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