unsuccessf­ul in acquiring weapons, police said.

Nicolas told CBC Radio on Thursday that the charges were untrue, and claimed that they were the result of lies spread by a former lover, who contacted police in Lévis after he sent humanitari­an aid, including food and clothing, to Haiti, where his half-sister lives.

“She made up a whole story that I was a terrorist,” he said, alleging that the woman told police the shipment contained illegal materials.

“She managed to convince [police] because I’m Black. If I were white, I wouldn’t be talking to you today. The police would have been more careful,” he said “The Lévis police are racists with a badge.”

Poirier said he hoped the “serious” charges against Nicolas would serve as a warning to others.

“If you are a Canadian citizen, breaking the law in a foreign country is the same as breaking the law in Canada.”

Nicolas is due to appear at the Quebec City courthouse on 1 December to face three terrorism-related charges.

 ?? Photograph: Valerie Baeriswyl/AFP/Getty Images ?? A police officer stands by a wall painted with a mural of the late Haitian president Jovenel Moïse, who was killed in July 2021.
Photograph: Valerie Baeriswyl/AFP/Getty Images A police officer stands by a wall painted with a mural of the late Haitian president Jovenel Moïse, who was killed in July 2021.

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