Former Haitian president Jean-Bertrand
Aristide charged Tuesday that political violence in Haiti was a "black
holocaust" orchestrated by France and the United States. Speaking to
reporters in Pretoria where he lives in exile, Aristide renewed his
charge that he was kidnapped by the United States and France as part of
a coup d'etat in February 2004 and that he remains Haiti's
democratically elected leader. Aristide refused to say if he would be a
candidate in general elections promised later this year in Haiti, but
he said there could be no free democratic elections in the troubled
country until thousands of his Lavalas party members are freed from
jail or allowed to return from exile. The ousted president said he
wanted to return to Haiti, "whenever conditions permit." Aristide also
again denied fomenting political violence in Haiti from South Africa
and defended his former interior minister, Jocelerme Privert, who was
charged Monday in connection with the killing of political opponents.
He called the charges "lies." "We are for peace, not violence," said
Aristide, claiming his Lavalas party members were victims, not
perpetrators. "Racism is behind a black holocaust in Haiti," said
Aristide. "More than 10,000 of my supporters have been killed in the
past year." He also charged that killings were being orchestrated by
the United States and France, who he has said kidnapped him and
organized the coup that ousted him. [more]
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