Duvalier charged with crimes against humanity

Amnesty International's James Burk (left) speaks while Javier Zuniga listens during a news conference in Port-au-Prince. Burk and Zuniga made public their report condemning Jean Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier of crimes against humanity and other human rights violations while he was in power from 1971 to 1986.

Amnesty International's James Burk (left) speaks while Javier Zuniga listens during a news conference in Port-au-Prince. Burk and Zuniga made public their report condemning Jean Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier of crimes against humanity and other human rights violations while he was in power from 1971 to 1986.

Published Sep 23, 2011

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Port-au-Prince - Amnesty International urged Haiti on Thursday to bring former dictator Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier to justice as the human rights group issued a report on killings and torture committed with impunity during his 15-year rule.

Duvalier returned unexpectedly to his Caribbean homeland in January after 25 years of exile in France. Days after his arrival, a Haitian prosecutor charged him with embezzlement, corruption and crimes against humanity stemming from his 1971-1986 reign.

A judge is investigating the charges but has not indicated when he will rule on whether Duvalier should be tried in a criminal court.

There is little confidence in the Haitian justice system and the Duvalier case is seen as a key test of the direction it will take under President Michel Martelly, who took office in May.

“There is sufficient evidence to prosecute Jean-Claude Duvalier for the widespread arbitrary detentions, torture, deaths in custody, killings and disappearances that took place during his regime,” Javier Zuniga, a special adviser at Amnesty International, said in a statement.

“What is needed is political will from Haiti's new administration to comply with their international obligations and their duty to the survivors and victims of abuses.”

Some Haitian human rights activists worry Duvalier, 60, could avoid prosecution if the investigation drags on.

Three Duvalier lawyers and a small group of his supporters barged noisily into a Port-au-Prince news conference organised by Amnesty to discuss its report on Duvalier on Thursday. Grabbing microphones, and insisting that the former “president-for-life” could not be prosecuted because the statute of limitations on his alleged crimes had run out, they forced the group to cancel the event.

Osner Fevry, one of the lawyers, accused Amnesty of dredging up Haiti's past. “They want to create division when the Haitian people want reconciliation,” he said.

Since he was charged, Duvalier has been seen dining out in restaurants and walking in an upscale suburb of the earthquake-ravaged capital of Port-au-Prince. He lives in a private hillside villa overlooking the city, in an enclave of Haiti's tiny but powerful elite.

Duvalier assumed power at the age of 19 after the death of his widely feared father, Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier, who used a dreaded secret police force known as the Tonton Macoutes to suppress opposition.

Together, the Duvaliers ruled Haiti for 28 years.

Amnesty International and other rights groups have said repeatedly that Duvalier should be tried for maintaining his father's reign of terror and using brutal henchmen to snuff out political opposition.

In its report, the London-based human rights group detailed more than a dozen cases involving people who either disappeared or were arbitrarily detained and tortured under the younger Duvalier.

“The cases of human rights abuses we documented in Haiti are likely to be only a small proportion of what really happened during Duvalier's rule,” Zuniga said.

Haitian prosecutors also have reactivated previous charges that Duvalier plundered millions of dollars from state coffers, although some activists say evidence suggests he may now be broke after a squandering a fortune in exile on lavish living.

Duvalier is alleged to have embezzled between $300-million and $800-million of assets from Haiti during his presidency.

Switzerland's government announced in February it was beginning legal proceedings to confiscate his assets which have been frozen in the country since 1986.

In one of his few public statements after his return from exile, Duvalier offered his sympathies in January to those who suffered abuses under his rule but he stopped short of making a clear apology.

“I take this opportunity to express once again my profound sadness for those of my fellow citizens who genuinely see themselves as victims under my government,” Duvalier said. - Reuters

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