Bill Quigley, a professor at Loyola University
New Orleans School of Law, is in Haiti on a visit as a volunteer
attorney with the Institute
for Justice and Democracy in Haiti.
Port-au-Prince, February 28 – One year ago
today, the elected government of Haiti, led by President Jean Bertrand
Aristide, was forced out of office and replaced by unelected people
more satisfactory to business interests and the US, France and Canada.
Today there was a large nonviolent March
for Democracy called for the neighborhood of Bel Air (Beautiful Air). I
attended with Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste and others from St. Clare's Parish. We
started with prayers in the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help
in the center of Bel Air. After prayers we joined the larger
crowd outside marching and singing through the streets of the old
and quite poor neighborhood. Thousands of people were walking
and dancing to the beat of drums, loudly chanting, "Bring Back
Titi (Aristide)!!!!" in Creole, French and English.
Fr. Jean-Juste has become one of the main
voices for democracy in Haiti since his release from prison several
weeks ago after 48 days in jail with no charges. He was
interviewed two dozen times by local and international media during
the walk with the crowd. It all seemed like a peaceful
unorganized mardi gras parade until I noticed the Reuters correspondent
was wearing a bullet proof vest. MINUSTAH, the UN
security presence was all around. The giant moving party continued
down Des Cesar Street. The street was packed from side to side
with people carrying signs, umbrellas, and handmade cardboard posters
all calling for the return of democracy and Aristide. Neighborhood
people joined in or clapped and danced from their front steps.
Suddenly, at the corner of Monsiegneur Guillot
Street and Des Cesar, there was a loud boom from very close by. People
started screaming and running. Another boom, then another. As
people fled, I slipped on a pile of fruit and tried desperately
to hide behind a very small tree. As people rushed past and
dove into an opening in a concrete wall, the booms continued. I then
dove though the wall and hid behind a one foot wide concrete pillar. The
booms continued. People were down in the street. I saw
a big white official looking truck hurtling down the street as the
booms continued. Others saw police in black uniforms,
helmets, ski masks, and large guns shooting into the crowd. People
around me were huddled under stairs and crying. The group from
St. Clare's pulled me into a corner and we rolled into a ball until
the booms stopped.
Out on the street a man was down and unconscious. Fr.
Jean-Juste knelt over him and prayed. Down the street others
were carrying injured people on their backs. The crowd screamed
that the police were coming back and we ran down an alley into
a small home. Children were screaming, adults were crying, everyone
was in fear. We waited, dirty and drenched in sweat, until
the growing UN presence made it safe to leave.
Early reports document several people shot,
at least one killed. Others were beaten. Two
men showed me where the police wounded them.
As we drove slowly out of the now deserted
neighborhood, the faces of the people on the porches who were so
happy minutes before, were now somber, many crying.
As we rode back to his parish, Fr. Jean-Juste
said: "The Aristide supporters were such a big number,
it was very difficult to have a proper estimation of the crowd. The
message is clear. Our vote has been counted. It still
must be counted. There is no other way for Haiti to go forward but with the
return of constitutional order, the release of all political prisoners, and
the physical return of President Aristide."
Though the march for democracy in Haiti
was halted by police shooting into the unarmed crowd, the people
I talked to said their march for the return of democracy in Haiti
will continue.
Contact Bill Quigley at [email protected]