Posted on 03/07/2004 3:26:12 PM PST by yonif
AT least six people, including a Spanish television journalist, were killed during protests in Haiti today, medical sources and witnesses said.
Another 26 were wounded.
Spanish television sources named the journalist as Ricardo Ortega, who worked for Antena 3.
He was shot in the chest close to the presidential palace in Port-au-Prince while reporting on the demonstration, according to Miami Herald photographer Peter Andrew Bosch.
He said he was with the Spanish journalist when he was shot.
Two other journalists, including one from the United States, were said to be among the wounded.
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) -- Gunshots erupted Sunday at a protest to demand that ousted Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide be tried for corruption and fomenting violence. At least four demonstrators and a foreign journalist were killed.
Witnesses blamed Aristide militants, but that could not immediately be confirmed. The shooting occured as crowds gathered in front of the presidential National Palace.
Cameraman Ricardo Ortega of Spain's Antena 3 television network was shot in the stomach and died at Port-au-Prince's private Canape Vert Hospital.
Blood covered the floor there as the emergency room quickly filled with more than 30 injured people.
Among them was Ft. Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel photographer Michael Laughlin, 37. He was shot in the shoulder and face but was in stable condition at the hospital.
Witnesses said they saw Aristide supporters shooting at the crowd in front of the National Palace, and they complained that peacekeepers did nothing to prevent the violence.
"The peacekeepers were nowhere near where the shooting was," said Almil Costel, 31, who was shot twice in the left shoulder.
French commander Col. Daniel Leplatois defended the peacekeepers. "We're not able to secure the lives of all of the demonstrators," he said.
After the shooting, a truck with speakers bolted to its frame paraded around the palace, blasting music. One man speaking over a truck loudspeaker shouted at the U.S. Marines: "People are dying every day in this country. You have to do something about it."
Haitian police and U.S. and French troops who had been guarding the march route began patrolling the area of the shooting to bring it back under control.
Aristide supporters had planned a joint demonstration Sunday but said they were offered no protection by the peacekeepers and were afraid of reprisal attacks from anti-Aristide activists. Their protest was rescheduled for Monday, though organizers said they were trying to determine how much security they could depend on.
"The Americans are only here to protect those who helped oust Aristide," said Ednar Ducoste, 23, an Aristide supporter. "If we had guns, we would be fighting against them right now."
Aristide released a statement Sunday through government officials in the Central African Republic, where he is in exile, saying he was "well-looked after" by his hosts and will personally address reporters at an unspecified time. Aristide has said the United States forced him from power, something U.S. officials deny.
Peacekeepers have removed barricades in central neighborhoods but have avoided Aristide strongholds, like La Saline and Cite Soleil.
"They come here with their missiles, and they do nothing for us," said Leo Bertrand, 27. "They kidnapped our president, and now they're here to hold us down."
Earlier during Sunday's march in Port-au-Prince, demonstrators tore down a billboard featuring Aristide's face and the slogan: "Haiti is the mother of freedom," then carried it to the palace and set it on fire. Military helicopters circled overhead as black smoke billowed from the front gate.
Rebel leader Guy Philippe was hoisted onto supporters' shoulders as they chanted "Guy Philippe - hero! Aristide - zero!"
Philippe, a former Aristide police chief accused of coup-plotting, reiterated Sunday that he had no political aspirations. On Wednesday, he said his fighters would lay down their arms. There were no weapons in sight Sunday.
There were also cheers for Louis-Jodel Chamblain, an ex-soldier convicted in the killings of Aristide supporters. Like film stars, both Chamblain and Philippe were surrounded by autograph-seekers.
Rebels have refused to give up their weapons, despite Philippe's pledge. Marines have faced hostility - so far, only shouted insults - from armed Aristide militants furious over their leader's ouster and what they call "an occupation army."
Sunday's anti-Aristide crowd also took up a cry of "Help, yes. Occupation, no!"
It swelled quickly to thousands who ran and danced through the city, chanting, "Try Aristide! Jail Aristide!"
Businessman Liastaud Michel, 56, called the event "a victory march ... to celebrate. We want things to change."
A recently appointed seven-member "Council of Sages" met for a third day Sunday in the capital to choose a new prime minister. Officials said they hoped to have a decision by Tuesday.
One possibility is Lt. Gen. Herard Abraham, probably the only Haitian army officer to voluntarily surrender power to a civilian. Abraham succeeded ousted Gen. Prosper Avril in 1990 and immediately handed power to Haiti's Supreme Court justice. That allowed the transition that led to Haiti's first free elections in December 1990, which Aristide won in a landslide.
Another choice is Smarck Michel, a businessman who was Aristide's prime minister in 1994-1995 but resigned over differences in economic policy.
The U.S. Marine presence is the third American military intervention in Haiti, which has suffered under civilian and military dictators since a slave rebellion won independence from France in 1804.
The United States sent troops in 1915 who occupied the country for 25 years. In 1994, 20,000 troops came to end a brutal military dictatorship, halt an exodus of boat people to Florida and restore Aristide, who had been ousted in 1991.
Aristide was a wildly popular slum priest when he became Haiti's first freely elected leader in 1990. But his popularity diminished after he was re-elected in 2000. Haitians said he failed to improve their lives, condoned corruption and used police and armed supporters to attack his political opponents.
---
Associated Press writer Joseph B. Frazier contributed to this report from Cap-Haitien.
http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/H/HAITI?SITE=DCTMS&SECTION=HOME
picking off the press deliberately knowing it will evoke a reaction
no liberals in the foxhole when you realize they are shooting at you and you are no longer a protected class
.
U.S. Coast Guard Boosts Patrols Off Haiti
ABOARD THE U.S. COAST GUARD CUTTER DILIGENCE (AP) -- Dr. Daniel Garcia says it's the hardest job in his 6 1/2-year career with the U.S. Coast Guard: hunting down Haitians on homemade boats and returning them to the turmoil embroiling their homeland.
The U.S. Coast Guard Cutter Diligence was among a dozen patrolling waters off Haiti on Sunday, a fleet increased from the usual two vessels to prevent a feared exodus.
Sea and air patrols have been stepped up since President Bush on Feb. 25 urged Haitians to "stay home" and warned anyone who did not would be repatriated.
That policy, announced as the United States was preparing to evacuate Americans from a dangerously volatile situation, has drawn criticism from human rights groups and some U.S. legislators. Critics say the United States is obligated by international law to grant asylum to people fleeing conflict zones.
On Feb. 27, Garcia's cutter encountered a 50-foot homemade wooden boat carrying 233 Haitians and brought them aboard.
Garcia spent four hours giving each one a physical checkup. He had to rely on a handful of English and Spanish speakers among the bedraggled boat people to translate the Haitians' native Creole.
He watched as they were dropped at the dock at Haiti's capital of Port-au-Prince.
"Since my six-and-a-half years in the Coast Guard, this has been the most trying time," Garcia said, especially "seeing what they have to go back to."
"I don't blame them. I'd leave too," he told The Associated Press.
Officers said some of the boat people got unruly when they realized they were being returned to Haiti. A few had to be shackled because they didn't want to go back.
The group was among more than 904 boat people, including babies, to be repatriated by the Coast Guard since Bush stepped up the policy.
Many of the Haitians in February were left on the dock on the southern outskirts of the capital as militant Aristide loyalists were setting up flaming barricades and robbing people of cars and money.
The boat people had only bundles with blankets, clothing and meals of beans and rice that the Coast Guard gave them.
Most said they had left to escape Haiti's grinding poverty, not because of political motivations or fear of being swept up in the rebellion.
U.S. Marines had to guard the frightened returnees and Haitian Coast Guard officers trained their rifles on the taunting crowd to force a passage through for the refugees.
A reporter there watched them walking uncertainly, most barefoot, in the direction of the tumultuous capital - a city most had never visited many miles from northern hometowns cut off by the rebellion.
On Feb. 29, Aristide fled the country, under pressure from rebels advancing on the capital and U.S. and French calls for him to bow out.
In recent days, the cutters haven't come across any boats with migrant hopefuls. But they worry that could change.
In the early 1990s, some 65,000 Haitians were intercepted at sea as they tried to escape the Caribbean nation's brutal dictatorship and reach U.S. shores. With no leadership and much of the nation divided between Aristide opponents and supporters, many may opt to flee again.
It's not known how many die attempting to reach Florida in rickety overcrowded sloops. Haitian boat people rarely make the news unless dozens drown in a capsized boat.
On another cutter, the Escanaba, crew members scanned the ocean late Saturday in search of migrant boats. The cutter hadn't intercepted a Haitian boat since December, when 361 Haitians were traveling aboard a 54-foot sailboat.
It took the crew six hours to bring them all aboard. The wooden boat was littered with human waste. The cutter did not have enough blankets and clothes on board to accommodate the Haitians, so crew members gave up some of their own.
One crew member, a Haitian-American, helped translate for the migrants along with another translator who was on board. Some told him to let them go, that he should understand their situation since he was one of them.
But the crew member, Petty Officer Fritzgerald Saintime, said he didn't feel too guilty about returning the Haitians.
"There's no way they were going to make it" to Miami, Saintime said. "We definitely saved their lives."
Copyright 2004 Associated Press. All rights reserved.
http://customwire.ap.org/dynamic/stories/H/HUNTING_HAITIANS?SITE=DCTMS&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT
Thanks to our Coast Guard!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.