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HAITI
HAITI'S PRESS SUFFERED A CRACKDOWN THIS YEAR that coincided with the February
inauguration of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and continued after an
apparent December coup attempt that sought to oust him. On December 17,
about two dozen gunmen stormed the National Palace at dawn. At least 13
people were killed in the attack and ensuing mob violence in the streets
of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and other cities.
Hours after the attack, hundreds of government supporters armed with machetes
and guns accosted and threatened at least a dozen journalists working
for private radio stations in the capital, prompting at least four media
outlets to suspend broadcasts for the day. Other stations went off the
air for several days. Several broadcasters also received anonymous phone
threats, while Aristide partisans attacked radio stations and vehicles
belonging to private news organizations.
Later that day, Aristide asked Haitians to respect the rights of political
parties and journalists. Opposition parties maintained that the president
was using the coup attempt as a pretext to crush dissent. As a result
of the violent attacks, at least 15 journalists left the country to apply
for asylum in the United States and France, and as many as 40 journalists
went into hiding, according to international press reports.
Before the December violence, frequent setbacks plagued the investigation
of the April 3, 2000, assassination of Jean Léopold Dominique,
the country's most prominent journalist and a longtime pro-democracy activist
whose station, Radio Haïti Inter, criticized Aristide's ruling Lavalas
Family (FL) party. Dominique alone had dared to air investigative stories
and name names in a country where a history of state repression has dictated
that political coverage be elusive and evasive.
Though not officially accused, FL senator Dany Toussaint is widely suspected
of masterminding Dominique's murder in reprisal for an October 1999 editorial
that criticized him sharply. At least six people were arrested and more
than 80 suspects were questioned, including Toussaint. But examining judge
Claudy Gassant resigned in June, saying he had received inadequate protection
from threats. Justice Minister Gary Lissade promised to ensure Gassant's
security. The judge then returned to the case, but the threats continued.
Although former president René Préval asked Parliament in
his final State of the Nation address to ensure that the Dominique case
was quickly resolved, several senators were widely criticized for questioning
why the probe deserved so much attention and whether the parliamentary
immunity of their colleague and suspect Toussaint should be lifted. In
protest, Radio Haïti Inter suspended its broadcasts for three days
in February.
In June, Toussaint's supporters erected barricades of burning tires in
Port-au-Prince suburbs and called for Gassant's arrest. In September,
Gassant requested that Parliament lift the legislator's immunity, but
by year's end no official decision had been made. Gassant left Haiti for
the United States in January 2002 and is considering seeking asylum there.
It is unclear whether the murder case will continue with an interim judge,
or if a new judge will restart the entire investigation.
In Haiti, where as much as 55 percent of the population is illiterate
and the price of a television can exceed the average yearly wage, radio
remains the primary medium, with more than 40 stations on the air. Many
are partisaneither government-backed or allegedly supported by conservative
foreign organizations. Government officials tend to attack private radio
stations when their coverage does not support the ruling party or the
president.
The country has two major dailies, Le Nouvelliste and Le Matin,
along with three partisan weeklies distributed in the United States and
Haiti: Haïti-Observateur, Haïti Progrès,
and Haïti En Marche. The 2-year-old Haitian Times,
which is edited by former New York Times reporter Garry Pierre-Pierre
and published in Brooklyn, New York, aims to inform English-speaking Haitians
at home and abroad about current events in Haiti and among the Haitian
diaspora.
Amid its charged politics and deteriorating economy, Haiti suffers from
a dearth of independent journalism. Although private radio stations criticize
the Aristide administration, they often fail to apply the same critical
eye to civic organizations, opposition parties, and the private sector,
whose paid advertisements help keep them afloat. Some journalists accept
bribes and have been known to drop stories in exchange for money. There
is virtually no investigative work because of the risks involved.
Press freedom abuses in 2001 coincided with a clampdown on government
opposition. On January 9, FL militant Paul Raymond threatened media owners,
former government officials, and opposition leaders with violence if they
did not distance themselves from a minority party coalition's plan to
launch a "shadow government." Journalists were targeted during March demonstrations,
when pro-Aristide street militants erected flaming tire barricades nationwide
and demanded the arrest of Gérard Gourgue, head of the opposition
Democratic Convergence, who claimed to be the "shadow" president. Journalists
said they were forced to conceal their press badges.
Jean Robert Delciné, a Radio Haïti Inter journalist, was assaulted,
threatened, and had his radio equipment confiscated by police officers
when he went to the Cité Soleil slum on October 13 to inquire about
executions allegedly committed by police officers. Extrajudicial executions
became an increasing problem after Aristide launched a "zero tolerance"
anti-crime campaign in June, implying that street criminals caught red-handed
could be summarily punished without trial. Opposition leaders and human
rights groups denounced the policy, fearing that anybody deemed a criminal
could become a target.
On December 3, Brignolle Lindor, news director of Radio Echo 2000, was
hacked to death by a machete-wielding mob while en route to one of his
other jobs as a customs official near the provincial town of Petit-Goâve.
CPJ sources said that Lindor's name appeared on an FL deputy's list of
opposition partisans who should be specifically targeted by the zero-tolerance
policy.
In June, CPJ Americas program coordinator Marylene Smeets visited Haiti
and met with media owners, government officials, foreign diplomats, local
press associations, and journalists to discuss the Dominique case and
other press freedom concerns.
January 9
Lilianne Pierre-Paul, Radio Kiskeya
THREATENED
Radio Kiskeya
HARASSED
Pierre-Paul, co-owner and program director of the independent Port-au-Prince
station Radio Kiskeya, was threatened by Paul Raymond, leader of the religious
organization Ti Kominote Legliz, during a press conference.
That same day, an unidentified individual tried to set Radio Kiskeya's
offices on fire.
Raymond's organization supports the ruling Lavalas Family party. During
his remarks at the press conference, Raymond read names from a list of
people who he claimed were planning to form a shadow government.
The list included Pierre-Paul. Raymond gave those mentioned three days
to distance themselves from the alleged plot, threatening violence should
they not comply.
During his remarks, Raymond said Pierre-Paul's name belonged on the
list because she always referred to the lawmakers who won a seat in the
controversial May 2000 parliamentary elections as "contested deputies."
Pierre-Paul told CPJ that at 7 p.m. that same evening, staff members
found a gallon of gasoline in a plastic bag in the station's courtyard.
Gasoline had also been poured on the ground.
A security guard and some neighbors later claimed to have seen someone
running away from the offices just before the gasoline was discovered.
The next day, a match was found stuck in the gate.
Local police declined to investigate the incident because there was
no actual fire.
Pierre-Paul told CPJ that she received death threats on a weekly basis,
mostly by mail. In insulting terms, the anonymous letters accused Pierre-Paul
of corruption.
June 9
Roosevelt Benjamin, Signal FM
THREATENED
Benjamin, news director at the private radio station Signal FM, based
in the Port-au-Prince suburb of Pétion-Ville, received a series
of telephone threats after a June 9 broadcast of his weekly political
talk show "Moment Vérité" (Moment of Truth).
Benjamin told CPJ that one hour after his program, he received an anonymous
call on his cell phone. "I see you are meddling in affairs that are none
of your business," the caller said. "But we can force you to be silent."
Five minutes later, the same man called again, this time telling Benjamin
that he knew where the journalist lived and what car he drove. The next
day at around 5 p.m., Benjamin received similar threats from a different
caller. After the program was rebroadcast on the night of June 11, Benjamin
received another, apparently threatening, call in which the caller remained
silent.
All four calls were made with a prepaid phone card, Benjamin said, making
it impossible for him to identify the callers.
Benjamin believes that he was threatened for stating, during his June
9 broadcast, that a recently launched political organization called the
Mouvement de la Société Civile Majoritaire (Majority Civil
Society Movement) was dominated by the relatives of senators from the
ruling Lavalas Family party.
On June 13, CPJ wrote a letter to President Jean-Bertrand Aristide expressing
its profound concern over the threats.
December 3
Brignolle Lindor, Radio Echo 2000
KILLED
A machete-wielding mob hacked to death Lindor, news director of the
private station Radio Echo 2000 that is based in the coastal town of Petit-Goâve,
some 40 miles west of Port-au-Prince.
At 11 a.m., Lindor and a colleague were driving to one of Lindor's other
jobs, as a customs official. Their car was ambushed by supporters of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide's Lavalas Family party. Lindor's colleague fled,
but Lindor was attacked and killed after he tried to take refuge in the
nearby home of a local town counselor.
Lindor hosted the political talk show "Dialogue." He had received numerous
threats from local authorities for inviting members of the 15-party opposition
coalition Democratic Convergence to appear on his show.
After Aristide launched a "zero tolerance" anti-crime campaign in June,
implying that street criminals caught red-handed could be summarily punished
without trial, Petit-Goâve deputy mayor Dumé Bony announced in
public that the "zero tolerance" policy should be applied to Lindor. Opposition
parties and human rights groups accused Aristide of issuing a carte blanche
for extrajudicial executions.
Lindor's December 11 funeral turned violent when police used bludgeons
and tear gas on mourners who were shouting anti-Aristide slogans, according
to wire reports.
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