Final
Delegation Report on UN Massacre
Growing
Evidence of a Massacre by UN Occupation Forces in
Port-au-Prince Neighborhood of Cite Soleil
A Summary of Findings of the US Labor and Human Rights
Delegation to Haiti
July 12th, 2005
Contact: Seth Donnelly ph:650-814-8495
sethdonnelly2000@yahoo.com
Background Information:
The San Francisco Labor Council sent a small delegation of
US trade unionists and human rights workers to participate
in the National Congress of the Confederation of Haitian
Workers, held in Port-au-Prince July 1st and 2nd, as well
as to investigate the labor and human rights conditions in
Haiti. Toward the end of our mission, on July 6th, we
received an eyewitness report from local Haitian human
rights workers that UN military forces had carried out a
massacre in one of Port-au-Prince's poorest neighborhoods,
Cite Soleil. We extended our trip to investigate the
report.
Extending up from the capital's port, Cite Soleil is a
vast ghetto -- reminiscent of the "townships" in
South Africa under apartheid -- of tin shacks, unpaved
roads, open sewage streams, lack of stable electricity and
plumbing, as well as widespread malnutrition, illiteracy,
and disease. It is also a community of political
resistance, consisting of thousands of people -- young and
old -- who provide part of the militant base in
Port-au-Prince of Lavalas, Haiti's majority political
party. Many residents of Cite Soleil emphatically told us
they will accept nothing less than the restoration of the
democratically elected government of President Aristide.
Since the coup on February 29th, 2004 that toppled the
Aristide government, the people of Cite Soleil and other
popular neighborhoods in the capital have been the target
of systematic repression -- including extrajudicial
executions -- by the Haitian National Police. Armed
networks established by young adults in Cite Soleil --
labeled "gangs" by the authorities -- have
attempted to provide security for a community facing
almost daily incursions and shootings at the hands of the
National Police. The community networks also provide vital
social services such as education and food for the
population.
The UN Mission in Haiti – MINUSTAH -- has insisted that
these networks turn in their arms, but has not shown the
capability or willingness to rein in the police units that
have been terrorizing the population of Cite Soleil. The
grass-roots networks have refused to disarm under the
prevailing conditions, and have clashed with both police
and UN military forces on multiple occasions.
Investigation Methodology:
Our delegation, joined by Haitian human rights workers,
carried out the following steps to investigate the
massacre allegation:
1) We viewed film footage taken by a Haitian who was on
the scene when the UN operation was occurring on July 6th
and we also took down his eye witness testimony.
2) We visited Cite Soleil on July 7th, the day after the
UN military operation there, conducted interviews with
many community members, videotaped these interviews, and
also videotaped physical damage to people's homes and
neighborhood infrastructure, as well as corpses still on
the scene.
3) We carried out an interview the following day, July
8th, with the military high command of MINUSTAH, Lt.
General Augusto Heleno and Colonel Morneau regarding the
operation.
4) We paid a return visit to Cite Soleil on July 9th
during the community funeral service for a community
leader slain during the operation, gathered more
information from community members, filmed more
infrastructure damage, and interviewed the Cite Soleil Red
Cross staff.
5) We interviewed the staff at Medecins Sans Frontieres,
the primary hospital in Port-au-Prince that serves the
people of Cite Soleil. [Unlike other hospitals, it does
not charge a fee for service.] The staff shared with our
delegation their registry records on the number of Cite
Soleil residents treated on July 6th, the nature of their
wounds and treatment, and the comparison of this day to
other recent days.
In sharing our findings, we will not use the name of the
Haitian human rights workers or anyone currently living in
Cite Soleil for their protection.
Investigation Findings:
Our delegation uncovered extensive evidence that indicates
there was indeed a massacre conducted by UN military
forces in Cite Soleil on the morning of July 6th. We will
first present the official version of events, as rendered
by the military command staff of MINUSTAH and a MINUSTAH
spokesperson. We will then proceed to share the evidence
we gathered that contradicts their version of events.
According to Lt. General Augusto Heleno and Colonel
Morneau, a little more than 300 UN troops, led by a
Jordanian contingent, surrounded Cite Soleil at
approximately 3 AM on July 6th. They also surrounded the
community with 18-20 Armored Personnel Carriers (APCs),
which appear to be like tanks, mounted with a cannon, but
do not have tank treads. MINUSTAH military spokesperson
Colonel Eloifi Boulbars stated that the number of APCs
involved in the operation was 41, as reported by the
Haitian media.
Heleno and Morneau denied that the APCs used cannons in
the operation. They stated that one helicopter was used,
flying above the community at 3000 feet, for observation
purposes only. They stated that this helicopter did not
fire ammunition down into the community. They did not
mention if grenades or tear gas were used. The number of
troops and APCs had effectively choked off ways into and
out of Cite Soleil by the time the operation began to
unfold.
In our interview, Heleno and Morneau reported that the
purpose of the operation was to capture Dread Wilme, a
leader of one of Cite Soleil's armed community networks
and viewed as a "gang" leader by the UN
occupation forces. They acknowledged the UN forces
surrounded the community and attempted to launch a
surprise assault by a smaller contingent of 10-15 UN
soldiers, but that "gang" members fired on them
first, provoking a firefight. They claimed that the UN
soldiers "never fire first" in their operations.
They claimed that the UN forces launched the operation
into the community at approximately 5:30 AM.
Both Heleno and Morneau said they did not know of any
civilian casualties, nor had they received reports of such
casualties from the Red Cross. According to Boulbars,
again as reported in the Haitian media, "numerous
bandits were killed during the operation, including five
in the house of Dread Wilme." He stated to the media
that bodies were not recovered because soldiers had other
things to do. No UN soldiers were killed during the
operation. Morneau suggested to us in our interview that
the corpses still in the community after the operation
could have been people killed by "gang" members
and then falsely blamed on the UN forces. He suggested
that ballistics tests be conducted on these bodies.
Lt. General Augusto Heleno defended the operation, asking
the human rights delegation why they only seemed to care
about the rights of the "outlaws" and not those
of the "legal forces" in the country.
According to the eyewitness account from a Haitian (who
shall remain anonymous for this report) who was present in
Cite Soleil during the operation and who did get some film
footage of the operation as it unfolded, a very different
picture emerges. Like the official UN account, he reported
that UN forces surrounded Cite Soleil, as stated by UN
military command staff, sealing off the alleys with tanks
[APCs] and troops. He reported that UN forces concentrated
on the Cite Soleil districts of Boisneuf and Project
Drouillard. He further reported that not one, but two
helicopters flew overhead.
From this point on, his account diverges considerably from
the official UN account. He reported that at 4:30 AM, UN
forces launched the offensive, shooting into houses,
shacks, a church, and a school with machine guns, APC
cannons, and tear gas. The eyewitness reported that when
people fled to escape the tear gas, UN troops gunned them
down from the back.
UN forces shot out electric transformers in the
neighborhood. People were killed in their homes and also
just outside of their homes, on the way to work. According
to this account, one man named Leon Cherry, age 46, was
shot and killed on his way to work for a flower company.
Another man, Mones Belizaire, was shot as he got ready to
go to work in a local sweatshop and subsequently died from
a stomach infection. A woman who was a street vendor was
shot in the head and killed instantly. One man was shot in
his ribs while he was trying to brush his teeth.
Another man was shot in the jaw as he left his house to
try and get some money for his wife's medical costs; he
endured a slow death. Yet another man named Mira was shot
and killed while urinating in his home. A mother, Sonia
Romelus, and her two young children were killed in their
home, reportedly by UN fire after UN forces lobbed a 83-CC
gas grenade into their home.
The video footage taken by this eyewitness during the
operation shows many of these killings while they were
occurring. While it does not show images of the UN troops
as they were firing into the community, one can view at
least 10 unarmed people either in the process of being
killed or who were already killed. Many were killed by
headshots, such as 31-year-old Leonce Chery moments after
a gun shot ripped off his jaw. Chery was clearly unarmed.
There are audible machine gun blasts occurring in the
background. The video footage also depicts the bodies of
Sonia Romelus and her two young children, lying in blood
on the floor of their home. Apparently, Sonia was killed
by the same bullet that passed through the body of her
one-year old infant son Nelson.
She was reportedly holding him as the UN opened fire. Next
to their two bodies is that of her four-old son Stanley
Romelus who was killed by a shot to the head. The video
footage shows a weeping Fredi Romelus, recounting how UN
troops lobbed a red smoke grenade into his house and then
opened fire killing his wife and two children. "They
surrounded our house this morning and I ran thinking my
wife and the children were behind me. They couldn't get
out and the blan [UN] fired into the house." The
video also shows the grenade canister, apparently left in
the house.
The eyewitness source claimed that the operation was
primarily conducted by UN forces, with the Haitian
National Police this time taking a back seat.
In summing up his testimony, the source claims to have
personally viewed 20 people killed by UN forces during and
after the operation, in addition to five people killed who
were buried by their families and yet another five people
from the community who have been missing since the
operation was launched.
When our delegation, joined by other Haitian human rights
workers, entered Cite Soleil the day after the operation,
in the afternoon of July 7th, we gathered extensive
evidence that corroborated his testimony and further
indicated that the people being killed in the video
footage were, in fact, killed by UN forces. The team
gathered testimony from many members of the community,
young and old, men, women, and youth.
Community residents said UN forces had reduced the
entrances and exits into and out of the ghetto by blocking
a street with a large shipping container. Our delegation
filmed this blocked entrance. Immediately prior to the UN
military operation on July 6th in Cite Soleil, there were
scarcely more than two functioning pathways into and out
of the community.
Community members spoke of how they had been surrounded by
tanks [APCs]
and troops that sealed off exits from the neighborhoods
and then proceeded to assault the civilian population.
Reportedly, the assault involved at least one, if not
more, helicopters firing down into the neighborhood. The
community allowed the Labor/Human Rights Delegation to
film the evidence of the massacre, showing the homes -- in
some cases made of tin and cardboard -- that had been
riddled by bullets, and what appear to be APC cannon fire
and helicopter ammunition, as well as showing the team
some of the corpses still on the scene, including a mother
and her two children and one man whose jaw had been blown
off.
The team also filmed a church and a school that had been
riddled by
ammunition. Allegedly, a preacher was among the victims
killed. Some
community members allowed the team to interview them, but
not to film
their faces for fear of their lives. People were
traumatized and, in
the cases of loved ones of victims, hysterical. One woman
spoke of how her husband was shot and killed during the
operation, leaving her stranded alone to fend for three
children.
Community members also guided us to two electrical
transformers in the neighborhood that had been destroyed,
claiming that UN troops had shot them and caused a
blackout in the course of the operation.
Multiple community residents indicated that they had
counted at least 23
bodies of people killed by the UN forces. Community
members claimed
that UN forces had taken away some of the bodies. Some
community estimates range even higher.
The team returned to Cite Soleil two days later, on July
9th, during the community funeral ceremony for Dread Wilme
in order to continue the investigation. Hundreds of people
from the community -- woman and men, children and adults
-- turned out for the funeral, held in a street. Armed
young adults attempted to provide "security"
during the ceremony. While they seemed to elicit no fear
from the general population, the UN military forces did.
Twice during the ceremony, a rumor traveled through the
crowd that UN military forces, represented by several APCs
in the near distance, were moving on the ceremony. People
fled in terror, in a virtual stampede and then regrouped
when they realized that such an operation was not
occurring.
During the ceremony, the team interviewed a Reuters
reporter who claimed to have filmed bullet holes in roofs
in Cite Soleil, which he concluded were caused by machine
gun fire from a helicopter assault during the operation.
Our team subsequently filmed what appear to be gun shot
holes in the roof of a community school and the roof of a
nearby building. The Reuters reporter also reported that,
while he was not present during the UN operation, he
personally filmed seven dead bodies a day or two later.
In the early afternoon of July 9, the team left the
ceremony and interviewed a staff member of the Cite Soleil
Red Cross. She informed the team that the local Red Cross
was not present during the UN operation, but that the Red
Cross had transported approximately 15 people to a local
hospital two days later on Friday July 8th. She did not
know of how many, if any, people were killed during the
operation. Additionally, she reported that about one week
prior to the "operation", UN military forces had
detained her, the President of the local Red Cross, and at
least one other local Red Cross member and taken them to
the local UN compound for interrogation. She described the
detention as intimidating.
After the interview with the local Red Cross, the team
left Cite Soleil and interviewed the staff at the Medicins
Sans Frontieres Hospital in downtown Port-au-Prince. This
is one of the few, if not the only hospitals in
Port-au-Prince where people can from Cite Soleil can go
because it provides free health care unlike other
hospitals which charge a service fee. The staff at
Medicins Sans Frontieres shared with the team their
hospital registry records detailing the number of patients
from Cite Soleil that the hospital admitted and treated on
July 6th. Starting at approximately 11 AM, the hospital
received a total of 26 wounded people from Cite Soleil who
were reportedly transported to the facility by Red Cross
"tap taps" (local minivans). Of these 26, 20
were women and children and 6 were men. Half of the total
number were seriously wounded by abdominal gun shot wounds
and were routed into major surgery. One pregnant woman
lost her baby. Other victims seem to be in recovery,
according to the hospital staff.
All reported that they had been wounded by UN military
forces during the operation and some spoke of their homes
being destroyed. This number of 26 stands in contrast to
the hospital's records of Cite Soleil residents admitted
on other days when the figures are much lower, such as 2
people on July 7th and none on July 8th. One Haitian human
rights worker present during the meeting with the hospital
staff speculated that the number of men from Cite Soleil
who were admitted to the hospital was low because many men
would fear being arrested by the authorities while in the
hospital.
In addition, a Red Cross staff member stated that on
Friday, July 8th, the local Red Cross transported 15
victims from the UN operation to a local hospital.
Putting all this evidence together, it is clear that there
were substantial civilian casualties from the UN operation
that were transported by the local Red Cross and by
perhaps other means, to be treated in a local hospital.
Conclusion:
In conclusion, the evidence of a massacre by UN military
forces in Cite Soleil is substantial and compelling. The
eyewitness account of the operation, and the film footage
shot by Haitian human rights workers who were on the scene
during the operation; the extensive videotaped testimony
by community members themselves on July 7th, coupled with
tangible, physical damage to their homes and
infrastructure; the bodies still on the scene that we have
on video; the intense fear of the UN military forces
evidenced by hundreds of residents of Cite Soleil; the
statements by the local Red Cross; and finally the
registry records of the relevant hospital -- all of these
pieces of evidence indicate that UN military forces in
Haiti today are not engaged in the work of
"peacekeeping" as much as they are in the
business of repression.
Clearly, further investigation is required to determine
the exact number of victims from the operation, their
identities, and the reasons for their deaths. One can only
wonder why UN forces in Haiti have not, apparently,
contacted the relevant hospital or dispatched their own
human rights team into Cite Soleil in order to assess the
true "collateral damage" resulting from this and
other armed incursions by the UN military forces.