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Violence-Plagued Haiti See More Peaceful Days

1 August 2007 Comments: 0

by LOURDES GARCIA-NAVARRO

Jean-Cyril Pres­soir for NPR

Jean-Cyril Pres­soir for NPR

Jean-Cyril Pres­soir for NPR

A young man laughs as chil­dren swim next to a pier in Cite Soleil.

Jean-Cyril Pres­soir for NPR

Fish­er­men sing as they mend a fish­ing net in Cite Soleil.

August 1, 2007

Haiti has long been asso­ci­ated with polit­i­cal tur­moil, kid­nap­ping and vio­lence. But with the elec­tion last year of Rene Preval and a new robust man­date by the United Nations Sta­bi­liza­tion Mis­sion in Haiti, the West­ern Hemisphere’s poor­est coun­try has been expe­ri­enc­ing a much-needed respite from inse­cu­rity and violence.

Take the Port-au-Prince area of Cite Soleil, for exam­ple. It was once the most vio­lent neigh­bor­hood in Haiti. But now, res­i­dents say there is no more fighting.

Back then, we would be going out, and we could get shot. It wasn’t good for us. Now things are bet­ter, and we thank God. There’s no more shoot­ing,” says Jacques Sonny Simea, a 33-year-old fisherman.

Spe­cial Moment’ in History

U.N. peace­keep­ing troops have been in Haiti since the ouster of for­mer Pres­i­dent Jean-Bertrand Aris­tide in 2004. Under the interim gov­ern­ment, the troops were inef­fec­tual at best, neg­li­gent at worst. Crime and vio­lence raged unchecked.

The 2006 elec­tion of Pres­i­dent Rene Preval marked a turn­ing point.

Mulet says it was dif­fi­cult for the U.N. to con­front the prob­lems of vio­lence dur­ing the interim gov­ern­ment, which he says didn’t have a “legit­i­mate voice.”

Now, the U.N. has man­aged to con­trol secu­rity because of Preval, whom Mulet describes as a pri­vate man who is try­ing to be a unit­ing fig­ure in a coun­try that has expe­ri­enced decades of polit­i­cal turmoil.

New Pres­i­dent Tack­les Violence

One of Preval’s first goals upon tak­ing office was to con­trol the vio­lence. He opened up nego­ti­a­tions with the gangs in Cite Soleil, but they demanded money and pass­ports so that they could leave the country.

The pres­i­dent lost patience and asked the U.N. forces now under Brazil­ian mil­i­tary com­man­der Car­los Alberto Dos San­tos Cruz to take them on. And San­tos Cruz says they did.

The sit­u­a­tion changed because we con­trolled all the neigh­bor­hoods,” San­tos Cruz says, adding that many gang lead­ers were arrested and are now jailed.

Fig­ures pro­vided by the U.N. show the dra­matic down­ward trend in the vio­lence nation­wide. In Jan­u­ary 2006, there were 240 attacks on U.N. troops. Over the past four months, there have been only 12. Kid­nap­pings are down as well: six in June, com­pared to 162 in Decem­ber 2005.

Despite Deaths, U.N. Troops Wel­comed in Slum

Still, the suc­cess hasn’t come with­out cost. U.N. troops have been accused of killing inno­cent civil­ians dur­ing their operations.

Human rights lawyer Mario Joseph, who is asso­ci­ated with the for­mer party of Jean-Bertrand Aris­tide, says he has the death cer­tifi­cates of 22 peo­ple whom he says were killed by U.N. forces in Decem­ber when they made their first big assault into Cite Soleil.

The sea­side slum has his­tor­i­cally been a bas­tion of sup­port for Aris­tide, and Joseph con­tends that the raids were puni­tive. San­tos Cruz, the head of the U.N. forces, denies the charge.

While the scars of the fight­ing are every­where in Cite Soleil, the res­i­dents say they trust these troops more.

Part of the rea­son is that they are Brazil­ian: Haiti is a soccer-mad coun­try, and Brazil is their favorite team.

Res­i­dent Ingado Pierre, 17, says that the peo­ple of Cite Soleil have also begun to take more respon­si­bil­ity, too.

We want peace and to live well,” he says.

Despite Gains, Poverty Remains

Furi­ous build­ing is going on at city hall, another sign of improv­ing times. But while every­one con­curs that secu­rity has improved, Haiti is still a place of abject poverty. There is no fight­ing, but there also is still no work.

Jacques Sonny Simea, the fish­er­man, says he can now walk to the mar­ket with­out fear, but he has no money with which to buy food.

We’re still in mis­ery and hunger over here,” Simea says. “What hap­pened before doesn’t hap­pen any­more, but we’re still hungry.”

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