Monday
Feb072005
Monday, February 7, 2005 at 05:59AM
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Report Documents U.S. Role in Chaotic Interim Government
A new and extensive investigation into Haiti's human rights situation
has found conditions in the country have sharply deteriorated under an
interim government that replaced ousted President Jean
Bertrand-Aristide in February 2004. Life for the impoverished majority
is becoming more violent and more inhuman as the months pass since the
elected government's removal, the report concludes. The
investigation team led by Thomas Griffin, a former federal law
enforcement officer and now an attorney practicing immigration law in
Philadelphia, conducted its interviews and observations in Haiti during
November 2004. Their 60-page report, published by the Center for
the Study of Human Rights at the University of Miami School of Law and
online at the website for the Institute for Justice and Democracy in
Haiti, www.ijdh.org, includes documentation of masked Haitian National
Police routinely committing summary executions of civilians, an outline
of U.S. involvement in the current government, and graphic photos of
victims of violence. Griffin says including the stark photographs
was an essential part of reporting the investigation's findings.Haiti is such a hotly debated political topic that it is important for
the report to be as objective as possible, he said. The photos are
necessary because they can't be spun one way or another for political
purposes. Anyone who sees these pictures will say this should not be
happening to human beings anywhere, especially just a few hundred miles
from Disney World. [more]
- A Year Since Aristide, Haiti Impoverished [more]
- INSTITUTE FOR JUSTICE & DEMOCRACY IN HAITI [more]
- Haiti sets date for new elections [more]