- Associated Press - Thursday, March 17, 2011

JOHANNESBURG (AP) — Haiti’s Jean-Bertrand Aristide will leave exile in South Africa in just a few hours, despite President Obama’s bid to keep the hugely popular but controversial figure away from his homeland until it holds a presidential election this weekend, officials said Thursday.

“We can’t hold him hostage if he wants to go,” South African Cabinet Minister Collins Chabane said, noting Haiti’s government had delivered Mr. Aristide’s diplomatic passport last month.

Mr. Aristide’s lawyer, Ira Kurzban, said Mr. Aristide will be back in Haiti by noon on Friday. The one-sentence statement was released Thursday and gave no further details.

South African officials, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to make the official announcement, said Mr. Aristide would leave immediately after addressing reporters around 9 p.m. (3 p.m. EDT) Thursday at Johannesburg’s second international airport on the city’s northern outskirts.

About a dozen massive suitcases marked “Aristide” arrived at the airport Friday night, followed by Danny Glover, the actor and social justice activist who arrived Thursday morning to help escort Mr. Aristide; his wife, Mildred; and their two daughters home.

“President Aristide … will soon be on the plane to go home back to Haiti,” Mr. Glover said before walking into the airport’s VIP area.

Mr. Aristide, a former slum priest, twice was president of Haiti and remains wildly popular among the Caribbean nation’s majority poor. He was unable to serve full terms, having been ousted the first time in a coup before being restored to power in a U.S. military intervention in 1994. After handing power to his successor, he was re-elected years later, only to flee a rebellion in 2004 aboard a U.S. plane. Mr. Aristide claimed he was kidnapped, a charge the United States denied.

Mr. Obama was concerned enough about the timing of Mr. Aristide’s return to call South African President Jacob Zuma on Tuesday and discuss the matter, U.S. National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor told the Associated Press. A Zuma spokesman had no comment, saying he was unaware of the call.

“The United States, along with others in the international community, has deep concerns that President Aristide’s return to Haiti in the closing days of the election could be destabilizing,” Mr. Vietor said. “President Obama reiterated … his belief that the Haitian people deserve the chance to choose their government through peaceful, free and fair elections March 20.”

Aides said Mr. Aristide, Haiti’s first democratically elected president, fears the winner might reverse the long-awaited decision to allow his return. In the past, both candidates have been opposed to Mr. Aristide. Now, both Michel Martelly and Mirlande Manigat stress his right to return as a Haitian citizen under the constitution.

Mrs. Manigat, a university administrator and former first lady, even said, “President Aristide is welcome to come back and help me with education.”

Mr. Glover, the chair of the TransAfrica social justice forum, asked why former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier could return to Haiti unhindered and not Mr. Aristide.

“People of good conscience cannot be idle while a former dictator is able to return unhindered while a democratic leader who peacefully handed over power to another elected president is restricted from returning to his country by external forces,” Mr. Glover wrote on the TransAfrica Forum website.

Prominent lawyers and law professors criticized U.S. government “interference” in Mr. Aristide’s “constitutional and human right to return from forced exile to Haiti.”

“The United States trying to control when any Haitian citizen — especially a former president — can enter Haiti is outrageous,” Bill Quigley, legal director of the Center for Constitutional Rights at Loyola New Orleans Law School, said. He is among more than 100 lawyers from the United States, Europe and Canada who wrote a letter of criticism to the U.S. State Department.

“I felt compelled to speak out to defend both President Aristide’s human rights and the American tradition of rule of law that I teach in my classroom,” Mr. Quigley said.

On Monday, U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner acknowledged Mr. Aristide’s right to go back to Haiti, but he said that returning this week “can only be seen as a conscious choice to impact Haiti’s elections.”

Haiti’s electoral council barred Mr. Aristide’s party, Lavalas, from the presidential election for technical reasons that supporters said were bogus. Its members are boycotting Sunday’s vote.

Thousands and thousands of people are expected to welcome Mr. Aristide home.

South African officials have been making increasingly acerbic remarks about delays in his departure.

Mr. Chabane told a news conference Thursday that South Africa cannot be held responsible for whether Mr. Aristide stays or goes, according to the South African Press Association.

“What I should stress is that we are not sending former President Aristide to Haiti. He was given the passport by the government of Haiti, and we can’t hold him hostage if he wants to go,” Mr. Chabane was quoted as saying.

Mr. Aristide emerged as a leading voice for Haiti’s poor in a popular revolt that forced an end to the Duvalier family’s 29-year dictatorship. He has said he will not be involved in politics in Haiti and wants to lead his foundation’s efforts to improve education in the impoverished Caribbean nation devastated by last year’s catastrophic earthquake.

It would be the second return from exile for Mr. Aristide, who first was ousted by a military coup in 1991. Aristide fled Haiti again on Feb. 29, 2004, leaving on a U.S. plane as rebels approached the capital, Port-au-Prince, and members of Mr. Aristide’s party was accused of killing opponents.

The priest has been reclusive in exile, doing university research and polishing his academic credentials with a doctorate awarded by the University of South Africa for a comparative study on Zulu and Haitian Creole. He relaxed by playing table tennis.

Associated Press writers Ben Fox in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and Jenny Gross and Ed Brown in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

 

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide