By: Wadner Pierre and Joe Emersberger - HaitiAnalysis
The Court of Appeal of Port-au-Prince has announced the dismissal of all
remaining charges against Father Gerard Jean-Juste. The Catholic priest is a
prominent supporter of Famni Lavalas, the political party of ousted Haitian
president Jean Bertrand Aristide.
Jean-Juste was arrested by the de facto government of Gerard Latortue in July of 2005, after being illegally arrested on a prior occasion in 2004. His imprisonment was such a flagrant act of political repression that Amnesty International designated the priest a “Prisoner of Conscience”. After getting a vial of Jean-Juste's blood past Latortue's police, Harvard professor and Partners in Health co-founder Paul Farmer verified that the jailed priest suffered from a form of lymphocytic leukemia that needed immediate treatment.
Under intense international pressure the Latortue regime
granted Jean-Juste “provisional freedom” in January of 2006 to to receive
treatment for leukemia in the U.S. However, until the court's announcement of
last week, Jean-Juste continued to fend off charges of criminal association
and illegal possession of firearms. No evidence had ever been produced to
substantiate the allegations.
Father Jean-Juste spoke with HaitiAnalysis by telephone from his parish in Haiti -
the Church of Saint Claire – where a boisterous celebration was well
underway. “I thank my Lord Jesus” he said “I believed he would not abandon me. I
forgive everybody who contributed in my two illegal arrests, which could have
cost me my life. I could have died in jail. Now I can continue serving the
poor.”
The Catholic Church hierarchy in Haiti suspended Jean-Juste for political
activity rather than speak out in his support while he was imprisoned. Asked
about the suspension, which has outraged his numerous supporters, Jean-Juste
expressed confidence that it would be lifted.
“I am not guilty and they will reject their decision to allow me to do my
job at the church as Jesus did until the last minute before he was betrayed and
arrested”.
Parish priests like Jean-Juste, and Jean Bertrand Aristide, formed part of the
Ti Legliz (little church) movement. It distinguished itself by opposing the
dictatorship of Jean Claude Duvalier. However the upper echelons of the Church have
frequently collaborated with dictatorships in Haiti.
The Vatican recognized the military junta that deposed Aristide in 1991 at a time when world opinion
was hostile to the junta. Francois Duvalier was excommunicated by the Catholic
Church in 1959 because he had expelled clergymen from Haiti who had criticized
his regime. However, in 1966, Pope Paul IV made an astounding capitulation
to the dictator. After intense negotiations the Duvalier's expulsions remained
in effect, Duvalier's excommunication was annulled, and the dictator was
given considerable say over clerical appointments in Haiti.
The Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI), an affiliate of the Institute for
Justice and Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), run by lawyer Mario Joseph, took the lead
in fighting for Jean Juste. Jean-juste has been receiving congratulatory emails and phone calls throughout the week from supporters and friends.

























