Activist-Priest Gérard Jean-Juste in Port-au-Prince Appeals Court
By: Wadner Pierre - HaitiAnalysis.com
"I am not a visitor. It is my country. I come when I want, only I have a lot
of things to do to the United States with the various Haitian communities,
and I travel frequently. I am only here for an appointment with the honourable
judges of the Court of Appeal in Port on Monday, November 26, 2007 at 10:00
AM. I respect the justice of my country” - so stated Father Gérard Jean-Juste
to journalists shortly after stepping off a plane in Port-au-Prince.
Accompanied by his lawyer Mario Joseph, of the Bureau des Avocats Internaux
(BAI), the priest arrived one half hour early for his court appointment. At
11:30 am the hearing began with the three judges of the Court of Appeal: Ms.
Lise Pierre Pierre, Mr. Daran and Mr. Eddy Joseph Lebrun. Father Gérard
Jean-Juste has been battling charges against him since July of 2005 despite
international protests in which even Amnesty International participated.
Jean-Juste is charged with the notoriously vague allegation of "criminal association",
as well as illegal possession of weapons. After questioning, the court asked Jean-Juste to summarize his defense.
In response to the charge of "criminal associations" he stated "As a priest
my boss is Jesus, then the Bishops, and after them my people are my
associates. I am not a member of an association of 'malefactors', but a member of an
association of benefactors, and in this association Jesus is the boss."
Regarding the second charge of illegal possession of weapons, he said: "I am
a priest, and as a priest my job is to pray and help people who need help.
When I worked for President Aristide I had some security guards. After the coup
in February 29 [2004] I lost the job and with that the security guards too.
The Judge who heard my case before wrote that I said I have guns. Yes, I have
guns: My Bible and my rosary are my guns. " Jean-Juste then held up his
rosary as supporters of Fanmi Lavalas, party of former President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, shouted out: "Justice, justice for Father Jean-Juste".
In the end Judge Pierre Pierre decided not to dismiss the charges. She
claimed more time was needed to review the case.
Jean-Juste retains his "provisional" freedom. The decision is odd given the two and a half year duration of the high profile case and the fact that the prosecutors conceded that there was no evidence against Jean Juste.
Writing in the South Florida Sun Sentinel, Human rights attorney Brian
Concannon, who has prosecuted very high profile cases in Haiti. observed that
"Jean-Juste has now faced charges under the Préval administration for as long as
he did under the Latortue regime." According to Concannon a hundred political
prisoners, much less prominent than Jean-Juste, continue to languish in
Haitian prisons despite Preval's election in 2006.
Jean-Juste needed police assistance to navigate through a large crowd of
enthusiastic supporters outside the court house.
- Amnesty International's Track Record in Haiti since 2004
- Haiti: Mysterious Prison Ailment Traced to U.S. Rice
- Arrested Suffer Unattended in Port-au-Prince General Hospital
- The Freedom House Files
- The Founding of a Grassroots Human Rights Coalition in Haiti: CONODDH
- Amanus Maette Remains a Political Prisoner
- January 14, 2007: Two Years Since the Killing of Abdias Jean
- Invisible Violence: Ignoring Murder in Post-Coup Haiti
- MINUSTAH accused of second massacre
- AUMOHD and the Community Human Rights Councils
- Lame Ti Manchèt accused of role in killing of Photojournalist
- SOS Journalists Appeal to the Authorities to Shed Light on Murder of Photojournalist
- War In The Haitian Slum
- MINUSTAH officials hide the body count in Haiti
- The Killing of Alexandra and Stéphanie Lubin
- Photo Exhibit: December 22nd Assault on the Bois Neuf Zone
- Theirry Fagart on La Scierie
- New Coalition Asks MINUSTAH To Stop Violence
- Haiti: Poor Residents of Capital Describe a State of Siege
- Alternative Chance: Defending the Rights of Women Criminal Deportees Sent to Haiti from the United States
- Kolektif Fanmiy Prizonye Politk Still Seeking Release of Political Prisoners
- Thoughts on Saving the Children
- Victims of Violence in Petit Goâve Speak
- MINUSTAH Intimidates Journalist on World Press Freedom Day
- September 30th Foundation calls for Trial of Luis Posada Carriles
- The leader of the FRAPH says he has no fear of being sent back to Haiti
- Haiti-Dominican Republic: Neighbours, But Not Friends
- A Two Day Seminar on Child Trafficking Opens in Port-au-Prince
- Kolektif Fanmi Prizonye Politik Marches for Justice
- Justice Denied: Haitian Political Prisoners and Canadian Development Dollars
- Samba Boukman and the Demobilization, Disarmament and Reintegration (DDR)
- AUMOHD and CHRC: Two Years since Gran Ravin Massacres
- Haitian Human Rights Leader Lovinsky Pierre Antoine Still in Captivity
- Victims of Violence Organize in Plateau-Central
- Groups Initiative Launched to Save the Life of Lovensky Pierre-Antoine
- If Stones Could Float: The British Press and the Turks and Caicos Boat Disaster
- Hallward Reviews Alex Dupuy's "The Prophet and Power: Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the International Community and Haiti"
- An Interview with Father Jean-Juste
- The Proxy War in Martissant and Gran Ravine
- Sektè Popilè Belè Commemorates Victims of Bel-Air Assault
- Document Release: AUMOHD Plateau Central Human Rights Report, 2002-2005
- Interview with Co-Author of Lancet Study on Haiti
- Rio de Janeiro Brazilian Police Profiled in New Documentary
- Members of Comité des Droits Humains de Savanette Under Threat
- Abductions of Fanmi Lavalas Leaders Raise Fears in Haiti
- Outcry to Find Missing Haitian Human Rights Activist
- Gunshots Fired at Radio-Tele Ginen
- Film "The Price of Sugar" Documents Haitian Workers in Bateyes
- Photo Exhibit: Crowds Cheer Persecuted Priest Gerald Jean-Juste
- Observations From The Hearing Of Father Gerard Jean-Juste
- Human Rights Crusader Michael Ratner: We'll Keep Going After Bush and Cheney When They Leave Office
- Did He Jump or Was He Pushed? Aristide and the 2004 Coup in Haiti
- Justice Delayed, Again
- Beating And Illegal Arrest of CHRC Member In Croix-Des-Bouquets
- Activist-Priest Gérard Jean-Juste in Port-au-Prince Appeals Court
- René Civil to Stand Trial This Week
- Haitian Political Prisoner René Civil Released
- Wilson Mésilien of Fondasyon Trant Septanm Under Threat
- Haiti: Journalist's Killers Sentenced
- To Help Haiti Recover, Cancel Its Debt
- Photo Exhibit: Freedom for Jeunesse Pouvoir Populaire Leader René Civil
- An Interview with René Civil: Anatomy of a Political Arrest
- Human Rights Defender Forced Into Hiding in Haiti
- Amnesty International Says Fondasyon 30 Septamn Leader Wilson Mesilien Under Threat
- Amnesty International on Threats Against Johnny Rivas, Human Rights Defender in Dominican Republic
- Amnesty International Fears for Safety of CCDH-GR Human Rights Activists Frantzco Joseph and Yveson Piton
- Toto Constant Opts For A Trial In Mortgage Fraud Case, Shunning a Deal, Also Challenging Recent Civil Suit Verdict
- Investigation Into The Assassination of Jean Dominique: Senator Rudolph Boulos Will Only Cooperate Through Attorney
- Haiti: Vanessa Redgrave Joins Appeal For Kidnapped Human Rights Activist
- Editorial: When The Poor Die of Hunger Who Speaks For Them, The Fascists?
- Yvon Neptune Seeks Justice from OAS Court
- AUMOHD Alert On Community Human Rights Council of Croix-Des-Bouquets
- The Failure of Human Rights Watch in Venezuela and Haiti
- Narco News: Alternatives International and the “Massacre” that Wasn’t
- Haiti's Image of Fear 'A Big Myth' To Some
- From Haiti to Tibet, China's Role in Suppressing Democracy
- Editorial: Globalization And Terror - Murder Inc. and Haiti
- AUMOHD Campaign Update: Prime Minister Comes to Aid of Poor Victims
- The Growing Human Rights Movement in Haiti: An Interview with Evel Fanfan
- Human Rights, Community-Based Health Care and Child Survival
- Anti-Hunger Protests Rock Haiti
- U.N. “Peacekeeping” Soldiers Launch Brutal Attack on Haitian Street Vendors
- Brooklyn, NY: Protestors Demonstrate as Toto Constant Trial is Postponed
- Lovinsky Pierre Antoine Honored with Human Rights Award
- Lovinsky Pierre Antoine - Still Missing After Nine Months
- Victory for Raboteau Massacre Victims
- PM Nominee Bob Manuel and the 1996 Cite Soleil Massacre
- Charges Finally Dropped Against Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste
- Lula Haiti Visit Prompts Protests in Brazil, Mexico and San Francisco
- Bush Administration Accused of Withholding "Lifesaving" Aid to Haiti
- Document Release: Haiti and the Jean Dominique Investigation: An Interview with Mario Joseph and Brian Concannon
- Two PPN Militants Tragically Lynched in St. Raphael
- Jubilee USA Demands Cancellation of Poor Country Debt
- Brooklyn, NY: Protests to Greet Toto Constant July 8 at Mortgage Fraud Trial
- IACHR Denounces Haitian Government for Political Persecution of Yvon Neptune
- Exclusive Interview: Yvon Neptune Speaks out Hemispheric Court Condemns His Treatment
- Lovinsky Pierre Antoine's Kidnapping: One Year Later, Still a Mystery
- Haiti's Ex-Military Rears its Unrepentant Head





















