MINUSTAH: Securing Stability and Democracy from Journalists, Children, and Other Threats |
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| Monday, 18 October 2010 16:44 |
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As we noted on Saturday, MINUSTAH, whose mandate is “to protect civilians under imminent threat of physical violence,” and “support …Haitian human rights institutions and groups in their efforts to promote and protect human rights; and to monitor and report on the human rights situation in the country,” among other responsibilities, attacked a group of peaceful demonstrators Friday who were criticizing the UN’s decision to renew MINUSTAH’s mandate for another year. Following the decision, “a coalition of grassroots and political opposition groups took to the streets to call for the end of what they say is an occupying force costing millions but doing little to ensure the security of the general population,” independent reporter Isabeau Doucet writes. Friday’s incident was most notable, perhaps, in that more journalists were present to witness and record the events, in contrast to many past incidents in which MINUSTAH has attacked Haitian demonstrators, or supported the Haitian police as they fired live rounds into crowds. And, as noted previously, these are not MINUSTAH’s worst crimes since its mandate in 2004 began, as documentation of killings of children and other civilians can attest. That Friday’s attack on peaceful protesters and journalists seems to be part of a pattern of criminalization of dissent, [PDF] even in a new post-January 12 context in which the protesters may be people who have lost their homes, whose lives are now regularly threatened by rains, floods, and disease, and who may have little hope for change as the Haitian government - aided by the U.S. and the international community - continues to move forward with a blatantly undemocratic electoral process, it is all the more disturbing that there is so little debate about MINUSTAH’s track-record. Worse yet is the absence of accountability for MINUSTAH’s actions. |