by Kim Ives
Haitian
police have killed four people and destroyed seven homes in an
attempt to clear peasants from a remote mountain-top park where
they have lived and farmed for the past 70 years.
The bloody
confrontation, which occurred exactly 25 years to the day after
an infamous 1987 peasant massacre near the northwestern town of
Jean-Rabel, has incensed the Southeast Department’s population
and redoubled charges that the President Michel Martelly’s
government is resurrecting the repressive tactics of the
Duvalierist and neo-Duvalierist dictatorships which ruled and
scarred Haiti over two decades ago.
The incident was first reported
and photographed by Claudy Bélizaire of the Jacmel-based
Reference Institute for Journalism and Communication (RIJN). His
photographs of bloody corpses and burned houses in Galette Seche/Seguin,
a remote locality near the peaks of some of Haiti’s highest
mountains, have gone viral on the Internet, Twitter and Facebook.
Meanwhile, the mainstream media has largely ignored the story to
date.
“A squad composed of 36
officers of the Departmental Unit of Law Enforcement (UDMO),
directed by the Departmental Director of the HNP [Haitian
National Police], accompanied by the Divisional Delegate of
South-East, the Government Commissioner and a Justice of the
Peace, came to Seguin [in the Marigot commune] specifically to
the La Visite Park, aboard six vehicles and an ambulance of the
Haitian Red Cross to launch an operation aimed at evicting 140
families, who have been illegally occupying [since 1942!] a part
of the Park,” the RIJN reported.
“ Furious at this armed,
muscular intervention, the local people confronted the police
and threw stones. According to witnesses, the operation lasted
two hours. Many shots were fired against the protesters and ...
five policemen [were] injured,” according to the RIJN. “The
bodies of four victims were found and identified [Désir Enoz -
32 years, Nicolas David - 28 years, Robinson Volcin - 22 years
and Désir Aleis - 18], four children are reported missing, three
houses were completely destroyed by fire and four others
ransacked, and three oxen were killed. Yet the day after this
tragic incident, Ovilma Sagesse, the Chief Constable of the
South-East, claimed these statements were false, saying that
only five policemen were injured by the park’s occupiers. ‘Given
the aggressiveness of these individuals, we had to suspend the
operation to avoid having victims.’ The victims' bodies at the
La Visite Park, however, attest to the contrary.”
Reached by telephone,
Claudy Bélizaire told Haïti Liberté that the situation in
the area remains very tense, and the local people very angry.
“The population has burned about 100 hectares of pine forest in
response to the authorities’ intervention,” Bélizaire told
Haïti Liberté. That figure comes from Frantz Pierre-Louis,
secretary general of the central government’s southeast office.
The agronomist Arcène
Bastien, the Environment Ministry’s South East departmental
director, in his remarks to the Nouvelliste, denied that
the police committed any violence against the peasants living in
the La Visite Park, saying that "30 policemen who accompanied
the delegation of Emergency Preparedness had to backtrack faced
with the people’s wrath." He also tried to raise the specter of
a conspiracy, saying to the newspaper that "troublemakers had
infiltrated the population and whipped them up against the
delegation."
It seems, nevertheless, that
those who protested against the eviction of the 140 families and
the victims who were killed by bullets were not armed in any
way. "They did not have any weapons,” Belizaire told us. “They
only threw stones."
Recently, Sen. Moïse
Jean-Charles has charged that the government and big landowners
in Haiti’s north have also begun expropriating peasants from
their land. After the Duvalier dictatorship’s fall in 1986,
peasants reclaimed many lands which had been stolen from them
and from the state over decades by the grandons, as
Haiti’s big landowners are called.
“Today, with Martelly’s
accession to power, all the big shots, the grandons who
seized land around Milot, have assembled around Martelly,” Moïse
recently told Haïti Liberté in a long interview (see
Haïti Liberté, Vol. 5, No. 51, Jul. 4, 2012). In the 1980s,
the senator was the leader of the Milot Peasants Movement (MPM).
“They have power in their hands, and they have begun to attack
us.”
On Jul. 23, 1987, the
grandons near Jean-Rabel massacred with guns and machetes at
least 139 peasants affiliated with Tèt Kole Tipeyizan Ayisyen
(the Heads Together of Haitian Small Peasants). Grandon Nikol
Poitevien famously went on Haitian television a few days later
to claim that “we killed 1042 Communists.’
In a long declaration on the
anniversary, Tèt Kole decried that “the criminals still are
walking around our society freely, swimming in state corruption
without any anxiety” and denounced the government of President
Martelly and his Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe as undertaking
Haiti’s “liquidation.”
In Le Nouvelliste, the
commentator Roberson Alphonse characterized the killings in
Seguin as "a fiasco" and "a shame" but argued that
"fundamentally, the efforts to restore protected areas and to
rehabilitate shrinking woodlands are necessary "and
even"indispensable, given the park's biodiversity, endangered
for years by the row crops of the occupants and the unregulated
cutting of trees for domestic use."
In his report, Bélizaire said:
"After several hours of discussions with policemen stationed in
the area, community leaders and families of victims and grieving
neighbors, a Committee of four members was formed..., An
intermediary was designated by the population to discuss with
the authorities such as: Nadège Excellus, representative of
women victims, Estinvil Sainvilus (ASEC), Jean Dais, community
leader, and Pierre Félix, a member of an area organization. The
negotiations are not over. Note that since this serious
incident, no state official has come to Seguin, where barricades
have been erected by the people, in protest. The only item known
about this negotiation was an envelope of 50,000 gourdes [about
$ 1,250] promised to each family (50% before departure, 50%
after). However, the offer, which proposes no place of
relocation, was rejected by the families involved, who believe
that this amount is insufficient to enable them to purchase
land, find a patch of fertile agricultural land and relocate."
The Parc La Visite is one of
Haiti’s three national parks and has one of Haiti’s last
remaining pine forests, in a country that is 98% deforested. It
has suffered from unauthorized logging and clearing over the
last decades, which has affected the watersheds for the cities
of Port-au-Prince and Jacmel.
However, the violence in
uprooting the families in the park is similar to the uprooting
of families in the Pétionville slum of Jalousie, a move also
being defended as an environmental imperative.
“ We can easily understand the
need to defend Haiti’s environment but any relocation must be
done equitably and with adequate compensation and planning so
that those displaced can find new homes and not be left
homeless,” Ronald Joseph, a Jalousie resident, told Haïti
Liberté. Many of the shanty-town’s residents complain that
wealthy residents also living on the mountain Morne Calvaire, on
whose flank Jalousie sits, are not being targeted for eviction.
The situation in Seguin has become so tense that the
United Nation military occupation force has felt compelled to
make a statement distancing itself from the Martelly
government’s actions: “The United Nations Mission for
Stabilization in Haiti (MINUSTAH) is concerned by reports of the
deaths of at least four Haitians and several injured, in
circumstances not yet clear, during an operation of forced
evictions conducted by police officers,” the note says. “A
multidisciplinary team of the United Nations was deployed in the
field to collect information to help establish the facts.
MINUSTAH recalls that forced eviction without providing
alternative adequate housing is contrary to international human
rights, including the International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights.” |