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Two Haitian rebel leaders accused of murder say they will surrender
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) - Two Haitian rebel leaders who helped oust President Jean-Bertrand Aristide promised Wednesday to surrender to face Haitian justice for earlier murder convictions.
Louis-Jodel Chamblain and Jean-Pierre Baptiste will turn themselves in to police Thursday, Chamblain and rebel leader Winter Etienne announced.
"Chamblain is not scared of this affair. He knows he's innocent."
"He trusts this country's justice system now" that Aristide has been ousted, Etienne said.
Chamblain has denied he was under pressure to surrender.
"If I could take up arms to fight Aristide's dictatorship, then I have to have the courage to do this," Chamblain said.
Chamblain was convicted in absentia and sentenced to life imprisonment for the 1993 murder of Aristide financier Antoine Izmery, who was dragged from church and shot dead.
Both Chamblain and Baptiste were convicted and given life imprisonment for a 1994 massacre of more than a dozen Aristide supporters in the northern town Gonaives, where Haiti's latest rebellion erupted Feb. 5.
Chamblain also allegedly ran death squads in the last years of Jean-Claude (Baby Doc) Duvalier's dictatorship in the late 1980s. A former army sergeant, he is notorious for being a co-leader of the paramilitary Front for the Advancement of Progress of the Haitian People, which is blamed for deaths of some 3,000 civilians under a 1991-1994 coup regime.
Meanwhile, the Bahamas withdrew its diplomats from Haiti, following the shooting and robbery of its ambassador's wife and a threatening telephone call to the wife of a second diplomat, a Bahamian government spokesman said Wednesday.
The Bahamas is the only Caribbean country with an embassy in Haiti. Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell told the Bahamian Parliament on Wednesday the government did not believe the shooting was politically motivated.
But a Caribbean diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he understood the Bahamas was investigating whether the two incidents were related and connected to the bad relations between Haiti's U.S.-backed interim government and the 15-country Caribbean Community that has refused to recognize it.
Francoise Newry, wife of Ambassador Eugene Newry, was shot and robbed of her handbag at a market near the downtown presidential palace Saturday. That night, Michelle Williams, wife of the embassy's second secretary, received a threatening telephone call, he said.
Also Wednesday, police reported a stampede at a police academy recruiting drive killed one person and injured 23 others in Haiti, officials said Wednesday.
Police fired tear gas and beat back applicants with batons as thousands of job hunters rushed the academy Tuesday, crashing through the gates and past French guards. U.S. marines arrived to help control the crowd by blocking the academy entrance with Humvees.
Most of the impoverished Caribbean country's eight million people are without jobs and live on less than $1 a day.
http://www3.cjad.com/content/cjad_news/article.asp?id=w0421109A
"Chamblain is not scared of this affair. He knows he's innocent."
"He trusts this country's justice system now" that Aristide has been ousted, Etienne said.
Chamblain has denied he was under pressure to surrender.
"If I could take up arms to fight Aristide's dictatorship, then I have to have the courage to do this," Chamblain said.
Chamblain was convicted in absentia and sentenced to life imprisonment for the 1993 murder of Aristide financier Antoine Izmery, who was dragged from church and shot dead.
Both Chamblain and Baptiste were convicted and given life imprisonment for a 1994 massacre of more than a dozen Aristide supporters in the northern town Gonaives, where Haiti's latest rebellion erupted Feb. 5.
Chamblain also allegedly ran death squads in the last years of Jean-Claude (Baby Doc) Duvalier's dictatorship in the late 1980s. A former army sergeant, he is notorious for being a co-leader of the paramilitary Front for the Advancement of Progress of the Haitian People, which is blamed for deaths of some 3,000 civilians under a 1991-1994 coup regime.
Meanwhile, the Bahamas withdrew its diplomats from Haiti, following the shooting and robbery of its ambassador's wife and a threatening telephone call to the wife of a second diplomat, a Bahamian government spokesman said Wednesday.
The Bahamas is the only Caribbean country with an embassy in Haiti. Foreign Affairs Minister Fred Mitchell told the Bahamian Parliament on Wednesday the government did not believe the shooting was politically motivated.
But a Caribbean diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he understood the Bahamas was investigating whether the two incidents were related and connected to the bad relations between Haiti's U.S.-backed interim government and the 15-country Caribbean Community that has refused to recognize it.
Francoise Newry, wife of Ambassador Eugene Newry, was shot and robbed of her handbag at a market near the downtown presidential palace Saturday. That night, Michelle Williams, wife of the embassy's second secretary, received a threatening telephone call, he said.
Also Wednesday, police reported a stampede at a police academy recruiting drive killed one person and injured 23 others in Haiti, officials said Wednesday.
Police fired tear gas and beat back applicants with batons as thousands of job hunters rushed the academy Tuesday, crashing through the gates and past French guards. U.S. marines arrived to help control the crowd by blocking the academy entrance with Humvees.
Most of the impoverished Caribbean country's eight million people are without jobs and live on less than $1 a day.
http://www3.cjad.com/content/cjad_news/article.asp?id=w0421109A
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