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Canadian troops in Haiti
accused of making death, rape threats
By: Jeff Heinrich
September 2, 2006 – (Ottawa Citizen) Canadian
troops and police with the United Nations in Haiti made death threats
during house raids and made sexual threats against women while drunk
and off-duty, according to Haitians interviewed as part of a meticulous
human-rights survey by U.S. researchers in December 2005 published
this week in the British medical journal The Lancet.
The study, which estimated that 8,000 Haitians
have been murdered and 35,000 women and girls raped since the ouster
of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide in early 2004, did not mention
Canadians specifically, blaming only Brazilian and Jordanian troops
for making threats. But in an interview Friday, the study's lead
author said Haitians interviewed for the peer-reviewed survey did
pinpoint Canadians as among those UN personnel who threatened them
physically or sexually over the 22 months studied.
"Canadians were definitely blamed for death
threats and threats of physical and sexual violence," said
Athena Kolbe, 30, an expert on Haiti who speaks Creole. She has
visited Haiti often and is doing her master's degree at Wayne State
University's School of Social Work, in Detroit.
One family was interviewed at their home in Delmas,
an eastern suburb of the capital, Port-au-Prince. "Canadian
troops came to their house, and they said they were looking for
(pro-Aristide) Lavalas chimeres, and threatened to kill the head
of household, who was the father, if he didn't name names of people
in their neighbourhood who were Lavalas chimeres or Lavalas supporters,"
Kolbe said by phone from San Francisco. (Chimeres is a Creole word
meaning ``spooks'' and refers to armed groups funded by the pro-Aristide
Lavalas movement.) "And he refused to, because, as he told
us, he didn't know anyone."
How did he recognize the soldiers were Canadians?
"From the flag on the uniform," Kolbe said.
How did he remember the incident so precisely?
"Because the family was traumatized by it."
That incident was alleged to have taken place around
the time of Aristide's departure in February 2004.
In another incident, "one woman said a Canadian
soldier tried to have sex with her, that this soldier was drunk
and she didn't want to, and that he was threatening her and grabbing
at her when she didn't want to," Kolbe said. The woman was
out with her friends near a Canadian base, on a street where drunk
and off-duty Canadian soldiers in uniform tried to pick up local
women. "She tried to tell him she wasn't interested, but he
spoke French and she spoke Creole, so she didn't think that he really
got it, and he wouldn't stop holding on to her."
Of the women in the study who complained of sexual
threats, drunk and off-duty Canadian and American soldiers were
most often blamed as the perpetrators, Kolbe said. "But regarding
Brazilian and Jordanian troops, a lot of the sexual threats were
actually when they were on patrol."
Canada sent 450 soldiers and other personnel along
with six CH-146 Griffon helicopters to Haiti in March 2004 as part
of a UN peacekeeping force of 6,700 military personnel and 1,600
police. The Canadian soldiers left in August of that year, but Canada
still has 66 police officers in Haiti leading the UN's police force.
Overall, the survey of 5,720 randomly selected
Haitians living in and around the capital found that 97 had received
death threats, 232 had been threatened physically and 86 sexually.
One-third of the perpetrators were criminals, about 20 per cent
were Haitian National Police and other government security agents,
and another 20 per cent were foreign soldiers. Most soldiers were
identified by the flag of their country displayed on their blue
UN helmet or on their uniform sleeve over the upper arm. Other UN
personnel, especially those on patrol with the Canadian-led CIVPOL
police force or working in other units doing crowd control or training
were harder to identify by country; they had blue helmets but no
flags.
The allegations of misconduct indicate that UN
troops in Haiti need to be reined in, Kolbe said. "These instances
are pretty much indicative of soldiers not having proper supervision
or training." Canadians would likely have been more frequently
cited if the study hadn't been restricted to the greater Port-au-Prince
area, where Canadian troops patrol less than elsewhere in Haiti,
Kolbe added. Told of the allegations after Kolbe related them late
Friday afternoon, a spokesman for the Department of National Defence
said they sounded specific and serious but needed verification before
any comment could be made.
"Is there any way that you could give us time
to comment?" said Lieut. Adam Thomson, asking publication of
the allegations be delayed until after the Labour Day weekend. Also
in Ottawa Friday, Rejean Beaulieu, the Foreign Affairs Department
spokesman for Haiti, refused comment, offering instead only an off-the-record,
not-for attribution "deep background briefing" on Canada's
role in Haiti. Earlier, Beaulieu referred questions to the the UN,
which he said "should be in a better position to answer since
our people in Haiti were and are working under this umbrella."
In Montreal, a spokesman for Premier Jean Charest
_ who visited Haiti in June 2005 and received its controversial
prime minister Gerard Latortue at his Montreal office last March
_ also declined comment. "The type of relationship we have
with Haiti is through humanitarian projects" _ in education,
in civil service training and such, not peacekeeping or policing,
which is Ottawa's jurisdiction, said Hugo d'Amours.
Ridiculous, retorted Marie-Dominik Langlois, co-ordinator
of the Christian Committee for Human Rights in Latin America, a
Montreal advocacy group founded in 1976 that promotes human rights
in the region, including Haiti and other Caribbean countries. "There
are lots of humanitarian projects in Haiti that only serve to legitimize
so-called community leaders" who had a role in the undemocratic
removal of Aristide, and Quebec is involved with them, she said.
But one Montreal Haitian community group took an
opposite view. "Impunity (from justice) reigns like a king
in Haiti, but in my opinion, things would be even worse without
the UN presence," said Marjorie Villefranche, director of programs
at the Maison d'Haiti, a community centre founded in 1972 that serves
some of the 70,000 Haitians here. "The security situation has
been getting worse in the last two years, and it's deplorable,"
she added. "There has been an acceleration of violence. But
it's an acceleration caused by armed groups, not foreign soldiers.
The real mistake was that the UN didn't disarm everyone when they
arrived."
From: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=f50a6790-ead6-4eb1-8e61-5524594435b1&k=70375
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