Five Dead as Violence Escalates in Cite Soleil

Violence erupted in Haiti's largest and most volatile slum, Cité Soleil, on Thursday, October 19th and has continued to escalate into the weekend. Residents threw rocks and glass bottles at United Nations soldiers protesting the alleged destruction of homes by U.N. peacekeepers. Residents insist that three civilians were killed in the ensuing gun battle. Violence of this level has not been seen in Cité Soleil in over two months. Since Thursday, five civilians have been killed and many more have been wounded residents say.

The fire fight broke out on Thursday as Brazilian U.N. engineers were demolishing the remains of an old wall and several uninhabited structures in order to open the narrow road to traffic. The AP quoted one resident, 24 year-old Naomi Exint, as saying that part of her home was destroyed.
A professor, who asked that his name be withheld for security reasons said "Cite Soleil spent two months in peace but since Thursday the U.N. soldiers went out and started breaking down a few small houses, among them, some belonging to the gangs." To some Haitians, the gangs are known as chimere - paramilitary men with mythical powers that protect them from bullets who are fiercely loyal to the deposed president Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Since then, the situation has deteriorated. The professor believes that the U.N. thought the gangs in that area had handed over their weapons through the DDR process (Demobilization Disarmament and Reintegration Program run in coordination with the Preval administration and the U.N.) and that is why the U.N. demolished the houses.
Photographs taken by the U.N. suggest that all destroyed buildings were abandoned.
The Associated Press and Reuters published slightly differing accounts on the incident in which casualty counts range from two to three civilians killed in the clash between Brazilian U.N. troops and armed groups fiercely loyal to the deposed president Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Brazilian U.N. military spokesman, Lt. Cmdr. Neuzivaldo Dos Anjos, maintains that the engineers came under attack and returned fire in self defense. The once narrow passageway runs along one side of the U.N. military base Strong Point 16 and connects with a main road.
No Brazilian peacekeepers were injured in the battle.

The U.N. demolished the buildings without plans to compensate the homeowners or offer them an alternative plan. The residents fled their homes because the area sees an intense level of fighting. Although the residents had fled, they still considered the abandoned structures their homes.
Before 11:00 AM Saturday morning there was calm but the situation rapidly deteriorated as residents claim that the U.N. soldiers fired into a church filled with 300 parishioners and critically wounded three children, aged between five and eleven years-old. Three others fainted for more than three hours as the fire fight around the church lasted around two hours, residents say.
A 58 year-old woman alleges that the U.N. soldiers shot at them because they were digging a trench in the road in order to prevent APCs or tanks from passing through the area. "We don't need them in the area", she explains "they must go, because they cause us too much pain and we are afraid of them." The few roads that exist in Cité Soleil are being destroyed in order to hinder the mobility of U.N. troops who only patrol the slum in Armored Personnel Carriers. Local infrastructure has also been heavily damaged in the fighting.
The roads had just been built with money from USAID (United States Agency for International Development) in cooperation with the IOM (International Organization for Migration). "Digging trenches in the roads is the only we can stop the tanks", a teacher in his late forties explains. Earlier saturday morning, U.N. tractors came into the area and filled in many of the trenches.
"We're working for peace but the soldiers are working for war according to their attitudes", according to the teacher.
The teacher believed that the peace was going to be long lasting. "But since Thursday, when we were in the school, we heard the tanks coming and at the end, they started shooting." As the shooting continued, bullets went into the school. The children fell to the floor. The school was then closed and the children sent home. As the students were leaving the L'ecole le Normaliene, two girls, aged seven and eight years-old, were shot in the stomach and their intestines "spread out".

Another man near the school was shot twice in the head near the market. "I would ask the president to ask the soldiers stay in the rules so the Cité Soleil people could live in peace", the teacher pleads.
"We're asking for justice," one pro-gang supporter says, "We're asking for the white people to leave."
"Why do people consider building a military base in Cité Soleil?", he asks, referring to the U.N. base there, Strong Point 16. "If they want to build a base, they can go to Titanyen." Titanyen was an old dumping ground for victims of Tonton Macoute violence during the Duvalier regimes. "With their presence this morning, three people have been killed."

On Saturday, the approach to the Boston area of Cité Soleil from Boulevard Jean Jacques Dessalines, a once lively commercial district and the main artery in Port-au-Prince, is quiet. Many of the stores and industries have closed. Six, maybe seven United Nations Armored Personnel Carriers (APCs), from China, Peru and Jordan, have permanent positions here. A large barricade has been constructed in front of the abandoned Texaco station. Behind it, four APCs take strategic positions. The buildings have been damaged by thousands of bullet holes - two years of near warfare have all but destroyed the area.
Six Peruvian and Brazilian APCs rumble into Boston. Amos, a journalist from Radio Metropole and I begin interviewing residents. Two minutes later, automatic weapons fire erupts and the street empties. The Colonel, a "chimere", has opened fire on U.N. forces. Amos records everything on his tape recorder which infuriates the Colonel. "Fuck! He recorded me! I'm going to kill that mother fucker journalist!" While other armed men are shooting at MINUSTAH, the Colonel fires three bursts at Amos. One bullet grazes his back.
All of Amos' recordings are then destroyed.
Children laugh at the Colonel because he was unable to kill Amos. In response, the Colonel jokingly tells them to go stand by the road so he can shoot them. Amos tells me that children with sacks and buckets filled with ammunition reload empty cartridges and distribute them to the chimere during the fight.
The armed groups have a plethora of weapons, among them; AK-47s, M14s, M16s and an assortment of handguns. Clips are taped together: after one clip empties, it is flipped over and and the fresh clip put in.
Leaving the alley and moving towards Strong Point 16, automatic weapons fire fills the street. We flee to another ally. Many children laugh during the fire fight as they find my reactions funny. They jokingly ask me why white people find gun fire scary - "they like killing." Some of the children, six years and older, have bullet wounds.
The fight rages on and off for more than an hour, but it was more on than off. We escape through a safe passage during a lull in the fighting. We learn that there have been two casualties and and unknown number of wounded. Final casualty counts are unknown, as we didn't see the fight through.
Comments
Nick - you write very vividly - good story telling - I realize how little I know about the situation in Haiti. Seems risky (duh) - so I hope you stay safe but you have great skill at writing and I appreciate it! Did you take the photos too.
Posted by: Christy | October 23, 2006 04:56 PM
Interesting strategy ther, widening streets for travel. Every cop on the beat knows ordinary civilian street traffic prevents crime. Its at isolated unpopulated and deserted neighborhoods where shit hits the fan.
Yet its altogether too damned easy to bulldoze buildings than to encourage growth of the marketplace leading towards healthy civilian foot traffic.
What will these new avenues running through the Chimera ghetto be used for? Does it mean an occupied presence of armored cars on patrol will follow? God forbid!!
Or will it encourage open air markets and vendors to open shop? And invite distribution points for relief supplies as well? Also allowing ambulance and emergency vehicle traffic at the same time.
Am truck driver by profession and can see where opening up supply lines for trade and travel can lead towards peace.
Meanwhile am hoping and praying the destruction of homes and widening of roads is not just a repeat of failed stragegy at containing populations by devestating their infrastructure and pushing them towards banditry and pillage.
(:=
Posted by: Yorick | October 23, 2006 07:40 PM
Haiti's safe, as a country - it's just unstable and is trying to get on it's feet. Cite Soleil is another world - a virtual war zone - very unlike the rest of Haiti right now. Not to say that the rest of Haiti doesn't have problems... they're just different.
I don't know what the new road is going to do. Since it's in an area of heavy fighting and since 99.99% of people in Cite Soleil don't own cars and never will, I don't know exactly what the point is. I understand what their goal was, but...
And yes, photos and text are mine.
Posted by: Nick Whalen | October 24, 2006 12:42 PM
Have you asked Cite Soleil residents about being fired from jobs? From my research I have found that between 8,000 and 12,000 public sector employees were fired following the coup de'etat, this inclues a few thousand from teleco and around 500 former police officers. Many of these people were loyal to the constitutionally elected government and they were replaced by the unelected Latortue government with partisans of the Group 184.
Posted by: J Sprague | October 24, 2006 07:31 PM
I don't know what to say... It is sad that these very young children in Haiti are in danger. not only children, everyone. i hope the situation gets better there.
Great work,
and stay yourself safe, Nick.
Posted by: Jae | October 24, 2006 10:31 PM
Bonjou Nick, Onè,
Ki jan ou ye? Mespere tout anfanm. I have lived and worked in Haiti and now work in the US for a Haitian org. - Lambi Fund. [#94 Ave. Lamartiniere, if you want to stop by and talk with our Director, Josette Perard] Your work is excellent and you are a terrific photographer. I don't know what your background is but you are obviously destined for several Pulitzers. Your approach is wonderful and the respect shines through. I am sure you have made many friends already but if you want some other good friends, please look up my friends Ari and Carla. They live in Gwo Jan, a little outside of PAP but an easy ride on a tap tap then a walk up the mountain! They are often in town though, so you could probably meet them there. Their e-mail is doabnhaiti@gmail.com and they also have a place to stay and they know about 99% of everyone in Haiti. But, you seem to have found your groove already.
Thank you VERY much for putting this work out there - I hope it gets some wide notice. Your friend posted your url on the Let Haiti Live listserv, so that's how I came across it.
Kenbe FÒS, Kouwaj, Respè,
Victoria
Posted by: Victoria Szatkowski | October 25, 2006 10:11 AM
Nick: The things you are teaching me are extreme: hope and dispair, good and bad, patience and desperation. It is hard to accept the unfairness that the world hands to so many people. But there are people like you who can face the truth. Your courage is a gift to all who know you, and your words and photos are strong and compelling. I know you too are learning every day and one of the most important things you are learning is how to protect yourself. Take care of yourself so that you can continue to take care of others, Miss you, love you, Dawn
Posted by: Dawn Masiero | October 25, 2006 02:02 PM
O nicolas,
Je ne sais pas si tu te souviens de le langue français mais j'espere que tu te souviens "uhh parlons de moi". Alright nick, you're doing well and I found this story and the preceding comments extremely interesting and informative. It is nice to know that i can get this kind of info from someone I know down there. I have to say it again like every one else keep yourself safe so I can see you in November when you come home.
Posted by: Gary Timpane | October 25, 2006 07:43 PM
I was wondering if Mr. Whalen could share with us the photos of the purported children feeding bullets to the "chimeres" in Cite Soleil? And did those folks in there simply walk up to you and introduce themselves as chimeres? "Hi, my name is so and so and I'm called the Colonel. I am a violent follower of Aristide but you can call me a chimere!" Sounds like the same old tired and simplistic labeling of the majority of the poor in the slums for the sensationalist benefit of another aspiring corporate media hack.
Posted by: John Holmstead | October 26, 2006 05:56 AM
I think Nick Whalen's work is about a thousand times more useful to understanding Haiti than the ramblings of a bitter old failure, mustered out of the U.S. military-type like John Holmstead. Good work Nick! And John, did you ever think of getting a real job rather than spending all day surfing the internet?
Posted by: Roger B. | November 12, 2006 11:44 PM