Haiti
Source:
Report Without Border
Area :
27,750 sq.km. Population : 8,326,000 Languages : Creole, French Head
of state : President Boniface Alexandre Head of government : Prime Minister
Gérard Latortue
Haiti
- Annual report 2005
Since
the resignation of President Aristide, press freedom has increased but is still
fragile. The job of maintaining the improvement, disbanding armed groups and restoring
the rule of law is enormous and beyond the single issue of press freedom. Everything
is in the balance.
The
departure into exile of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on 29 February 2004 ended
a long nightmare for the Haitian media that began with the April 2000 murder of
the country's best-known radio journalist, Radio Haiti Inter chief Jean Dominique.
Since his death, pro-Aristide thugs called "chimères" emerged and another journalist,
Brignol Lindor, was hacked to death in December 2001. The president terrorised
the media by failing to punish the killers of the two men.
Aristide's fall
was sparked by a rebel advance towards the capital and by French and US pressure.
Physical attacks and threats against the media and its journalists peaked in the
days and weeks before his overthrow. In February alone, 22 media outlets were
attacked, looted or censored and 19 journalists attacked, threatened or shot and
wounded. A week after Aristide fled, Ricardo Ortega, of the Spanish TV station
Antena 3, was killed in still unexplained circumstances.
Journalists have
since regained some of their confidence. "We can breathe again," Marvel Dandin,
chief editor of the leading Port-au-Prince station Radio Kiskeya, told a Reporters
Without Borders fact-finding mission in early June. The immediate arrival of a
UN peacekeeping force helped calm the situation by curbing the appetite for revenge
and by facing off the rebels controlling more than half the country. But the impact
of the force was soon limited by the problem of disarming the various sides.
Self-censorship
in the provinces
The
respite for the media in Port-au-Prince may be short-lived. Aristide supporters
resumed violent attacks in September, intimidating and terrorising people, and
more than 150 people died, including many policemen, some of who were decapitated.
The wave of violence, dubbed "Operation Baghdad," showed the continuing influence
of Aristide from his South African exile.
The media in the provinces, largely
controlled by the rebels, opted for self-censorship. Jean-Robert Lalane, owner
of Radio Maxima, in the northern city of Cap-Haitien, said the rule of law no
longer existed and that journalists had no defence against threats or physical
attacks. The rebels were mostly former members of the army, which was disbanded
by Aristide in 1995 after the collapse of the military dictatorship and which
has rarely shown any interest in democracy or in tolerating the media.
When
the ex-soldiers seized Cap-Haitien in late February, they did nothing to stop
the ransacking of pro-Aristide media offices and sometimes took part in it. They
arbitrarily arrested journalists in the Centre province who were unenthusiastic
about them. But staff at Radio Cap-Haitien said the situation was an improvement
on the climate of terror under Aristide.
Disturbing
events in the battle against impunity
The
fight against impunity in the Dominique and Lindor murder cases made little progress
despite the goodwill of new prime minister Gérard Latortue.
Disturbing developments
included the apparent discovery in early December that three-quarters of the contents
of Dominique case file had vanished from the supreme court offices. A senior court
official later denied this but by the end of the year, it was not clear where
they were. Under Aristide, virtually all government bodies obstructed progress
in the murder investigation.
Concern about impunity increased when two former
soldiers, Louis-Jodel Chamblain and Jackson Joanis, were acquitted in August of
committing atrocities during the 1991-94 military dictatorship. The trial was
denounced as a sham by human rights groups. Chamblain was a leader of the rebellion
against Aristide and it was thought the government did not want to upset the still-powerful
rebels.
No progress was made in the Lindor case, which has been stuck in the
supreme court since spring 2003 despite the new government's promise in June 2004
to see that the court ruled quickly on whether to grant the Lindor family interested
party status in the case. Lindor, of Radio Echo 2000, was lynched in December
2001 in Petit-Goâve (70 kms. southwest of Port-au-Prince). A pro-Aristide "grassroots
organisation" (in fact, a militia) said it had killed him.
While Aristide's
supporters and the ex-soldiers who overthrew him remain armed they are a threat
to the media. General disarmament is the government's declared priority. If it
fails, disorder and violence against the media may return during the general elections
due in 2005.
In
2004…
1
journalist was killed
22 physically attacked
20 threatened
23 medias were physically attacked
and 19 censored
Personal
account
"It
wasn't just a normal looting"
Armed
men ransacked and looted the premises of Télé-Haïti on 29 February 2004. General
manager Antoine Blanc recalls a sombre day for the station and its staff.
Several
dozen armed men, some wearing T-shirts with the face of ex-President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide who'd fled the country a few hours earlier, appeared in front of the
station's building in downtown Port-au-Prince. They were in a bus which they used
to break down the locked gates. Then they got into the building by smashing side
windows and for the next few hours carted off everything they could and destroyed
the rest - ceilings, air-conditioning, electrical wiring, computer cables - with
machetes and iron bars. After taking fire extinguishers and cutting off the water
supply, they started a fire in the canteen, which fortunately didn't spread and
was later put out safely. It wasn't just a normal looting. It was deliberate destruction.
24 vehicles were destroyed, some burned or else stripped bare with the help of
the car mechanics that work in nearby streets. All the cable network maintenance
equipment that was in the vehicles and offices was stolen.
We reckoned at
least $730,000 worth of damage was done. The key parts of the business were attacked
- the electrical system, the vehicles (vital to maintain the cable network and
keep contact with customers), the computer system with all the customer accounts
and all the production and reporting equipment. Our 90 employees were devastated
to find their workplace in ruins and felt vulnerable, helpless and depressed.
Especially as the police did nothing to prevent the attack even though they'd
been alerted several days before and again on the morning of the attack by many
radio stations.
Before Aristide fled, the transmitters of more than half a
dozen radio stations were sabotaged on the hills above the capital on 14 January.
Persistent rumours said other media outlets, including Télé-Haïti, were about
to be attacked.
Early on 4 February, three men arrived at the station in a
car and asked to see the manager. Two of them, armed and carrying walkie-talkies,
said they were police and that their visit was "personal." They were told the
manager wasn't there. They said they would come back. They didn't.
Télé-Haïti
told the police inspector-general, Evens Sainturné, who promised to "look for
them," and communications minister Mario Dupuy, who told us the government would
take "appropriate steps." Pro-Aristide "chimères" (hotheads) approached a Télé-Haïti
crew returning from the prime minister's office on 25 February and said they were
going to march on the station. When the crew got back there, they saw groups of
people standing round nearby. All the station staff were evacuated just in case.
Soon afterwards, burning street barricades were erected in front of the building.
Several radio stations called for people to help Télé-Haïti but the pro-Aristide
police did nothing. Over this period, several security firms, including the one
guarding Télé-Haïti, were attacked and their weapons stolen, ensuring that the
destroyers and looters could do their work with confidence in the days that followed.
Port-au-Prince,
May 2004