FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: The UN and Haiti Government Square Off in Impunity Championship, Haiti’s Poor Pay the Price

See the French version of this Press Release.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contacts:
Mario Joseph, Av., Managing Attorney, Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI), Mario@www.ijdh.org, +509 3701-9879 (Haïti) (English, French, Kreyòl)
Brian Concannon, Esq., Executive Director, Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), Brian@www.ijdh.org, +1 541-263-0029 (Boston, USA) (English, French, Kreyòl)

The UN and Haiti Government Square Off in Impunity Championship, Haiti’s Poor Pay the Price

Port-au-Prince, March 5, 2018 – The Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI) and the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), who represent the victims of cholera imported by the United Nations Mission Stabilization in Haiti (MINUSTAH), urge the Haitian government and the United Nations (UN) to set aside their diplomatic games in order to meet their legal obligations and respect the rights of the Haitian people, especially cholera victims. Attorney Mario Joseph of the BAI encourages “the Haitian government to curb foreign interference in Haiti’s internal affairs,” while hoping that “the government does not use the cholera case for diplomatic purposes to hide corruption allegations of those close to President Jovenel Moïse and other former high ranking officials.”

On February 26, 2018, the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH) expressed a favourable opinion on the appointment of an investigating judge to a case involving the squandering of $3 billion that Haiti had received under an oil agreement with Venezuela (known as “Petro Caribe”), which implicated former senior state officials and close associates of President Moïse. In response, the Haitian government withdrew its ambassador to the UN and canceled its participation in a high-level meeting on cholera at the UN in New York on March 1 and 2, 2018. The meeting, which was to have been chaired by President Moïse and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and assisted by several donors, addressed the financing of water and sanitation systems to eliminate cholera in Haiti.

“The Haitian State waited six (6) years, until just after the declaration of the UN Secretary-General recognizing the UN’s responsibility in the introduction of cholera in Haiti, to make a public statement in favor of cholera victims,” said Attorney Joseph. “So far, the government has taken no serious steps to ensure that the UN respects the rights of these victims. By contrast, this Haitian government took only two (2) days to position itself firmly against MINUJUSTH’s note concerning the Petro Caribe issue”. According to Joseph, “This is proof that the Haitian government is anti-national, serving the interests of the strongest to the detriment of the weak.”

“MINUJUSTH is right to insist on an investigation into the squandering of Petro Caribe funds. But the UN will have no credibility to insist that Haiti respect the rule of law until it complies with its own legal obligations to a million victims of the UN’s cholera ” said IJDH Executive Director Brian Concannon.

Jovenel Moïse agreed to commit the Haitian government to the transformation of MINUSTAH into MINUJUSTH, disregarding the more than one million victims of cholera, as well as women victims of sexual abuse and exploitation who are still fighting for justice and reparation. As a result, MINUJUSTH damages not only Haiti’s image, but the dignity of the Haitian people, being an occupation force legitimized by the signature of Jovenel Moïse.

Attorney Joseph concludes, “The public confrontation between the Haitian government and MINUJUSTH is a diplomatic distraction because they both know that they are not credible to address the claims of cholera victims, the fight against corruption, or the massive repression perpetrated by National Police of Haiti (PNH) officers against Haitian civilians. As such Attorney Joseph “encourages the Haitian people to continue their fight for social emancipation, understanding that the fight against corruption is a struggle for the recovery and reorientation of public spending for the benefit of human rights.”

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