Monday, July 14, 2008

Justice sought in ex-Haitian strongman trial

The trial of the ex-leader of a violent Haitian paramilitary group began on Monday in a U.S. federal court. Emmanuel "Toto" Constant had been previously accused of crimes such as torture and murder due to his command of the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH) between 1993 and 1994. (In 2006, he was forced to pay $19 million in damages to three women who were gang raped by FRAPH soldiers). Yet Constant is standing trial for the white-collar crime of mortgage fraud after he fled Haiti to the U.S.; a fact that drew the ire of actor Danny Glover in an op/ed piece:

(…) Remarkably, for more than a decade until 2006, Constant has been living in relative comfort in Queens (New York) thanks in part to intervention by our own federal government. The twists and turns of Constant's road from paramilitary leader to defendant awaiting trial for mortgage fraud tell us volumes about the last decade of Haiti's difficult history - and the twisted U.S. policy toward the poorest country in our hemisphere…

One day, Emmanuel Constant must be returned to Haiti and stand trial there. First, he must face trial for what he has done to the people of New York.

In the meantime, we must fight to ensure that in the future, our government does not allow our country to be a haven for war criminals.

The chief of one Haitian activist group in New York has advocated that Constant be punished with “the maximum sentence possible”. One would hope that is the case for someone who lived ten years in impunity and masterminded atrocious crimes against his own countrymen.

Image- City Room (“Members of the Center of Constitutional Rights organized a rally in front of the State Supreme Court in Brooklyn for the trial of Emmanuel Constant…”)

Sources- New York Daily News, The Latin Americanist, Wikipedia, Guardian UK, MSNBC

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