Tuesday, March 20, 2012

ARTICLE - DEFYING LOGIC?

U.S. AMBASSADOR MERTEN'S STATEMENTS DEFY LOGIC, SAYS PRESIDENT OF BAR ASSOCIATION
(Defend Haiti) -

PORT-AU-PRINCE - The President of the Port-au-Prince Bar Association, Stanley Gaston, on Monday said the declarations made by U.S. Ambassador to Haiti Kenneth Merten, particularly on March 8th at the National Palace of Haiti defied logic, and may have caused more confusion between democratic institutions in Haiti.

The press conference brought together members of the diplomatic corps and a religious, unity organization named Religion pour la Paix (Religion for Peace), founded after the earthquake of 2010 to stop incidents of violence between religious groups hostile to each other after the 7.0 magnitude earthquake.

France, the United States, Canada and others were represented at the National Palace and it was the evening that President Michel Martelly, without announcing, and after 5 months embattled publicly, to comply with a Haitian Senate investigation, he showed his passports to the attendees present at the press conference. No Haitian lawmakers were present.

U.S. Ambassador Kenneth Merten, made a declaration at the National Palace in the context of the Senate Investigation. In Creole, Merten said, "...as you all may know, the law of the United States is very strict. I don't have the right to discuss the file, whether it is a President or one of my friends; without the permission of the person concerned."

This would be the second time that Ambassador Merten would refer to a U.S. law that would prevent the U.S. government to release information about one of its citizens.

For the President of the Port-au-Prince Bar Association, Stanley Gaston, if the Haitian Head of State is not a U.S. citizen why even mention it? The Battonier of Port-au-Prince said:

"Now with the declaration of the American Ambassador, myself, as a lawyer, when there is a declaration, what interests me are the things that did not have to be said."

"When one speaks, a lawyer listens closely, with a lot of interest analyzing what you are saying."

"For me, there are two things that caught my attention. There was a time the parliament sent a letter to the American Ambassador... and two weeks later there was a visit by Mrs. Mills, Mrs. Cheryl Mills the assistant to Mrs. Hillary Clinton... I believe it was Senator Anick Joseph who asked her himself, and in the response that the American's gave they said 'according to the law of the United States that protects private lives, American institutions do not have the authority to give information concerning citizens'..."

"Listen to me good."

"If President Martelly is not an American citizen then the United States doesn't have to go into this debate at all."

Hercules lamented on the involvement of Ambassador Merten at the press conference. A woe to democracy and international relations. The battonier felt that with an open Senate investigation, the Ambassador could have given the Haitian institutions the respect of conferring at least, with Senators on the investigating commission with such a declaration.

Hercules said:

"I believe that for the interest of the nation, between the executive and the parliament, there should be some solidarity of togetherness in the declarations that they make, because these are questions that are quite simple."

"And these are matters that can reinforce confidence in our institutions."

"In all countries of the world a legislative investigation is something normal. A parliamentarian is investigating the question of nationality. The question of nationality is not an issue of opinion, it is a question of an individual that is based on certain facts, that are objectively observable, that are objective, legal, verifiable... so tuly, I do not see a problem with a parliament that is conducting an investigation."

"What I find regrettable is the declaration that certain officials can make that can cause trouble, confusion, and that can discredit our institutions."

"If you are in a process of reinforcing democracy, you must reinforce the institutions, so that each can play their roles within the limits of the Constitution, and what the law provides for them."

The passports were not made immediately available to the Haitian Senate. Even on March 8, after private and public requests by members of parliament for months, the travel documents were given to Religions for Peace, who served as an unannounced mediator for the unannounced event.

Senators have since declared the passports fraudulent and have extended their investigation due to a number of invalid booklets. The president of the lower house on Monday declared the investigation not closed, and the commission continues to press through its work in the legislature.

The passports were given to the Haitian senate commission on Saturday March 10. It was returned on Tuesday March 13th to the President by Religions for Peace.

Religions for Peace was organized with the leaders of major church conferences, islamic, christian and the confederation of vodou. Religions for peace was outspoken in April 2011 when it organized with the Confederation of Haitian Voudousists led by Max Beauvoir and the direction of Monsignor Pierre Andre Dumas, who "condemned the acts of murder against Vodou followers." By the end of March 2011, more than 50 Voudouists throughout Haiti were killed in 5 months, accused of 'possessing the occult's techniques of creating cholera', introduced mid-October 2010.

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