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UN to investigate shootings at prison after Haiti quake

24 May 2010 Comments: 0

By Guy Adams, The Independent

The United Nations has launched an inves­ti­ga­tion into what it calls “major human-rights vio­la­tions” at an over­crowded jail in Haiti, after claims that police shot dozens of pris­on­ers dur­ing the chaotic days after the country’s earth­quake in January.

Between 12 and 19 inmates were killed, and roughly 40 wounded, when armed offi­cers stormed the jail in Les Cayes, Haiti’s third-largest city, a week after the dis­as­ter, to try to quell a riot. Most of the vic­tims either had their hands raised or were lying on the floor to sur­ren­der, sev­eral wit­nesses said. The inci­dent went largely unre­ported, in the upheaval that fol­lowed the 12 Jan­u­ary quake, which killed between 230,000 and 300,000 Haitians, mostly in the cap­i­tal city of Port-au-Prince. But the UN decided to open an inquiry on 12 May amid grow­ing sug­ges­tions that the men killed there had been unarmed.

As far as we’re con­cerned there was a major human rights vio­la­tion in that prison,” UN spokesman David Wimhurst said yes­ter­day, adding that “incom­plete and inac­cu­rate” offi­cial state­ments sug­gest a pos­si­ble attempt to cover up what had hap­pened. “We’ve waited and waited for the Hait­ian gov­ern­ment to do its thing and now we’re going to do our thing,” he said. “We’re not here to under­mine them, but nor are we here to turn a blind eye to gross human-rights violations.”

An inves­ti­ga­tion by The New York Times, which inter­viewed sev­eral wit­nesses, claimed that the riot started at Les Cayes prison when some of its 467 inmates, who were in severely over­crowded cells and ter­ri­fied of after­shocks, tried to escape.

Police and UN peace­keep­ers from Sene­gal sur­rounded the com­pound, which had not been dam­aged by the quake, and appeared to have the sit­u­a­tion under con­trol. But at some point, the Hait­ian police offi­cers decided to rush into the prison com­pound and open fire. Onlook­ers said they first threw 30 tear-gas can­is­ters, and then began shoot­ing inmates, many of whom had not been involved in the ini­tial escape effort. Some vic­tims were still locked in their cells when they were killed.

They shouted, ‘Pris­on­ers, lie down. Lie down. Lie down’,” Kesnel Jeu, a recently released inmate, told the news­pa­per. “When the pris­on­ers lay down they began fir­ing.” Some of the police shoot­ings involved some set­tling of scores, he added. “There were peo­ple they selected to kill.”

Many of the inmates at Les Cayes had been locked up for rel­a­tively minor offences such as drug pos­ses­sion or shoplift­ing. Oth­ers were yet to be con­victed of any offence, and were instead being held on remand. Police had claimed that vio­lent inmates had taken three female prison cooks hostage and were threat­en­ing to kill them.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/un-to-investigate-shootings-at-prison-after-haiti-quake-1981137.html

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