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<font size=3>2 articles follow<br><br>
Haiti's former PM Neptune freed from jail<br>
Thu Jul 27, 2006 5:06 PM ET<br><br>
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<a href="http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-07-27T210623Z_01_N27382163_RTRUKOC_0_US-HAITI-NEPTUNE.xml&archived=False" eudora="autourl">
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=worldNews&storyID=2006-07-27T210623Z_01_N27382163_RTRUKOC_0_US-HAITI-NEPTUNE.xml&archived=False<br>
</a></font><font size=3>By Joseph Guyler Delva<br><br>
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters) - Former Haitian Prime Minister Yvon
Neptune was freed on Thursday from the prison where he was held for more
than two years on what he called imaginary charges after the ouster of
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.<br><br>
Frail from an on-and-off hunger strike, the 59-year-old walked out of the
National Penitentiary annex supported by two U.N. peacekeepers. They
helped him into an ambulance that took him to a U.N.-run hospital for a
checkup.<br><br>
Neptune was never tried and has repeatedly denied wrongdoing.<br><br>
"It's not freedom yet," he told Reuters as he left the prison.
"The machinery of injustice didn't stop with my release today. The
laboratories that invented those kind of imaginary crimes are very
strong."<br><br>
Human rights groups had repeatedly called on Haiti to free Neptune, who
was arrested in June 2004, a few months after the populist Aristide gave
up the presidency in the face of a bloody rebellion.<br><br>
Neptune was detained on accusations he masterminded what Aristide's
opponents called a massacre on February 11, 2004, in La Scierie, a small
village near the western port city of St. Marc. U.N. investigators
characterized the incident as an armed clash with casualties on both
sides.<br><br>
An appeals court ordered Neptune's release on Thursday and he was
escorted from the prison amid heavy security shortly afterward.<br><br>
Brian Concannon, a U.S. lawyer who has campaigned for his release, said
he believed Neptune had been freed on humanitarian grounds.<br><br>
"This is very good, but he's only been provisionally released. The
charges haven't been dropped," Concannon said.<br><br>
"An appeal of the charges is before the appeals court in Gonaives.
The prosecutor has recommended charges be dismissed because they are
unjustified."<br><br>
FREEDOM 'FOR ALL'<br><br>
Neptune served under Aristide and was among hundreds of Aristide
supporters jailed by a U.S.-backed interim government after Aristide was
driven into exile.<br><br>
He said he had been on a hunger strike for the past 15 months, consuming
only liquids. Neptune expressed reservation his release was unaccompanied
by a declaration absolving him of wrongdoing. He said he bore no hatred
toward those who put him in prison but would continue to fight for
justice.<br><br>
"At a certain age, one should not be fighting for himself anymore.
In such cases he would be selfish," he said as he left the
prison.<br><br>
"I am fighting for generations to come. ... The Haitian people show
that they know what freedom means, and they will continue to fight for
freedom, freedom not just for a few but for all."<br><br>
The order for his release was made public a day after Neptune talked to
reporters from his cell. He said then the government of President Rene
Preval, who took office in May, would be partly to blame if he died while
in prison on charges he called false and politically motivated.<br><br>
Among the hundreds of Aristide supporters jailed by the interim
government on vague charges, Concannon said only a few had been
released.<br><br>
"There haven't been mass releases. There's been a trickle. I'd say
maybe 10 have gotten out," he said.<br><br>
Preval said recently about 100 had been released.<br><br>
<br>
Haiti's jailed former PM scolds new president<br>
Thu Jul 27, 2006 8:48 AM GMT<br><br>
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<a href="http://za.today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-07-27T064844Z_01_BAN724492_RTRIDST_0_OZATP-HAITI-NEPTUNE-20060727.XML" eudora="autourl">
http://za.today.reuters.com/news/NewsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-07-27T064844Z_01_BAN724492_RTRIDST_0_OZATP-HAITI-NEPTUNE-20060727.XML<br>
<br>
</a></font><font size=3>By Joseph Guyler Delva<br><br>
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters) - Haiti's former Prime Minister Yvon
Neptune, on a hunger strike, said on Wednesday the new government would
be partly to blame if he died while imprisoned on charges he calls false
and politically motivated.<br><br>
"I am a political prisoner. Whether I get out of jail dead or alive
will be on the government's decision," Neptune told journalists from
his cell at the National Penitentiary annex.<br><br>
"My case has nothing to do with justice," he said. "It's
up to the government to free me."<br><br>
Neptune, who has been on a hunger strike for some 15 months but was
taking liquids, appeared exhausted. He wore a blue T-shirt and beige
shorts, and lay on a small mattress on the floor with two pillows under
his head.<br><br>
He said his arrest in June 2004 was a political decision by U.S.-backed
interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue and former Justice Minister
Bernard Gousse.<br><br>
He served under President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was driven out in
February 2004 during an armed rebellion. Neptune was detained on
accusations that he masterminded what Aristide's opponents called a
massacre on February 11, 2004, in La Scierie, a small village 60 miles
(95 km) north of Port-au-Prince.<br><br>
Neptune has repeatedly denied the accusations and has never been tried.
He complained that the international community that once championed his
case had abandoned him.<br><br>
"I used to see many diplomats from the U.S. State Department and
others, but I don't see them anymore," he said.<br><br>
Neptune accused the administration of President Rene Preval, who took
office in May, of continuing the "reign of injustice."<br><br>
He said the new administration would bear part of the blame if he died in
prison because Preval has the constitutional authority to grant
amnesty.<br><br>
"When you know what to do to prevent an innocent from dying in jail
and you refuse to do it, you will become an accomplice in the
death," said Neptune.<br><br>
Preval, who was elected in February, said earlier this week that efforts
were being made to free Neptune but did not provide further
detail.<br><br>
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