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Haitian Pro-Aristide Violence Kills 14

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - Three Haitian politicians allied with ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide surrendered to police Saturday after barricading themselves in a radio station for six hours, denying involvement in clashes that have killed at least 14 people.
The three politicians said police intended to arrest them on weapons charges. They were led out of Radio Caraibes in handcuffs Saturday night after a judge entered with an arrest warrant to negotiate their surrender.

``They are kidnapping me. They have no reason to arrest me. It is an illegal arrest,'' former Senate president Yvon Feuille said, appealing to Aristide supporters not to respond with violence as he was led away.

At least five men were killed Friday by gunmen outside the home of an anti-Aristide community leader in the seaside slum Village de Dieu, residents said Saturday.

Police also fired on a peaceful demonstration of Aristide supporters in the neighborhood of Bel Air on Friday, killing two young men, said Anne Sosin, a human rights monitor of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti.

Radio Metropole reported one civilian shot dead in a pro-Aristide demonstration Friday, while Justice Minister Bernard Gousse said police had killed two gang leaders Thursday in fighting in Cite Soleil, a seaside slum teeming with Aristide loyalists.

The headless bodies of three police officers turned up Friday. They, along with a fourth policeman, were killed in clashes Thursday in the capital Port-Au-Prince, police said.

``Aristide's partisans have begun an urban guerrilla operation that they call Operation Baghdad,'' human rights activist Jean-Claude Bajeux said Saturday. ``The decapitations are imitative of those in Iraq, and they are meant to show the failure of U.S. policy in Haiti.''

Aristide's Lavalas Family party on Thursday began three days of commemoration of the 1991 coup that toppled Aristide's first government. They are demanding an end to the ``occupation'' by foreign troops - referring to the U.S.-led force that followed Aristide's February ouster and U.N. peacekeepers who have taken over since June.

Aristide, now in exile in South Africa, has accused U.S. agents of kidnapping him when he was flown out of Haiti on a U.S.-chartered jet amid a bloody rebellion. But the U.S. government insists Aristide left of his own free will.

In the Village de Dieu - which means Village of God - several people fearing for their lives abandoned homes after the five men were killed Friday. The anti-Aristide activist who lived in the home targeted, Jean Renald, escaped and went into hiding, residents said.

``When the shooting started, everybody ran,'' said Andre Denache, 31, who said he saw gunmen firing at the men standing outside Renald's home before sunset.

One of those killed, 23-year-old Mackenson Simeon, was ordered to lie down and was shot twice in the head and neck, his sister Roselaine Simeon said.

``I don't know why they did it, because he didn't have any enemies,'' she said, adding that the family had called police but no one came.

The bodies were taken away in ambulances, leaving blood staining the ground.

``The attackers are gangsters, political opportunists who are taking advantage of the three-day commemoration to terrorize the people, to destabilize the country to make it easier to rob and rape,'' said Jean Louis, a 30-year-old mechanic in the slum of crumbling cinderblock homes. ``Their power is fire power, not persuasion.''

Lavalas party officials said their demonstrations were peaceful and blamed the interim government and anti-Aristide infiltrators for the violence. ``No effective step was taken to ensure the security of the demonstrators,'' Lavalas party spokesman Gilbert Angerville told Radio Metropole.

The three politicians barricaded themselves inside Radio Caraibes' offices after appearing on the air Saturday.

They denied involvement in any crime. Feuille said police told him they had found weapons in a car outside belonging to one of the three, but he denied the car belonged to them.

``We came here to say it is necessary to make peace,'' former Sen. Gerard Gilles said hours before he was arrested along with Feuille and Roudy Herivaux, former president of the Chamber of Deputies.

Earlier Saturday, another Lavalas official, former Chamber of Deputies member Joseph Axene, was arrested outside the station on a separate warrant for an unknown offense, the Haitian broadcaster Radio Megastar reported.

Some Haitians are criticizing the failure of U.N. peacekeepers to control the violence and the country's chamber of commerce denounced ``the inaction of the U.N. multinational force'' in a statement.

``We're doing the best we can,'' U.N. spokesman Toussaint Kongo-Doudou said. ``Right now it's difficult to be everywhere.''

The aftermath of Tropical Storm Jeanne, which killed more than 1,550 and left some 900 missing two weeks ago, has tied up some 750 of the 3,000 U.N. peacekeeping troops in Haiti.

Most streets vendors in the capital stayed home Saturday as Aristide supporters took to the streets. Masked gunmen fired into the air before dawn in the traditionally pro-Aristide neighborhood of Bel Air, radio station Signal FM reported.

Police also came under heavy gunfire when they retrieved the headless bodies of the officers found a day earlier, police spokeswoman Jesse Coicou told Radio Metropole. Some people in the area stoned cars, residents said.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,1280,-4531044,00.html
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