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| THE HANDSTAND | SEPTEMBER 2006 |
AMY GOODMAN: 19-year-old Wildert Sanedy was shot and killed by the UN troops in the raid. The delegation caught up with his mother, Adacia Sanedy, four days after the shooting. She talked about her son.
AMY GOODMAN: Ben Terrall, there is a grieving mother. Explain what she's saying, because maybe it misses something in translation, as she says I thank the UN troops. BEN TERRALL: Well, I was going to ask her if she had a message to the outside world, but we just sort of let her talk about the experience. And she described how her son was fixing the radio on the roof as the snipers came in. And she said, This is my message to the UN: I want to thank you for killing my son. You come in here. I don't know why you're here. Civilians are killed all the time. So this is part of a pattern. This operation -- AMY GOODMAN: Shes being sarcastic. BEN TERRALL: Completely sarcastic. Yeah, shes very obviously very bitter about this. And her son did nothing to deserve this. He wasn't connected to an armed group. He was just fixing a radio on the roof. And this has been true throughout these operations. I talked to an older man who was leaving the neighborhood, who said there had been many people killed. We have him on tape, as we were interviewing him. He said many people had been killed, and they weren't connected to armed groups. So the UN, theyre -- basically the UN is
operating without oversight. They're operating with
impunity. They're going in, and they're just,
quote/unquote, "securing" these neighborhoods
at the behest of the ultra-rightwing small elite in Haiti
that want to kill as many people as possible in these
areas. They're not going after death squads. They're not
disarming the rightist-backed forces and the holdover
forces from the coup, which unfortunately are still
controlling the judiciary. They're controlling much of
the Haitian government. JUAN GONZALEZ: Id like to ask you about some of these incidents and the atrocities of the UN peacekeepers. What kind of coverage in the media -- first of all, in Haiti, because the rest of the world has already, like, forgotten Haiti, ever since Preval came back, was re-elected as president. But in terms of -- what's happened now in terms of the Haitian media? BEN TERRALL: Well, the largely rightwing elite-controlled Haitian media is driven by these ultra-rich, ultra-right forces that want the UN to crack down further. They want them to kill more people. There's been a campaign of complete dehumanization of the poorest neighborhoods in Haiti. And so, you're not getting accurate information in most of the Haitian press and a small number of radio stations. But certainly internationally, we don't hear the broader -- we never hear the broader context of what the UN has been doing, since the beginning of the coup, which is backing up the Haitian police, aiding and abetting slaughters. And this went on in the first two years. A key factor of this is this went on in the first two years. And they were provoking the population by engaging in vast numbers of killings, the police. And it's been thoroughly documented before the Lancet study by the University of Miami Law School, by filmmaker Kevin Pina, by the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti................................you have to remember, in the 91 coup, there were like 5,000 people killed, so people have this memory of that. And it's always -- in the media reporting, it's always taken out of that context.
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