Duvalier forced to court on charges he abused power in Haiti

Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier

PORT-AU-PRINCE,  (Reuters) – Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier appeared in court today for the first time to face charges he was responsible for corruption and serious human rights violations during his 15-year rule.

Duvalier had boycotted three previous court hearings, and a judge responded to his last failure to appear a week ago by issuing a warrant ordering prosecutors to ensure his presence for Thursday’s hearing, under police escort if necessary.

Hundreds of Duvalier supporters gathered outside the courthouse.

Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier
Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier

It is the first time Duvalier has personally been obliged to address crimes allegedly committed during his 15-year rule.

“I think that what they’re doing now is trying to delay proceedings by all means,” said Alix Fils-Aime, who was imprisoned by Duvalier’s government. “Obviously it’s not working and he will have to face his accusers in court, he will have to face history in court, just like other dictators around the world are facing.”

The case is being closely watched by international human rights observers who consider it a landmark case for Haiti’s weak justice system after decades of dictatorship, military rule and economic mayhem.

“Duvalier got away with everything all his life, and now he’s being forced to face his victims across a courtroom,” said Reed Brody, a spokesman for Human Rights Watch.

“It’s a powerful message. This is the sort of thing that could restore Haitian faith that justice is possible,” he added.

Reynold Georges, who heads Duvalier’s legal team, argued unsuccessfully last week before appeals court Judge Jean-Joseph Lebrun that his client’s presence in court was not required.

Duvalier returned to the impoverished Caribbean nation in January 2011 after 25 years of exile in France and was briefly detained on charges of corruption, theft and misappropriation of funds that are still pending against him.

Separate charges of crimes against humanity filed by alleged victims of wrongful imprisonment, forced disappearances and torture under Duvalier, were set aside by an investigating judge last year because the statute of limitations had run out.

But the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, Navi Pillay, has warned Haitian authorities that there is no statute of limitations under international law for serious violations of human rights.

“I encourage the judicial authorities to act on their responsibilities and ensure the victims are provided with the long overdue justice they deserve,” Pillay said in a statement last week.

BACK FROM EXILE

Critics say prosecutors have been too lenient in Duvalier’s case. President Michel Martelly’s government recently renewed Duvalier’s diplomatic passport, saying he was entitled to it as a former head of state.

Duvalier’s flight into exile in 1986 ended nearly three decades of dictatorship begun by his father, Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier. He is alleged to have fled with more than $100 million stashed in European bank accounts.

The Duvaliers enforced their rule with the aid of a feared militia, the National Security Volunteers, better known as the “Tonton Macoutes,” who were blamed for hundreds of deaths and disappearances.

Soon after he returned to Haiti in 2011, Duvalier issued a brief apology “to those countrymen who rightly feel they were victims of my government,” the first ever public recognition of abuses under his rule.

After initially reveling in his return, often sighted dining out with friends at the best restaurants, he has since withdrawn to a villa in a posh suburb in the hills above the capital Port-au-Prince.

While in exile Duvalier acknowledged privately that killers in his government went unpunished, according to Bernard Diederich, a New Zealand-born journalist and author of several books on Haiti, including a biography of the younger Duvalier due out later this year.

“He always passed the blame to others,” said Diederich, who conducted four long interviews with Duvalier in the late 1990s.