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Up
to 25 people killed as police raid Haiti slums 05
Jun 2005 02:34:00 GMT
Source:
Reuters
By Joseph Guyler Delva |
PORT-AU-PRINCE,
Haiti, June 4 (Reuters) - As many as 25 people were killed in
police raids on Friday and Saturday in the slums of Haiti's capital after the
government said it would get tougher on gangs, morgue workers and witnesses said.
Clerks
at the morgue in the General Hospital said they had taken in 17 bodies on Saturday
and three bodies on Friday after the raids in Bel-Air and other Port-au-Prince
slums, centers of support for ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. A
Reuters journalist also saw five other bodies in two different areas of Bel-Air.
Residents
said the dead were shot by police and accused police of setting slum homes on
fire. Police
officials had no immediate comment on the death toll and it was not clear whether
all the victims were killed in the raids, or if some were shot as gang members
returned fire. Haiti's
interim government, backed by a 7,400-strong United Nations peacekeeping force,
has sought to stabilize the impoverished Caribbean country since Aristide fled
into exile as armed rebels closed in on the capital in February 2004. Human
rights groups have accused the Haitian police of summary executions and abuses
against supporters of Aristide -- allegations denied by the government. Justice
Minister Bernard Gousse and other officials said on Friday authorities planned
tougher action against armed gangs in pro-Aristide slums, where victims of a recent
wave of hundreds of kidnappings are often said to be held. At
least 740 people have been killed in criminal and political violence in Haiti
since September. A French diplomat was shot to death this week while driving in
the capital. "The
police arrived, they started shooting. There were other people shooting too, but
they managed to flee," said Ronald Macillon, a Bel-Air resident. "The
police killed a lot of people and set several homes on fire," Macillon said.
Several
other witnesses gave similar accounts. A
spokesman for U.N. troops in Bel-Air, Col. Carlos Barcelos, told Reuters the Brazilian
contingent based in that slum did not take part directly in the raids, but put
up checkpoints and secured the outside perimeter. The
Central Director for the Administrative Police, Renan Etienne, told Reuters he
could not say how many people were killed or comment on allegations police set
homes on fire, as he had not yet received police reports.

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