HAITIInsight is the
National Coalition for Haitian Rights' bimonthly bulletin on refugee and
human rights affairs. Published since 1989, HAITIInsight
has gained a solid reputation as a credible source of information for
human rights activists, researchers, immigration lawyers and advocates,
as well as officers of the U.S. Immigration & Naturalization Service
and other agencies of the U.S. government.
Haiti Insight Volume 8, No. 1
Eruption in Mirebalais:
Two Killed, Including HNP Chief
By Ismene Zarifis, Port-au-Prince
Rising tensions between the Haitian National Police and a popular organization
in Mirebalais flared last Feb. 5 and the ensuing violence led to the sacking of the
Mirebalais police station, a prison break, a strong show of force by the HNP, and the
death of two people, including the city's police chief, Ricelin Dorneus.
"Dorneus was the 41st policeman we've lost and the first time a police
chief was killed on duty," stated Eucher Luc Joseph, Inspector General of the HNP.
According to a NCHR investigation and press reports, the violence was sparked by
an argument on Feb. 5 between Dorneus and members of an organization named Mete Lod
Nan Dezod (Put Order into Disorder or MLD), who were reportedly working as security
guards at a construction site in Mirebalais, a city of about 50,000 people in the Central
Plateau region. It has not been determined what the disagreement was about. After Dorneus,
31, left the work area, sources told NCHR a number of MLD members, who were riding in a
truck, insulted Dorneus as he stood on the side of a road questioning an underage driver.
Dorneus reportedly left the scene and obtained arrest warrants for three MLD members who
were riding in the lorry.
From Bad to a Nightmare
At approximately 4:30 PM on Feb. 5, Dorneus arrested and detained two MLD
members. While Dorneus and an estimated seven other HNP officers remained inside the
precinct, MLD members led by Jean Fanfan Ti Bwa Degrotte and family members of
the detainees assembled outside the station. Some in the crowd carried machetes and
stones.
According to official reports, Dorneus called his superior, Departmental
Director of the Central Plateau Nesly Phele, for reinforcements. Phele was unable to
provide immediate help and advised Dorneus that in order to calm the crowd, he should
release the detainees.
Vastly outnumbered, Dorneus and the other HNP officers reportedly attempted to
disperse the crowd by firing warning shots. During these chaotic moments, Jean Paul
Merisier was shot and killed. Fantal Aurelien, one of the individuals named in the arrest
warrants, was shot in the leg. It has been widely reported that both victims were hit by
stray bullets.
Merisier's death ignited an already unruly crowd. Dorneus released the two
prisoners, but at approximately 7 PM alleged MLD supporters forced their way into the
police compound, seized Dorneus, and began stoning him. He was then hacked to death.
During the frenzy, alleged MLD supporters burned two HNP vehicles and one prison authority
truck, and broke into the jail. All 76 prisoners escaped. Still in a state of shock three
days later, deputy police chief Fritz-Gerald Muscadin, 26, described to the St.
Petersburg (Fla.) Times how he had watched helplessly as the stoning began.
"They told me if I resisted they would cut off my head...One man had a machete and
the others took turns to throw rocks. It went on for 20 minutes."
CIMO Deployed
CIMO Deployed in Port-au-Prince, 1997. Photo Credit: Chantal
Regnault/Gamma Liason
Hours after the death of Dorneus and Merisier, 40 members of the heavily armed
crowd control unit (Intervention and Maintenance of Order Company, or CIMO), 30 officers
from the HNP SWAT team, 30 cops from HNP command headquarters, and members of the local
CIMO team based in the departmental capital of Hinche were deployed to Mirebalais,
according to Secretary of State for Public Security Robert Manuel. Manuel said the
specialized units were ordered to search for suspects who murdered Dorneus, reinforce the
police station, and secure the municipality.
HNP officials say the main suspects in the Dorneus investigation are doyen (judicial
dean) Prosper Theisme, who is suspected by the authorities of being associated with MLD,
Jean Robert Dubuisson, the federal prosecutor of Mirebalais, and (Daniel: put "Fanfan
Ti Bwa" in italics) Fanfan Ti Bwa Degrotte.
Dubuisson was apprehended in Mirebalais on Feb. 19 and charged with the murder
of Dorneus. Dubuisson protested his arrest and declared when he was detained the HNP did
not follow correct legal procedures. After being transferred to the National Penitentiary,
Dubuisson was released on March 9 when a (Daniel: put doyen in italics) doyen
ruled there was insufficient evidence to hold him in prison. Theisme and Degrotte remain
fugitives.
Charges of Illegal Arrests and Torture
There have been serious charges levied against CIMO that some of the searches in
Mirebalais were conducted with excessive force, including beatings. Most of the elite HNP
units were deployed to the city for approximately two weeks.
Simon Belony -- who confessed to having been present when Dorneus was killed --
was allegedly brought to the Mirebalais precinct "beaten and forced to eat" dirt
that was stained with Dorneus's blood, according to Deputy Emmanuel Derilus
(Anti-Neoliberal Party-Petit Riviere), a member of parliament's lower house, the Chamber
of Deputies. Derilus was a member of a congressional delegation that went to Mirebalais to
investigate the violence.
"We were informed that the police beat them a lot, on the head, chest,
face, back, and waist. Some suffered from internal bleeding," stated Derilus,
referring to suspects who were interrogated by the HNP. "If you go to the prison, you
will see the blood stains."
On Feb. 7, several Port-au-Prince radio stations carried live interviews from
Mirebalais. Reports on Radio Metropole stated that police had searched the house of
(Daniel: put "doyen" in italics) doyen Theisme. Although Theisme was
not present at the time, the Metropole report stated that police beat the individual they
found in the home.
"From what we can gather, the Mirebalais police station was reportedly one
of the best run and Dorneus seemed to have tried to do a fairly decent job. But the fact
that he or his force reacted the way they did is a stain on the HNP. That the crowd
control units used heavy handed tactics to re-establish control in Mirebalais should be
criticized," said NCHR Executive Director Jocelyn McCalla. "But the mob's
reaction, however, went far beyond protesting against the HNP. They allegedly committed
murder and created disorder, including the release from prison of several criminals."
Deputy Louis Esteven (Independent-Central Plateau), part of the Derilus
delegation, has charged that the majority of the arrests in the Dorneus investigation were
illegal, including arrests made without proper warrants or a justice of the peace present.
The delegation also charged justices of the peace were asked to sign and authorize
warrants after the arrests were made. The HNP, however, flatly denies these charges.
"There was no cases of systematic torture or repression" during the
searches at Mirebalais, said Inspector General Joseph. "The Director General and the
Secretary of State for Public Security went on site personally to make sure" that
these incidents would not occur. Joseph said the HNP has opened a general investigation
into the events of Feb. 5., including examining complaints of human rights abuses.
In another development, heavily armed CIMO and SWAT officers have been deployed
throughout Port-au-Prince as of March 5. HNP spokesperson Felder Jean Baptiste told
Reuters the deployment is part of a new HNP crackdown on violent crime. "This is
nothing political, the police stations have simply been reorganized to respond to
crime," he said.
Zarifis is a NCHR research associate.
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