News
and opinions on situation in Haiti |
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| 22/01/05 |
Haiti’s PM seeks Aristide’s help to end violence By Joseph Guyler Delva |
www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N1L102234.htm 22 Jan 2005 00:58:12 GMT Source: Reuters PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Jan 21 (Reuters) – Haiti will send an envoy to South Africa to ask ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and the Pretoria government for help restoring stability and preparing for elections, the interim prime minister said on Friday. Gerard Latortue said his government would welcome initiatives by African diplomats to help negotiate an end to a wave of violence between pro- and anti-Aristide forces that has killed at least 240 people since September. It was the first time any Haitian official publicly expressed the need to talk to Aristide as a means to bring peace to the impoverished country. Latortue wants Aristide to urge his supporters to halt the violence. “The special envoy that will have to go to Pretoria will meet with ex-President Aristide and also with (South African) President (Thabo) Mbeki so that they may say how they see the situation and give the country a chance,” Latortue told Radio Tropic FM. Latortue encountered heavy resistance from other Haitian political players, sources close to the prime minister said. Parts of Haiti are still controlled by the rebels and former soldiers who drove out Aristide. South African Vice President Jacob Zuma, who was attending a U.N. summit on small island states in Mauritius last week, said then that South Africa was ready to participate in efforts to resolve Haiti’s political turmoil, if asked to do so. Aristide fled Haiti in February 2004 after a monthlong armed revolt and amid U.S. and French pressure to quit. He took refuge in South Africa, but his supporters, especially in Haiti’s slums, demand his return. Scores of Aristide supporters marched on Thursday through the Port-au-Prince slum of Bel-Air to call for Aristide’s return and said there could be no dialogue or reconciliation without his participation. Mbeki has been harshly criticized by Aristide’s opponents for warmly welcoming the former Haitian leader they accused of despotism and corruption. Latortue’s U.S.-backed interim government was appointed to lead the country through a transition culminating in elections by the end of 2005, with a new president due to take office in February 2006. Rights
groups have accused Haiti’s interim authorities of serious
human rights abuses against Aristide allies, which the government
has denied. “Men anpil chay pa lou” is Kreyol for – “Many hands make light a heavy load.” See, The
Haitian Leadership Networks’ 7 “Men Anpil Chay
Pa Lou” campaigns to help restore Haiti’s independence,
the will of the mass electorate and the rule of law. See, |
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