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US backed Haitian Government arrests Yvon Neptune, Haiti's Elected Prime Minister

by hbn
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Mon. June 28: Yvon Neptune, the man who served Haiti as prime minister until the ouster of President Jean Bertrand Aristide, was yesterday detained at his Port-Au-Prince home by authorities of the interim government.
Radio Vision 2000 reports indicate the detention comes in light of the Gerard Latortue administration’s claim that Neptune orchestrated killings of opponents in St. Marc during the February rebellion that led to the ouster of Aristide.

Neptune, who turned himself in, is the highest-ranking official to be detained Feb. 29.

His detention comes as Amnesty International called on the interim Latortue government to push a significant disarmament program and apprehend escaped prisoners and known human rights violators.

Didier Mortet, Air France’s chief executive in Haiti is the latest victim of the high levels of violence which have cost the lives of hundreds of civilians since the uprising in February. Didier Mortet, was shot dead by three men on a motorcycle as he approached his home in the capital Port-au-Prince.

"The availability of weapons and the climate of impunity continue to fuel insecurity and human rights violations in Haiti, as measures to stop this are nowhere to be seen," said Amnesty International. "The Haitian interim government has been dragging its feet: after 100 days in power, there are still no signs of the urgently needed disarmament program or any real attempt to apprehend escaped prisoners and known human rights violators."

Latortue, interim President Boniface Alexandre and Foreign Minister, Joseph Yvon Simeon, will be in New York today for the meeting of the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC).

http://www.hardbeatnews.com/details1404.htm
§Haiti's Ex-PM Arrested, Denounces 'Political Justice'
by repost
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters) - Haiti's former prime minister, Yvon Neptune, who served under ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, surrendered to police on Sunday to face mass murder charges but said the case against him was politically motivated.

Neptune had been in hiding since soon after Aristide was forced into exile on Feb. 29 by a month-long armed revolt and U.S. and French pressure to quit. He turned himself in to police and was taken to the National Penitentiary in the capital, Port-au-Prince.

Neptune gave himself up after a judge in Saint Marc, 60 miles north of Port-au-Prince, issued an arrest warrant for him as part of an inquiry into what Aristide opponents have called a massacre on Feb. 11 in La Syrie, a village near Saint Marc.

"I've never participated nor have I ordered any massacre; it is just political justice in action," Neptune told Reuters in a phone interview before giving himself up.

Justice minister Bernard Gousse, a member of the interim government appointed by a council of prominent Haitians after Aristide left, said the decision to prosecute Neptune was not politically motivated.

"Judicial authorities are just doing their job," he said.

During February's revolt against Aristide, led by an armed gang and former members of the army and paramilitary groups, clashes between pro and anti-Aristide gangs were frequent. More than 200 people were killed during the revolt in the impoverished Caribbean country of 8 million people.

Aristide opponents said about 50 people were killed in La Syrie on Feb. 11, but journalists and human rights activists who went there 24 hours after the killings were reported saw five bodies.

An armed group in Saint Marc called "Ramicos," whose leader has been named mayor of the town and which said those killed on Feb. 11 were mostly its members, is among those accusing Neptune of involvement, Neptune said.

"The members of Ramicos, who killed partisans of Aristide, who burned police headquarters and who committed other awful crimes in Saint Marc during the rebellion, are now those used by the authorities to accuse me," he said.

Since Aristide left, Prime Minister Gerard Latortue's interim government has arrested supporters of the former president or of his Lavalas Family party, accusing them of corruption, murder and other crimes.

But little effort has been made to go after human rights abusers from past military regimes who joined the revolt, prompting human rights groups to call for a more even-handed approach.
Neptune called on Sunday for the international community to independently investigate his case.

"I cannot trust Haitian judicial authorities. The justice minister, Bernard Gousse, is part of a political group which hates me," Neptune told Reuters. He referred to the 184 group, led by powerful businessman Andre Apaid, which played a prominent role in the political movement to oust Aristide before the armed revolt in February.

A U.N. peacekeeping force led by Brazil has just taken over command from a U.S.-led force that arrived in Haiti hours after Aristide fled to try to restore order. Aristide, who has repeatedly said that his removal was unconstitutional, is living in exile in South Africa.

http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml;jsessionid=I2V1FIUC2U4LICRBAE0CFEY?type=worldNews&storyID=5523780&pageNumber=1
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