BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-56383
SEQUENCE:56383
CREATED:20050127T061300Z
DESCRIPTION:Fr. Gérard Jean-Juste, celebrated Haitian humanitarian, personal friend 
 and political ally of ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was arrested 
 while feeding hungry children at his Port-au-Prince church and released 
 after seven weeks due to pressure from international church and human 
 rights organizations and political leaders.  He will be in Berkeley Fri. 
 Jan. 28 – Sun. Jan 30 and address the press:  11:00 – 11:10 School 
 children present priest with funds collected for Fr. Jean-Juste’s feeding 
 program.  11:10 – Fr. Jean-Juste updates press on the fragile political 
 situation in Haiti since the U.S. forced democratically-elected President 
 Jean Bertrand Aristide out of office Feb. 29, 2004; he will respond to 
 questions.  Background: Excerpts from an interview with Fr. Jean Juste,Dec. 
 20, 2004:  (ON HIS DETENTION) I was arrested while I was feeding hundreds 
 of children and young adults…. They told me that -- I saw them writing on 
 the book – “arrested for disturbing the public peace.” But what was 
 hurting me the most that day, why some of us in Haiti are trying to help 
 the most desperate people, is…the repressive forces from the…de facto 
 government came and shot at our people. Three children have been shot, one 
 girl and two boys. … I think instead of brutalizing us, instead of 
 arresting us arbitrarily, they could congratulate us for helping them, 
 because I think that by feeding the people, by taking care of the children, 
 by educating them, we are helping the government….  I went through the 
 court system after a month staying in jail without   seeing a judge, and 
 the judge looked at the file, and thought it was   frivolous. There was 
 nothing. They said, “Hey, you have been accused of   plotting against the 
 government.” I said, “What? Plotting against the   government?”…. 
 There was no proof. At that time the judge said, “Hey, I have to order 
 your release.” The judge did order my release, and then the commissioner, 
 the one who is responsible for approving the judge's decision -- it is 
 supposed to take five days -- he (waited) two weeks before accepting the 
 reality that I should be free.  (ON HUMAN RIGHTS IN HAITI) The jails are 
 too overcrowded. While I was at the main penitentiary in Port-au-Prince, 
 there were over 1,200 -- that's a jail that's supposed to take 600 
 prisoners. That’s the reason why right now I’m appealing to the de 
 facto government to make a humanitarian gesture. Too many people, too many 
 youngsters have been arbitrarily arrested…. they are being forgotten in 
 jail…  (ON THE COUP AGAINST ARISTIDE) I am really sad to see that so many 
 right wing elements within the President Bush administration had 
 participated in the coup d’état against President Aristide on February 
 29. Also for me having lived in the U.S. for many years where many of us in 
 this country are calling for respect, for democracy… I think it's   
 really very sad to see that in Haiti, while we're trying to make a 
 democracy to take place, [right wing U.S. elements are trying to 
 destabilize the country.]  If we keep acting that way, every time we have 
 an elected official, an elected president, and some other country may not 
 like the president and decide to plot against the president, and get rid of 
 him, so we are killing the democracy everywhere. Killing it in Haiti, it's 
 been that you are killing the democracy in the United States of America…. 
 Whatever you see take place in any corner of the world can be repeated in 
 any other corner of the world.  (ON THE ROLE OF THE U.N.)  That's another 
 point. Where the U.N. is supposed to be a respectable… international 
 institution, and in that case, we find the U.N. on the side of the 
 repressive government, and the people cannot understand it at all.  (ON 
 COLIN POWELL’S VISIT)  He visited Haiti, and we have left with the 
 impression that he's strongly backing up the repressive system, the 
 de-facto, the unconstitutional, the illegal government that is now running 
 Haiti.  (  ON POWELL AND CONDOLEZZA RICE SAYING THAT ARISTIDE COULD NOT 
 COME   WITHIN 150 MILES OF HAITI) This is what I cannot understand. One 
 official, some official, will decide for a nation, and we are talking about 
 democracy in the United States. Can we accept that in the United States? I 
 think that this is abuse of power from some officials of the United States. 
 They are abusing the power and repressing this black nation.  (ON TARGETING 
 ARISTIDE SUPPORTERS) We are not only targeted, we are being chased. And in 
 the jail over half of the population are arbitrarily arrested, and kept in 
 jail, and most of them are Aristide supporters….You should see …. among 
 them there was a very young man, a great artist from Bel Air, and he 
 composed two beautiful songs while he was in jail. I said, “What happened 
 to you? How come they beat you so badly?” He said, “Because I composed 
 this song, these songs are in favor of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. I 
 still recognize him as the president,” and they beat him that badly and 
 broke his head. And fractured some of his limbs.   From an interview on 
 Democracy Now! By Amy Goodman; full interview at  
 http://www.democracynow.org/print.pl?sid=04/12/20/154247   From Oct. 14, 
 Human Rights First Press Release:  In the 1970s, Rev. Jean-Juste founded 
 the Haitian Refugee Center in Miami, Florida. He served as its Executive 
 Director for a number of years. While at the Haitian Refugee Center Rev. 
 Jean-Juste worked closely with Human Rights First and others to assist 
 those who fled Haiti during the Duvalier regime. …  Rev. Jean-Juste 
 returned to Haiti in 1991 and became parish priest at the Sainte Claire 
 Catholic Church. He was a vocal supporter of former   President Aristide. 
 Since Aristide’s forced exile in February 2004, Rev. Jean-Juste has been 
 outspoken in his criticism of human rights abuses carried out by armed 
 forces with ties to the government.  
 http://www.humanrightsfirst.org/media/2004_alerts/1014.htm  1992 Interview  
 http://www.epica.org/Library/martyrs/notmysoul.htm  Bay area appearances  
 Friday, Jan. 28, 7 p.m.  Braun Auditorium, Mudd Chemistry Building, 333 
 Campus Drive, Stanford  6-7 p.m. reception in auditorium lobby  7 p.m.: Fr. 
 Jean-Juste speaks  (for Stanford event only: 503-807-8923)  Saturday, Jan. 
 29, 7:30 p.m.  St. Joseph the Worker Church  1640 Addison St., Berkeley     
  ------ End of Forwarded Message  \n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/01/26/56383.php
SUMMARY:FREED HAITIAN POLICITCAL PRISONER FR. GERARD JEAN-JUSTE
LOCATION:  Berkeley Montessori School  1310 University Ave, Berkeley (near Acton 
 St., at the former Santa Fe   Depot)
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2005/01/26/56383.php
DTSTART:20050128T190000Z
DTEND:20050128T200000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
