Duvalier: I came to help with Haiti reconstruction

Former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier told Haitians he had returned after 25 years in exile to participate in the post-earthquake reconstruction of his homeland and was ready to face “persecution” for alleged crimes during his administration.

Former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier told Haitians he had returned after 25 years in exile to participate in the post-earthquake reconstruction of his homeland and was ready to face “persecution” for alleged crimes during his administration.

In his first public comments since his shock return to Haiti on Sunday, the ousted strongman known as “Baby Doc” spoke in a faint voice and did not take questions, leaving that to three American consultants – including former US congressman and presidential candidate Bob Barr – and one of his Haitian lawyers.

He said the return was timed to coincide with the one-year anniversary of the January 12 2010 earthquake.

“When I made the decision to come back to Haiti to commemorate this sad anniversary with you, in our country, I was ready for any kind of persecution,” Duvalier said.

“But I believe that the desire to participate by your side in this collaboration for the national reconstruction far outweighs any harassment I could face.”

After several restaurants and hotels refused to host his speech, Duvalier spoke sitting at a long wooden table in a rented guest house in the hills above Port-au-Prince. He faced a jostling throng of cameras and reporters – mostly Haitians.

The 59-year-old former leader, who ruled Haiti from 1971 to 1986 through terror and the regime he inherited from his father, returned on Sunday evening to the shattered nation.

He soon found himself facing an investigation by a Haitian court for corruption, embezzlement, torture, arbitrary imprisonment, crimes against humanity and other allegations.

His motives for returning have been a source of debate and confusion. Some believe he had a desire to unlock Swiss bank accounts that contain the last remnants of his squandered fortune.

Others speculate that he is gravely ill, or that he is a pawn in someone else’s game – Haiti’s current president, the US or France – to influence Haiti’s current electoral crisis.

Duvalier did not address any of those topics, other than to say it was his choice to return. He appeared to be in imperfect health, slurring his speech at times in a near-whisper, apparently unable to move his neck and walking with a shuffle.

Much of the speech was a throwback to earlier times. He spoke in French, the colonial language used by presidents until after his ouster, dropping in only occasional words of Haitian Creole.

He referred to his arrival at “Francois Duvalier International Airport” - which carried his father’s name until his fall from power. It is now Touissant Loverture International Airport, named for the leader of Haiti’s late 18th-century revolution.

About Haiti’s past, Duvalier expressed sympathy primarily for his partisans “killed, burned, grilled, tortured by ’Pe Lebrun”’ – the Haitian slang term for placing a tyre around someone’s neck and setting it on fire – or who lost their property in revenge against his regime following his ousting.

“And all under the glare of cameras around the world,” he added.

As for those tortured, imprisoned, killed and exiled under his rule he offered “my profound sadness toward my countrymen who consider themselves, rightly, to have been victims of my government”.

He ended with a declaration “imitating Martin Luther King” in which he envisioned a day when “all Haiti’s children, men and women, old and young, rich and poor, from the interior and from the Diaspora, can march hand in hand without exclusion to participate together in Haiti’s rebirth”.

As he shuffled off, the Americans – Mr Barr, long-time Duvalier family adviser and lawyer Ed Marger and Snellville, Georgia, lawyer Mike Puglise – arrived with Haitian lawyer Reynold Georges to take questions while a band waving Duvalier’s red-and-black party flag played outside.

Mr Barr called Duvalier’s speech “profoundly moving”.

Mr Marger, who handled most of the queries, said they were there to help Duvalier collect undelivered reconstruction funds promised by the US and other countries at the March 31, 2010, United Nations donors’ conference.

He said Duvalier could manage them more effectively than former US president Bill Clinton and distribute them more justly than current Haitian president Rene Preval.

The men said they would be paid if Duvalier were able to collect those funds.

On the ex-dictator’s health, Mr Marger said he appeared to be suffering from a “stiff neck”.

As for the accusations about the abuses under his regime, Mr Marger said: “Are there atrocities in Haiti? You bet your life. Is (Duvalier) responsible for them? I don’t know.”

Amnesty International reiterated its call yesterday that Duvalier should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of Haitian law.

“There is no statute of limitations for crimes against humanity. Jean-Claude Duvalier therefore must be brought to justice for these acts,” said researcher Gerardo Ducos.

But many Haitians, too young to remember his time in power, reacted more favourably to the ex-dictator’s speech.

“He came to do good things for us. This country doesn’t function anymore,” said Kevins Felicie, a motorcycle driver born four months after Duvalier boarded a US plane for exile.

“It wasn’t me that was hurt by him, or even my dad – but my grandfather. He didn’t do anything to me.”

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