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Council On Hemispheric Affairs |
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Monitoring
Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere |
Wednesday, July 27 2005
COMMENTARY FROM COHA
One long day in Pointe Noire, on
my vacation from volunteer work in the forest, the Congolese painter Trigo
Piula and I sat arguing in
his jumbled studio about
whether there is a spiritual element to canvasses. There was little common
ground to be found between us, and after debating at length he gave up
on me. He declared
that I simply must not be “tuned in,” and to prove his point about “active
invisible forces,” he switched on a smooth Congolese radio station
before conjuring up yet another image.
If only “tuning in” were always
so benign. In 1994, the low droning rant from Hutu extremists on Radio-Télévision
Libre des Mille Collines provoked mass slaughter in Rwanda with its lethal
mixture of target locations and accompanying calls to arms. “Exterminate the cockroaches,” said
the voice, and a people shaped by a colonial culture of submission dutifully
hacked their friends and neighbors to pieces. Now, and in our own hemisphere,
Haitian print and electronic media have done comparable diabolic work as they
relentlessly polarize their country and help to draw a new roadmap for political
persecution. The most recent example is the July 21st mobbing and arrest of Father
Gérard Jean-Juste, one of the country’s true heroes, for the still
unsolved murder of Haitian journalist Jacques Roche, while he was presiding over
the latter’s funeral.
A few days before the arrest, as part
of
the interim Haitian government’s
lawless campaign of violence aimed at eliminating supporters of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide’s Lavalas party, its potential presidential candidate, Father
Jean-Juste, was publicly accused of plotting against the state, instigating kidnappings
and importing weapons for distribution to Lavalas, all baseless claims that were
repetitions of the ones Karyne Sylvestre broadcasted from Miami on July 14, the
same day that Roche’s body was found in one of Port-au-Prince’s most
abysmal slums. In a scenario similar to the strategy frequently invoked by the
renegade Haitian National Police of placing a gun next to the corpse of the victim,
the murder was officially blamed on Lavalas simply because the poor overwhelmingly
support Aristide. The silver bullet that led to Father Gérard’s
manhandling and arrest was a rightist newspaper’s front-page announcement
that he would be present at Roche’s funeral.
“Arrest and kill the rat,” shouted well-rehearsed militants attending
the service, when the prelate stepped out in his formal white robe. Menacing
young
men, obviously not dressed for the mournful occasion, burst into the
church, and the resulting uproar soon escalated into spitting, slapping and punching.
Along with a U.S. eyewitness, Jean-Juste was led out of the church and
hurried
to a police truck that transported him to the Petitionville police headquarters.
He was told at the station that public clamor had sufficiently identified
him as Roche’s assassin. Bizarrely enough, Jean-Juste is now being held
in jail for participating in Roche’s murder, even though he was in
Florida at the time of the killing.
Reporters Sans Frontières, the U.S.-funded hard-right
covert operator, which is not to be confused with its prestigious medical
namesake, has placed
Aristide on its list of “predators of press freedom.” In
a burst of pure propaganda, it claims that the media climate has dramatically
improved
since Aristide was ousted, but CARLI, one of the more prominent human
rights organizations presently operating in Haiti, stated in late 2004
that the overwhelmingly
anti-Lavalas Haitian media is the greatest obstacle to ending human
rights abuses. The organization estimated that roughly 20 of the 25
radio and print outlets
now operating in Haiti are owned or controlled by members of the notorious
Group of 184, and dutifully spread the elite’s anti-Lavalas propaganda.
The net result of the homegrown media’s malignant influence on Haiti’s
political atmosphere, whose efforts are largely supported by Washington and funded
by the European Union, is the creation of murderous conditions and the annihilation
of pluralistic institutions. U.S. coverage of Haitian political and media developments
remains embarrassingly equivocal and exiguous if not downright false. Our recent
interest in journalistic responsibility at home should extend to an environment
that Washington insists on manipulating abroad. The ongoing saga of the world’s
first black republic merits better telling. Every additional minute that Jean-Juste
remains detained, his life becomes more jeopardized. More puddles of blood in
Haiti are a further indictment of Washington’s shameful Haiti policy and
leadership choices, and also reflect its media’s slip into deeper
responsibility for beatings, murders and wholly unjustifiable arrests.
This
analysis was prepared by COHA Research Associate Kathryn Tarker.
July 27, 2005
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COHA Commentary 05.13