By Bill Quigley
Oct. 22 Jeanine (not her real name for reasons you will
shortly understand) is a quiet 14 year old girl who lives with her
family of 18 off a rutted dirt road near the international airport
in Port au Prince. Twice a week she walked the mile or so to eat a
meal at St. Claires church.
Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste is the pastor of St. Claires. He has been
in jail for more than a week after his church was surrounded by heavily
armed masked men while feeding 600 children at his parish. His arrest
was violent. The police ripped metal bars out of their concrete surroundings
and smashed the windows of the church house to enter. After beating
and handcuffing Fr. Jean-Juste, they dragged him out though the smashed
window, threw him into a car, and raced off to jail.
After the arrest, the people of the parish publicly complained and
said the masked police had even shot children. Haitian authorities
flatly denied any children were shot and no police inquiry into the
arrest has been made.
Government-friendly media and US Embassy personnel also scoffed at
the reports of children being shot by police. They said the stories
of the children were products of the Haiti rumor mill and propaganda
from the opponents of Haitis unelected government.
Now the wounded children have appeared in public. They have real bandages
and real medical reports.
And then there is the bullet.
When I visit Jeanine, she sits on a wooden bench leaning far to her
left. Her mother tenderly turns her around and modestly lifts her
daughters dark blue skirt to reveal a four-inch jagged blue-stitched
suture at the bottom of her right buttock.
Jeanines older brother holds out a blood-stained gauze packet.
Unfolding it, I find the brassy bullet the doctors removed from Jeanines
backside last week.
Jeanine was shot in the backside while running away from the Haitian
police during the arrest of Fr. Jean-Juste after the feeding of the
children at St. Claires.
I held the bullet removed from Jeanine in my palm. It is a little
less than an inch long, brass colored, and very hard. Jeanine is still
in pain. Her family cannot afford to bring her back to the doctor.
Two other children, two young boys, were also shot by the police during
the arrest of Fr. Jean-Juste. One was shot in the head, one in the
shoulder. I met them as well. They were also seen by medical authorities.
Fr. Jean-Juste sits in the national penitentiary along with numerous
other political prisoners. He is officially charged with disturbing
the peace, a crime punishable by a fine of 40 cents. Amnesty International
condemned his arrest and also warns that his courageous Haitian lawyer
Mario Joseph may be in danger because of his human rights work.
Meanwhile, the unelected authorities in Haiti are supported by the
US government. Both condemn the opposition, saying they are only interested
in violence.
Why would masked Haitian police shoot a little girl in the backside?
Why would the police shoot the other two boys? Why deny they were
shot? Why beat and indefinitely imprison a priest? Why threaten his
lawyer?
Makes you ask the question, which side in Haiti is really interested
in ruling by violence?
Dont bother to ask Jeanine and the other children,
they know the answer.
Source: Counterpunch