By: Evel Fanfan and Tom Luce - HaitiAnalysis.com
(Photographs: Wadner Pierre)
On August 20th of 2005 the duly elected government of President René
Préval had not been even envisioned. The out-law government of U.S.
backed Gérard Latortue was proceeding with the agenda of eliminating
pro-Aristide forces. Anti-Lavalas militias were cooperating with
elements of the Haitian National Police that summer with full impunity
as they carried out vengeance killings. Among these groups was the
Little Machete Army based in Gran Ravin and headed by Rudy Kernizan.
The police head of the west department of Port-Au-Prince, Carlo Lochard,
organized within his office a plan, utilizing members of the Little
Machete Army, to arrest prominent Lavalas leaders, allegedly armed and
violent, at a summer, "peace" soccer tournament at St. Bernadette's
soccer field in Martissant an inner city zone on the flatlands leading
to the harbor. The plan escalated into a Rwanda style massacre with
Little Machete Army members hacking people to death, and the police
shooting victims as well, over 50 dead. A follow-up massacre in Gran
Ravin was carried out by the police including house burnings the day
after. A total of 15 police were eventually arrested for this
governmental crime, but were released, case closed, in February of 2006,
just before the election of President Préval, by Judge Jean Peres-Paul.
On July 7, 2006 a second massacre occurred in Gran Ravin, carried
out by the same Little Machete Army. Intensive peace-making efforts on
the part of the Association of University Graduates Motivatd For A Haiti With Rights (AUMOHD) and its local Community Human Rights Council (CHRC)
in Gran Ravine were carried out throughout the fall of 2005 and into the
beginning of 2006. Hundreds of residents including people from
neighboring zones where violent retributions had been carried out in
addition to the "soccer" massacre met for weeks in an attempt to obtain
a disarmament agreement. This work was done by AUMOHD which insisted
that the so-called "DDR" (demobilization,disarmament, reintegration)
program of the UN not be brought in because of its clearly biased
nature--allowing groups to turn in arms and then immediately arresting
and jailing them.
A public reconciliation ceremony was held in March of 2006, amidst Canadian solidarity observers, with members of CHRC present, during which Rudy Kernizan of the Little Machete Army and Jean Louis Colson, a representative from Grand Ravine, and a community mentor, went on stage to pledge ongoing efforts at peace. As the new Préval government was just getting itself into
operation, in spite of repeated urgent calls by AUMOHD for government
intervention, the Little Machete Army struck again in Gran Ravin,
slaying over 20 innocent men, women and children and burning 300+ homes
creating over a 1000 refugees. And in a bold intimidation move to stop
prosecution for massacre #1 and #2 the new CHRC-GR chair, Esterne
Bruner, was assassinated on Sept. 21.
The original 1st massacre victims and their families are still without any justice as well as the second massacre victims and their families. The initial legal work on the Gran Ravin massacres was done by the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI). Since then AUMOHD has carried out frequent field/footwork in the area. AUMOHD has not
received any communication from the government groups, Haitian or UN,
regarding a petition and watchdogging efforts to prosecute the
cases.
It is hard to
tell what is being done to reform the judiciary which under Judge Jean Peres Paul
(former head of the judges' association) threw out the
cases of the police involved in the 1st massacre.
We can give credit to Police Head Andresol who did credible work under
impossible circumstances in this first case and has been personally
involved with the second. He is right when he says his job is done
after the arrests are made. But the UN has not communicated since
January with AUMOHD's supporter Human Rights Accompaniment in Haiti (HURAH). There are news reports that the UN continues to
work with the police in the area and are still based at the high
school that AUMOHD's assassinated human rights worker Esterne Bruner
wanted vacated. However, agreements made at a January meeting with the
UN Human Rights division to collaborate with AUMOHD, have not been kept.
According to the press and human rights sources there has been a
reduction in violent crimes in Gran Ravin and Martisant. The minimal
response to the pressure on the part of AUMOHD and the Community Human
Rights Council (CHRC) from
the government has been an allocation of some money to the families
whose homes were burned last summer.
The CHRC of Gran Ravin has been working hard on trying to forge a
peace plan that will prevent any further violence among neighbors in
this volatile area. Support for AUMOHD's work continues to be very
minimal. To contribute send a check to Joan Rae, Treasurer, P.O. Box
418, Faytson, VT 05673.
