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One Down, 700 to go: Political Prisoners in HaitiAnonyme, Sunday, December 5, 2004 - 01:31 More than 700 Lavalas partisans sit in cages. The police who rounded them up are fully backed by the RCMP and Canadian Forces who both occupy high level positions within the illegitimate United Nations mandate. These prisoners dared to cast a ballot for President Aristide and further dared to demand his return when he was kidnapped by the US, Canada, and France on February 29, 2004. One Down, 700 To Go A cause for Thanksgiving arrived last Monday, four days late for the official celebrations, but still most welcome. Haiti's most famous political prisoner, Fr. Gérard Jean-Juste, drove away from the Omega prison in Carrefour to the Archbishop's residence in Port-au-Prince. During seven weeks of incarceration, Haiti's interim government spared no effort to build a case against Fr. Jean-Juste in the Court of Public Opinion. Prime Minister Gérard Latortue announced there was a valid warrant for his arrest, Justice Minister Bernard Gousse promised evidence that the priest was financing violence, the police declared him responsible for disturbing the peace and for attacking them. The prosecutor insisted Fr. Jean-Juste was an The interim government worked just as hard to avoid presenting its case in a Court of Law. No judge approved the arrest beforehand, or confirmed it The reasons for the government's fear of the courthouse became clear when the case finally went before a judge on November 12. There was no arrest The judge, one of Haiti's most respected, quickly threw the case out and ordered Fr. Jean-Juste released. The government held Fr. Gerry for ten more days, but was eventually forced to obey the release order. The legal case against Fr. Jean-Juste was no weaker than the cases against most of Haiti's other political prisoners (the Catholic Church's Justice & If Fr. Jean-Juste can today walk freely, feed children and say Mass, it is because an international outcry forced the interim government to respect the rule of law in his case. Congresswoman Maxine Waters led 31 members of the U.S. House of Representatives (including Barney Frank and James McGovern of Religious leaders like Archbishop Joseph Serge Miot of Port-au-Prince and Bishop Thomas Gumbleton of Detroit deployed their moral authority against If Prime Minister Latortue counted on Fr. Jean-Juste's release to muffle this outcry, he may have acted too late. The case drew world attention to all of Haiti's political prisoners. UN Secretary General Kofi Annan warned that "the arbitrary detention of people solely for their political affiliation is in contravention of fundamental human rights principles," and called for the release of all political prisoners. On November 10, the countries of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) refused to recognize the interim government, declaring that they would not The interim regime denies there are any more political prisoners, and says that the jailed pro-democracy activists are common criminals. But everyone World leaders must continue to insist on justice for the 700 political prisoners that Fr. Jean-Juste left behind, especially as International Human Rights Day, December 10, approaches. The rest of us must make sure they do so. Members of Congress, Prime Ministers and UN Secretary Generals do the right Brian Concannon Jr., Esq. directs the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, which represents Fr. Jean-Juste. The Institute's website, www.ijdh.org, Brian Concannon Jr.
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