28/82 Report of the Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in Haiti, Gustavo Gallón
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2015 Feb
Session: 28th Regular Session (2015 Mar)
Agenda Item: Item10: Technical assistance and capacity-building
GE.15-02042 (E) 090315 100315
Human Rights Council Twenty-eighth session
Agenda item 10
Technical assistance and capacity-building
Report of the Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in Haiti, Gustavo Gallón
Summary
The Independent Expert on the situation of human rights in Haiti considers the
situation to be complex but not insuperable. Following his second mission to the country, in
July 2014, he reviews here the efforts made thus far to address the five human rights areas
identified in his previous report as warranting urgent action, namely: (a) illiteracy, (b)
prolonged pretrial detention, (c) elections, (d) redress for large-scale human rights
violations perpetrated in the past and (e) resettlement of the people displaced by the 2010
earthquake.
For each area, the Independent Expert identifies the problems observed and
proposes specific solutions. As a prerequisite for addressing these urgent human rights
matters, however, there must be strong political will on the part of the Government and the
international community, active involvement by civil society, consensus on the priority
problems to be addressed, focused coordination of work and perseverance in efforts to
attain the stated goals.
In December 2014, a new Prime Minister was appointed as a first step towards
clearing the impasse surrounding the holding of elections, which is one of the five areas
identified by the Independent Expert for priority action. Success on this front could bring
significant momentum to the efforts to improve the human rights situation in Haiti. The
early days of 2015 will be decisive in this regard.
United Nations A/HRC/28/82
General Assembly Distr.: General 9 February 2015
English
Original: French
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Contents
Paragraphs Page
I. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 1–8 3
II. Five key aspects of the human rights situation in Haiti ........................................... 9–86 4
A. Economic, social and cultural rights and social inequality ............................. 25–39 6
B. Deprivation of liberty and detention conditions ............................................. 40–56 9
C. Weak rule of law ............................................................................................. 57–68 11
D. Past human rights violations and impunity ..................................................... 69–77 13
E. Other factors having an impact on human rights, including catastrophes
and other humanitarian crises ......................................................................... 78–86 15
III. Conclusions and recommendations ......................................................................... 87–92 17
GE.15-02042 3
I. Introduction
1. The present report is submitted pursuant to the statement of the President of the
Human Rights Council, of 28 March 2014, in which the Council invited the Independent
Expert on the situation of human rights in Haiti to undertake a mission to Haiti and to report
on that mission to the Council at its twenty-eighth session (A/HRC/PRST/25/1, para. 13).
2. In the President’s statement, the Council agreed to extend the Independent Expert’s
mandate for one year (para. 9). Mr. Gustavo Gallón had been appointed in June 2013 and
took up his duties on 1 August 2013. The present report relates to the period from 15 April
to 31 December 2014 and contains recommendations for the Government of Haiti and the
international community.
3. The Independent Expert undertook a mission to Haiti from 15 to 22 July 2014,
followed by a series of meetings in New York from 22 to 25 July. In Haiti, he stayed in
Port-au-Prince and visited Aquin and Les Cayes in the Sud Department; he also participated
in a workshop on economic and social rights organized in Côte des Arcadins by the
Minister for Human Rights and the Fight against Extreme Poverty.
4. The Independent Expert wishes to thank all those he met during his visit, especially
the Haitian authorities — who made the mission possible — and in particular the Minister
for Human Rights, who invited him to take part in the aforementioned workshop with
members of the Interministerial Committee for Human Rights. The workshop enabled the
Independent Expert to appreciate first-hand the Committee’s efforts to bring together the
work done by different ministries with a view to developing a comprehensive human rights
policy, which is the starting point for coordinated governmental action in this sphere.
5. The Independent Expert also wishes to thank the President of the Senate, the
Ombudsman, the Director General of the National Police, the Deputy Director of the
Prisons Administration, the Inspector General of the National Police, the Secretary of State
for Literacy, the Dean of the Court of First Instance in Aquin, the Government
Commissioner at the Court of First Instance in Aquin, the Police Commissioner and the
Clerk at the Aquin police station, the Dean of the Court of First Instance in Les Cayes, the
former Government Commissioner in Les Cayes, the Dean of the Court of First Instance in
Les Côteaux, the Government Commissioner at the Court of First Instance in Les Côteaux,
the alternate Government Commissioner at Île-à-Vache and the alternate Government
Commissioner at the Court of First Instance in Les Cayes.
6. The support received from the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti
(MINUSTAH) was instrumental in the success of this mission. The Independent Expert
wishes to express his appreciation to the Special Representative of the Secretary-General,
as well as to her staff and all those working with her, in particular in the Human Rights
Section, and all members of their teams for the able support they provided in Port-au-Prince
and on field visits and for the views they shared on the country situation. The Independent
Expert also wishes to thank the representatives of the United Nations funds and
programmes in Haiti and their teams for their support and for the information they
provided.
7. The Independent Expert wishes to thank as well the representatives of the
Organization of American States, through whose good offices he was able to meet with
members of the diplomatic corps to exchange views on the human rights situation in Haiti.
He also expresses his thanks to the ambassadors of the Group of Friends of Haiti with
whom he met in New York, hosted by the Permanent Mission of Uruguay to the United
Nations.
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8. Lastly, the Independent Expert extends his sincere thanks to the many
representatives of civil society organizations, political parties, journalists and members of
human rights NGOs in Port-au-Prince and the Sud Department with whom he met in Haiti
and in New York.
II. Five key aspects of the human rights situation in Haiti
9. The Independent Expert presented his first report to the Human Rights Council in
March 2014, following his first mission to Haiti from 23 September to 1 October 2013. In
that report, he pointed to the profound inequalities in Haitian society as the underlying
cause of the critical human rights situation in the country and drew attention to five key
aspects that required urgent action: (a) the extremely precarious economic situation of the
majority of the population; (b) inhumane conditions in prisons; (c) very weak government
institutions; (d) continued impunity for serious human rights violations committed in the
past and still awaiting resolution; and (e) other factors, including a succession of natural
disasters and other events that are complicating the task of guaranteeing human rights both
now and for the future.
10. Far from being new, these five aspects have been present for many years and are the
result of an accumulation of developments within the country as well as internationally.
They have been identified in the numerous substantive analyses conducted by the
Independent Expert’s predecessors, which he endorses and which show that these five key
aspects require urgent action inasmuch as they are at the root of continued serious
violations of human rights. Furthermore, from a structural viewpoint they undermine the
enjoyment of human rights by Haitian society as a whole and must be addressed and
resolved once and for all.
11. While the human rights situation in Haiti is complex, the Independent Expert does
not feel it is insurmountable. This assessment, which he expressed already in his first
report, is based on the Haitian population’s vast capacity for work, their perseverance and
desire for freedom, and the country’s rich natural-resource base, despite the many trials and
tribulations faced by this brave nation throughout history.
12. To tackle the country’s critical human rights situation, the Independent Expert
proposes a set of emergency measures, or “shock treatment”, to jump-start changes in the
most acute areas of these five aspects, namely: (a) eradicating illiteracy; (b) resolving, as a
matter of urgency, all cases of persons being held in pretrial detention; (c) ensuring
transparency and credibility in the holding of the elections; (d) guaranteeing redress for the
large-scale and systematic violations of human rights perpetrated in the past; and (e)
resettling in suitable, long-term housing all of the people displaced by the 2010 earthquake
and subsequent disasters who are still living in camps.
13. These measures are necessary for three reasons: first, to end the serious human
rights violations that would otherwise continue to be committed against thousands of
people; secondly, to send a clear message to the Haitian people and the international
community of the firm commitment to remedy the country’s human rights situation; and
lastly, to open the way for full implementation of the recommendations made by
international human rights mechanisms over the past 30 years. The Independent Expert
stands ready to assist in this undertaking.
14. The Independent Expert’s second mission to Haiti focused on observing
developments in these five key aspects, and particularly the five elements identified during
his first mission.
GE.15-02042 5
15. In line with the guidance provided by the Human Rights Council with regard to his
mandate (A/HRC/PRST/25/1, paras. 10–12), the Independent Expert has proposed that the
Government organize a workshop to identify the causes of inequality that are undermining
human rights in Haiti and ways to overcome them. The workshop would be intended for
key national and international stakeholders, Government representatives, members of the
Interministerial Committee for Human Rights, the Office of the Ombudsman and
representatives of civil society. The previous Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and
human rights would also take part, as would two other experts from intergovernmental
organizations active in the area of inequality. The Independent Expert hopes that, subject to
the Government’s agreement, the workshop can be held in early 2015 and that it will lead to
a strengthening of programmes already under way as well as new initiatives to tackle the
inequality that underlies the human rights crisis in Haiti.
16. Prior to the Independent Expert’s second mission, a number of international human
rights instruments were incorporated into Haitian legislation, including the two Optional
Protocols to the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The Government has also launched
the ratification process for a number of other instruments, such as the Convention against
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment; the International
Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their
Families; the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons; and the Second
Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, aiming at the
abolition of the death penalty. In addition, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has signed the
Inter-American Convention against Racism, Racial Discrimination and Related Forms of
Intolerance and the Inter-American Convention against All Forms of Discrimination and
Intolerance.
17. Haiti has submitted its midterm report under the universal periodic review and, after
nationwide consultation with civil society and final review by the Interministerial
Committee for Human Rights, has finalized its periodic report for submission to the
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women.
18. Haiti has also adopted legislation on paternity, maternity and filiation; an anti-
corruption law; a law against human trafficking; and an adoption reform law.
19. The Minister for Human Rights has prepared a draft plan of action to promote and
protect human rights in Haiti, and the draft is being discussed at national consultation
workshops. This is a unique opportunity to include in the plan of action the urgent priority
measures recommended for the five areas identified in the Independent Expert’s report.
20. On 8 October 2014, the Human Rights Committee met with a high-level delegation
of the Government of Haiti to review the country’s report on the implementation of the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which was ratified by Haiti in 1991.
This was the initial report from Haiti; it was to have been submitted in 1996.
21. The Committee welcomed a number of positive developments, in such areas as
decisions taken (e.g., the appointment of a Minister for Human Rights), national legislation
adopted (e.g., on the inclusion of disabled persons) and accession to or ratification of
various international human rights instruments (CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, paras. 3 and 4). At the
same time, the Committee noted four areas of special concern and requested the
Government to provide additional information within a year. Those areas were: (a) the slow
pace of the investigation into the Jean-Claude Duvalier case and the lack of reparation for
the victims of serious human rights violations imputed to him; (b) the continued
occurrence, which showed an increase in 2014, of firearm-related deaths caused by the
forces of law and order; (c) allegations of threats, harassment and intimidation against
human rights defenders, journalists and members of the opposition; and (d) the denial of the
6 GE.15-02042
right of Haitian citizens to vote and be elected in regular elections since 2011 (paras. 7, 10,
19 and 20).
22. The Committee also expressed concern about the following matters: incorporation of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights into national law and its
applicability in Haitian courts; the small budget assigned to the Office of the Ombudsman
and the shortage of information on the implementation of its recommendations; gender
equality; discrimination against lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people; the
withdrawal from the parliament’s agenda of the bill to ratify the Second Optional Protocol
to the Covenant, aiming at the abolition of the death penalty; the Criminal Code’s definition
of torture, which does not include psychological torture; violence against women, in
particular rape; human trafficking, especially of child domestic workers; the situation of
persons deprived of their liberty, especially those in prolonged pretrial detention; the
dilatoriness and passive stance of the judicial system; interference by the executive and
legislative branches in judicial decisions and the weak operating capacity of the High
Council of the Judiciary; and the ongoing forced evictions of persons living in refugee
camps (CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, paras. 5, 6, 8, 9 and 11–18).
23. The Committee’s observations and recommendations are highly pertinent. Many of
them are considered, by the Independent Expert and others, to warrant urgent priority
action, in particular those concerning prolonged pretrial detention, the holding of elections,
and the right to know the truth and to reparation and justice for victims of serious human
rights violations in the past. The urgency attached to these matters should be taken into
special account by the Haitian authorities.
24. The Government has expressed reservations about some of the Committee’s
observations and recommendations, namely with regard to the Office of the Ombudsman,
violence against women (rape), independence of the judiciary, protection of persons
displaced by the earthquake, alleged violations of the freedom of opinion, expression,
assembly and association, and participation in political affairs.1 While respecting the right
of Haiti to express its opinion on these matters, the Independent Expert invites the
Government to use the recommendations of the Committee and other relevant bodies to
strengthen safeguards and respect for human rights in its territory and to identify any
obstacles it encounters in this regard.
A. Economic, social and cultural rights and social inequality
25. As noted in the previous report, the full enjoyment of economic, social and cultural
rights in Haiti is severely limited by the country’s acute social inequalities.
(i) Priority action to eradicate illiteracy
26. To tackle this situation of inequality, the Independent Expert had recommended that
priority be given to ensuring the right to a quality education for all, without exception. The
country should therefore focus all available resources on promptly eradicating illiteracy,
which plagues more than half of the adult population. The literacy rate among Haitians
aged 15 and older stands at 48.7 per cent according to the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP).2
1 Response of the Haitian Government to the Committee’s concluding observations on the initial report. 2 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Human Development Report 2014, Sustaining
Human Progress: Reducing Vulnerabilities and Building Resilience, table 9 (“Education”); available at http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/hdr14-report-en-1.pdf (consulted on 26 January 2015). This
table refers to the year 2013 although this is not indicated in the heading.
GE.15-02042 7
27. Reducing inequality takes time and will require structural programmes that go
beyond just providing social assistance. In the meantime, steps must be taken urgently to
close the literacy gap, as knowing how to read and write is crucial to a life with dignity and
to the exercise of most rights, such as the right to education, which in turn gives access to
such other rights as the right to work, to food, to housing and to health.
28. According to UNDP figures,3 5,294,000 Haitians — out of a total population of
10,320,000 — are illiterate. The Office of the Secretary of State for Literacy has indicated
to the Independent Expert a figure on the order of 3.5 million illiterate Haitians. A two-year
campaign supported by Latin American and Caribbean cooperation assistance is currently
under way to teach 450,000 people how to read and write.
29. Without wishing to diminish that campaign’s importance, at the rate indicated it
would take at least 15 years (or 23 years, according to the UNDP figures) to eradicate
illiteracy, and that does not take into account future population growth. Urgent action to
address this problem should include a major boost in the human and financial resources
allocated to achieving this goal in order to cut significantly the time needed to teach all
Haitians how to read and write.
30. The authorities responsible for improving literacy in Haiti have shared with the
Independent Expert their concern that the literacy campaign focuses exclusively on Creole
and does not include French, the country’s other official language. As French is the
language used in all administrative, legal and other official matters, an additional effort is
needed to make sure that people who learn to read and write in Creole can also understand
written French, thus helping to guarantee the realization of Haitian citizens’ rights.
31. The Independent Expert encourages the Government of Haiti to step up its effort to
eradicate illiteracy as soon as possible in order to lay a solid foundation for the realization
of human rights in the country. He further invites the entire international community to
support this effort and to coordinate international cooperation with the Government in this
area as a matter of the highest importance.
(ii) Other aspects of economic, social and cultural rights that merit particular attention
32. In the Independent Expert’s previous report, it was stated that the majority of
Haitians lived in conditions of extreme poverty. A full 76 per cent of the population earned
less than US$2 per day, and 60 per cent earned less than US$1 per day. Unemployment
stood at 60 per cent. The Global Hunger Index (GHI) for Haiti was calculated at 23.2,
placing it in the category of “alarming”. More than 44 per cent of the population suffered
from malnutrition. Nearly 75 per cent of households were located in slums,4 which meant
that the right to housing is not a reality for the majority of Haitians (and that situation has
worsened since the earthquake in 2010). The right to health was similarly not guaranteed,
with 60 per cent of the population lacking access to basic health care, according to the
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF); that situation, too, had worsened since the
cholera epidemic. Lastly, the right to education was not enjoyed by all: UNICEF figures
showed that almost half of the country’s boys and girls did not attend school and only 2 per
cent of children of school age completed secondary education.5
33. The Government has deployed considerable efforts to tackle these situations of
extreme vulnerability, including through a national programme to combat hunger and
3 Ibid.
4 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and Haiti, “2013 MDG report: Haiti, a new look – executive summary” (Port-au-Prince, UNDP, 2014). Available at www.ht.undp.org/content/haiti/fr/ home/library/mdg/rapport-omd-2013---haiti-un-nouveau-regard/.
5 See A/HRC/25/71, paras. 11–17.
8 GE.15-02042
malnutrition and a national social assistance programme aimed at improving living
conditions.6
34. These programmes are part of the Strategic Development Plan for Haiti, which is
built around five priorities: (a) education and human and social development (access to
education, health, social services and culture, and better quality of habitat); (b) the
environment and land use; (c) the economy and employment; (d) energy; and (e) the rule of
law and democracy. The Government is aiming to halve the number of people suffering
from hunger by the end of 2016 and to eradicate hunger and malnutrition fully by 2025.
35. According to a report on the status of attainment of the Millennium Development
Goals in Haiti, co-authored by the National Observatory on Poverty and Social Exclusion
and UNDP, Haiti has made significant progress against most of the indicators and has
achieved all (or almost all) of its targets. In particular, underweight in children under 5 has
been halved, extreme poverty has been reduced to 24 per cent, infant mortality has fallen by
44 per cent since 1990, maternal mortality has dropped to 157 per 100,000, the HIV/AIDS
epidemic has been stabilized and 64.8 per cent of households now have access to an
improved drinking-water source. Haiti is still among the countries receiving the most
attention from the international community, with a leap in official development assistance
following the 2010 earthquake.7
36. The same report observes that many challenges remain, and the progress made in
some sectors is still too limited to have a major impact on development and poverty
reduction.8 Among those challenges, the report mentions inequality, low income levels (45
per cent of workers live on less than US$1.25 per day), unequal gender representation in the
parliament (women account for only 4 per cent) and the lack of measures to combat
deforestation and the loss of biodiversity.
37. With respect to inequality in particular, the human development index (HDI) for
Haiti rose from 0.456 in 2012 to 0.471 in 2013, leaving it in 168th place among the 187
countries and territories surveyed.9 When this index is adjusted for the inequalities affecting
the poorest of the poor, who are deprived of health, education and dignity, it drops to 0.285
(which is a slight improvement over 2012, when it stood at 0.273).10 According to UNDP,
the HDI can be viewed as an index of “potential” human development and the inequality-
adjusted human development index (IHDI) as an index of “actual” human development.
The loss in potential human development caused by inequality is the difference between the
HDI and the IHDI, and can be expressed as a percentage.11
6 Government of the Republic of Haiti, Les programmes d’inclusion sociale et de lutte contre la pauvreté extrême du Gouvernement Martelly-Lamothe, 2013 (?), Port-au-Prince. Available at
www.faes.gouv.ht/download/GTR_11714_PARP_programmes_2014-04-23.pdf.
7 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and Haiti, “2013 MDG report: Haiti, a new look – executive summary” (Port-au-Prince, UNDP, 2014). Available at www.ht.undp.org/content/haiti/fr/ home/library/mdg/rapport-omd-2013---haiti-un-nouveau-regard/.
8 Ibid.
9 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Human Development Report 2014, Sustaining
Human Progress: Reducing Vulnerabilities and Building Resilience, table 1 (“Human Development Index and its components”). Available at http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/hdr14-report-en-1.pdf (consulted on 26 January 2015). This table refers to the year 2013 although this is not indicated in the
heading.
10 Ibid., table 3 (“Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index”). Available at: http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/hdr14-report-en-1.pdf (consulted on 26 January 2015). This
table refers to the year 2013 although this is not indicated in the heading.
11 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), International human development indicators.
Haiti. Country profile: Human development indicators. 2013 report (Subtitle: Inequality. Based on
the “Inequality-adjusted Human Development Index” indicator in this document: Human
GE.15-02042 9
38. A further disparity appears in the gender inequality index, which reflects gender-
based inequalities in three areas: reproductive health, empowerment and economic activity.
In 2013, Haiti had a gender inequality index rating of 0.599, which was a modest
improvement over the 0.592 recorded in 2012. Even so, it still leaves the country in 132nd
place in 2013, as compared with 127th in 2012.12
39. The Independent Expert wishes to reiterate the hope he expressed in his first report
that the social assistance programmes and the 2014–2016 Poverty Reduction Action Plan
will be able to meet the basic needs of the majority of the population. It is also his hope that
they will help to identify the factors perpetuating the deep social inequalities besetting
Haitian society so that they can be neutralized as soon as possible through policies that
ensure decent living conditions for all.
B. Deprivation of liberty and detention conditions
(i) Priority action to address prolonged pretrial detention
40. A second area that requires urgent action is the practice of prolonged pretrial
detention. More than 70 per cent of prisoners in Haiti are deprived of their liberty for years
without appearing before a judge.13 For some of these individuals, the time spent in pretrial
detention is longer than the sentence that might be handed down if they were convicted.
This practice is clearly contrary to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
which stipulates in its article 9, paragraph 3, that anyone arrested or detained on a criminal
charge is to be brought promptly before a judge or other officer authorized by law to
exercise judicial power and shall be entitled to trial within a reasonable time or to release. It
is therefore crucial that steps be taken to ensure that persons held in prolonged pretrial
detention are either tried or released within a reasonable period of time. This perverse
judicial practice must be halted.
41. Urgent action must be taken at the national level so that cases can be brought to trial
or other solutions found for most of the 7,500 people who are being held in pretrial
detention in the country’s seriously overcrowded detention facilities, which currently house
over 10,500 prisoners.14
42. As indicated in the Independent Expert’s previous report, the authorities are aware
that this situation is not new and it is due in part to the shortage of investigating judges
available to hear the cases of detainees. Aside from their insufficient numbers, these judges
do not devote enough time to dealing with cases. According to the same sources, some
Development Report 2013. The Rise of the South: Human Progress in a Diverse World. Explanatory
note on 2013 HDR composite indices. Haiti. HDI values and rank changes in the 2013 Human
Development Report). See http://hdrstats.undp.org/fr/pays/profils/HTI.html. Owing to changes to the
UNDP web page, the document is no longer available. The Independent Expert guarantees the
accuracy of this citation.
12 United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), Human Development Report 2014, Sustaining
Human Progress: Reducing Vulnerabilities and Building Resilience, table 4 (“Gender Inequality Index”). Available at http://hdr.undp.org/sites/default/files/hdr14-report-en-1.pdf (consulted on 26 January 2015). This table refers to the year 2013 although this is not indicated in the heading.
13 According to conversations with the Chief Commissioner of the Prisons Administration, this figure
can reach or even exceed 80 per cent. At 31 October 2014, 72 per cent of the people in custody were
awaiting trial (79 per cent of them were minors and 81 per cent were women), according to the
MINUSTAH correctional unit. The International Centre for Prison Studies estimates that some 70.6
per cent of prisoners were in pretrial detention in August 2013 (www.prisonstudies.org/country/Haiti,
consulted on 26 January 2015).
14 As at 31 October 2014, according to the MINUSTAH correctional unit, out of 10,508 prisoners, 7,578
were in pretrial detention.
10 GE.15-02042
judges spend a disproportionate amount of time giving classes or looking after personal
affairs.
43. Various steps could be taken to keep this problem from getting worse. The
Independent Expert has been informed that, on the instruction of the prosecutor’s office, a
committee has been set up to monitor the situation of detentions in Les Cayes (Sud
Department). The committee sits once a week to review the cases of persons being held in
pretrial detention and orders releases as applicable.
44. Other measures relating to the administration of justice should be implemented at
the national level. Currently, investigating judges cannot be reappointed immediately upon
expiry of their mandate because they have to wait months to be issued a certificate of good
conduct so that the Ministry of Justice can reappoint them. This practice paralyses the
administration of justice as over 100 investigating judges are presently unable to investigate
or preside in cases of persons being held in prolonged pretrial detention.
45. This procedure could be organized differently such that certification would be ready
before expiry of their mandate. That way, judges could be reappointed without any
interruption in their work.
46. The Independent Expert wishes to repeat the recommendation made to the
authorities in his previous report that a small group of judges, assisted by law students in
their final year of studies, should be appointed for a set period of time to examine the cases
of prolonged pretrial detention and take a decision on them. Some high-ranking officials are
aware of the situation and are working on possible solutions. The Minister for Human
Rights informed the Independent Expert that she had asked the Minister of Justice to reopen
before the end of October 2013 the office responsible for monitoring prolonged pretrial
detention. That request should be made again.
47. As indicated above, the urgent need to address the matter of pretrial detention had
also been identified by the Human Rights Committee. In its concluding observations on the
initial report of Haiti, the Committee recommended that the State party should ensure that
all persons who are arrested and detained enjoy the effective right to habeas corpus. It
should also encourage courts to promote alternatives to deprivation of liberty for indicted
persons, taking into account the United Nations Standard Minimum Rules for Non-
custodial Measures. It should take urgent steps to address the situation of persons who have
been in pretrial detention for many years in a way which will directly help reduce prison
overcrowding. The State party should also take appropriate action to ensure the separation
of remand and convicted prisoners and of adults and minors (CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, para. 15).
(ii) Other aspects concerning detention conditions
48. The country’s places of detention have a combined capacity to hold only 4,000
prisoners.15 They are extremely overcrowded16 and do not offer decent living conditions.17
This constitutes inhumane, cruel and degrading treatment.
15 Based on information provided by the Prisons Administration. According to the International Centre
for Prison Studies, the capacity stood at 5,958 as at 1 August 2014. Available from
www.prisonstudies.org/country/Haiti (consulted on 26 January 2015).
16 According to the MINUSTAH correctional unit, there were 10,508 prisoners as at 31 October 2014.
According to the Prisons Administration, 10,161 were registered as at 29 June 2014.
17 The Prisons Administration in Haiti has set itself a target of providing each detainee with 2.5 square
metres, which would mean that the official capacity of the country’s prisons is 2,383 persons. According to the United Nations, the target should be 4.5 square metres, which would give an official
capacity of 1,324 persons.
GE.15-02042 11
49. The occupancy rate is 794 per cent of maximum capacity in the five most
overcrowded prisons; that works out to 0.57 square metres per person (the standard is 4.5
square metres per prisoner). Fort-Liberté and Port-au-Prince have even higher rates, with
almost three persons per square metre.18
50. The prison in Les Cayes, in the Sud Department, has capacity for 100 persons. It
currently holds 610 prisoners (474 “on remand” and 136 convicted, of whom 132 were
men, 3 were women and 1 was a minor), according to information provided to the
Independent Expert by the former government commissioner on 19 July 2014.19
51. In the municipality of Aquin, also in the Sud Department, the Independent Expert
visited the police station, which is used as a place of detention. The prisoners were divided
among five cells: in one, there were three women; in another, there were two minors (who
should not have been in custody); and in the remaining three, there were more adults than
the space was designed to hold.
52. The judicial authorities in Aquin asked the Independent Expert to report that a
detention facility is needed in that municipality and also in Les Côteaux, because convicted
prisoners from these two places are confined in the prison in Les Cayes.
53. Sanitation conditions in places of detention are inadequate. The Independent Expert
observed a lack of privacy and appropriate sanitation at the Aquin police station, including
the absence of sewage drains. Similar situations had been found in the Port-au-Prince and
Jacmel prisons during the previous mission.
54. As stated in the previous report, the national prison in Port-au-Prince, which is
located in the town centre, will be demolished to make way for urban redevelopment. It is
not yet known where the prisoners will be transferred, and this has generated concern.
55. Detention centres do not offer conditions that allow prisoners to work or study. The
Prisons Administration is responsible for providing medical services and food but often
does not have the funds or service agreements in place to ensure the supply of these
services.
56. The Independent Expert is compelled to repeat the call made to the Haitian
authorities in his previous report concerning the need to improve significantly the
conditions in detention centres and, in particular, to improve health services, ensure
availability of food and health care, provide settings that allow prisoners to work or study
and add a more humane dimension to living quarters and recreational areas.
C. Weak rule of law
57. Because of the weak rule of law, the people of Haiti face uncertainty in many
spheres of their basic rights, including property registration, access to justice and
government services, and the holding of elections.
(i) Priority action to ensure the right to participation in public life
58. The right of citizens to vote and to be elected to office has been flouted all too often
in Haiti. As unclear electoral rules have repercussions that go to the very core of the
country’s institutional structure, a solution is needed urgently. In his previous report, the
Independent Expert noted that parliamentary and municipal elections should have been held
18 According to data provided by the MINUSTAH Human Rights Section on 31 October 2014.
19 As at 31 October 2014, there were 683 prisoners (548 “on remand” and 135 convicted), according to the MINUSTAH Human Rights Section.
12 GE.15-02042
in 2012 but, as of December 2013, no date had yet been set. Similar observations had been
made by previous Independent Experts. In 2006, for instance, Louis Joinet stated that, at the
time of completion of his report, he was unaware, owing to repeated deferrals, of the date
and under what political circumstances the elections would be held (E/CN.4/2006/115,
para. 79).
59. During his July 2014 mission, the Independent Expert saw progress in the fact that
the Government had set a date of 26 October 2014 for the first round of parliamentary and
local elections and 28 December for the second round. These elections had been postponed
several times since 2011. A number of concerns, however, led him to wonder if the
elections could in fact take place on those dates. For instance, the parliament would need to
enact electoral legislation before the end of the legislature on the second Monday of
September 2014; the make-up of the provisional Electoral Board was being contested by six
opposition parties; and the logistical preparations for the elections would take 120 days as
from the promulgation of the electoral act.
60. Those doubts were confirmed when 26 October came and went and no elections
were held. The Government announced that the Senate had not taken a decision on the draft
electoral legislation approved by the Chamber of Deputies and that the elections would be
held in 2015 pursuant to regulations that would be issued in a presidential decree.
61. Many observers had forecast that the Senate would not be able to adopt an electoral
law given the body’s calendar and, in particular, because only two thirds of the Senate seats
were occupied; the terms of the remaining third had expired and not been renewed in the
absence of legislative elections. With the terms of another third of the senators and a
number of members of the Chamber of Deputies coming to an end in January 2015, that
means there will no longer be a parliament at that point and the Government would take the
place of the legislature by way of presidential decrees until such time as elections are held.
Such a scenario presents a grave danger for democratic rule.
62. Political confrontation has always been a highly sensitive issue in Haiti and it
continues to be so. It is thus all the more urgent that the competing political forces reach
agreement on a set of ground rules so that elections can be called.
63. The urgency of addressing this situation, as expressed by the Independent Expert, is
echoed by the Human Rights Committee, which has recommended to the State party that it
take, as a matter of highest priority, the necessary measures to organize the legislative and
municipal elections that were to have been held in 2011 so as to guarantee effective access
to citizens’ rights under article 25 of the Covenant (CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, para. 20).
64. The consultative commission appointed by the President to find a solution to the
election impasse recommended on 8 December 2014 that a new government be formed
with participation of the opposition parties. Évans Paul was subsequently named Prime
Minister on 25 December 2014. The commission also recommended that the President of
the High Council of the Judiciary and the members of the provisional Electoral Council all
step down; that was expected to happen in early January 2015.
(ii) Other elements of the rule of law that need to be guaranteed
65. In his previous report, the Independent Expert identified a number of other areas
where the weak rule of law was evident and where a concerted effort was required to
strengthen it. These areas include the need for a reliable property registration system; the
need for judges to be allowed adequate time to handle matters in their remit; deteriorating
respect for the right to life, which casts doubts on the executive branch’s ability to protect
this right and draws attention to the judiciary’s passive stance vis-à-vis these violent crimes
(including those imputed to State actors, sexual violence and attacks against human rights
GE.15-02042 13
defenders); and the continued exploitation of children sent to live with and work for host
families.
66. During the July 2014 mission, the Independent Expert noticed a lack of public
confidence in the administration of justice. It was especially striking among people whose
land had been expropriated to expand the airport at Les Cayes; some 200 families cited
various problems linked mainly to indemnification for their land. The specific complaints
included: (a) the indemnification process was slow, not transparent and discriminatory; (b)
for the small number of families having received compensation, the value was limited to the
land expropriated and did not cover other property, and the amounts were significantly
below the market value; (c) no compensation had yet been paid for expropriated dwellings;
and (d) families receiving compensation for their land were notified by the authorities to
move immediately without yet having received any indemnity for their homes. The right to
own property is enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (art. 17) and the
1987 Constitution of Haiti (chapter II, section H); in cases of public interest or eminent
domain, laws and procedures are in place that govern when and how a person’s right to own
property may be denied. The right to housing is also a basic right and it must be respected if
the home of some of these families is expropriated without indemnity. The right to housing
is set forth in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (arts. 22 and 25), the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (art. 11) and the 1987 Constitution of
Haiti (art. 22). Subsequent to the Independent Expert’s mission, a high-level delegation
consisting of the Secretary of State for Public Works, two advisers to the Prime Minister,
the Sud Departmental Finance Director and the Director of the Antoine Simon airport in
Les Cayes met with those landowners and pledged to follow up so that the indemnification
process could move forward to everyone’s benefit and construction work could begin
without further delay.
67. The Independent Expert continued to receive reports of acts of intimidation and
threats against the two co-directors of the non-governmental organization KOFAVIV,
which works to prevent sexual violence. The children of Malya Villard-Appolon and of
Eramithe Delva were the target of an attempted kidnapping in 2013. In February 2014, a
woman was arrested on suspicion of having taken part in that attempt; and in May 2014, a
man was arrested on charges of having threatened Mrs. Villard-Appolon with a firearm in
October 2013. A member of KOFAVIV who had identified the female suspect to the police
reportedly received death threats and was forced to move away from her neighbourhood.
Since March 2014, Mrs. Villard-Appolon and Mrs. Delva have been receiving threatening
telephone calls and, on 28 April 2014, several shots were fired at the organization’s offices.
The two co-directors of KOFAVIV have had to leave the country out of fear for their lives.
The organization’s lawyer, Julio Hyacinthe, and its gender and communications officer,
Georjhy Desire, have also reportedly received telephone threats, according to complaints
lodged with the Judiciary Police on 22 May and 11 June 2014.
68. Building a strong rule of law is a challenge but it is also an urgent need in Haiti. The
Independent Expert wishes to reiterate the suggestion made at the time of his first mission
that a workshop should be organized, led by an expert in the rule of law, to strengthen the
work of civil society and the Government, in particular the Interministerial Committee for
Human Rights, under the guidance of the Minister for Human Rights.
D. Past human rights violations and impunity
69. A fourth critical area is the matter of impunity, which is of special concern in Haiti
and relates to all types of crime.
14 GE.15-02042
(i) Priority action to provide redress for human rights violations committed in the past
70. Impunity is especially blatant in connection with the large-scale, systematic and
serious violations of human rights committed in the past. Urgent action must be taken to
give effect to the victims’ right to know the truth, right to justice and right to reparation.
71. On 20 February 2014, a three-judge appellate court sitting in Port-au-Prince
overturned a lower-court ruling that had not allowed complaints brought by individuals
whose human rights had been violated by the former dictator, Jean-Claude Duvalier. In
January 2012, an investigating judge had ordered Mr. Duvalier to appear before a
magistrate’s court on charges only of misappropriation of public funds; all the other charges
were rejected, including those for crimes against humanity, murder and torture. The
appellate court reproached the investigating judge for not having interviewed all the
complainants and it affirmed that crimes against humanity form an integral part of the
country’s legal system and are imprescriptible. The appellate court accordingly ordered a
new investigation that was to identify all the parties involved, including all those complicit
in the crimes imputed to Mr. Duvalier.
72. Although this was a landmark decision in that it ordered a follow-up investigation to
remedy a denial of justice that had occurred at a lower-court level, the actual impact has
been very limited. The new investigation was launched in mid-May 2014, but Jean-Claude
Duvalier died six months later, on 4 October, without any formal charges being filed
against him. The investigating judge had not been able to interview more than one
complainant a week inasmuch as he had not been relieved of any of his other caseload and
he had not been assigned an investigative team and clerk in order to be able to devote
himself entirely to the Duvalier case.
73. As these crimes against humanity were perpetrated over a period of 15 years, the
justice system should have been aware of them since the end of the regime some 28 years
ago. With over two dozen complainants and various other parties and witnesses to be
interviewed, the Duvalier case deserved the investigating judge’s undivided attention, and
he should have been afforded a guarantee of independence, heightened security and
additional human, physical and financial resources in order to properly conduct such a
high-profile case.
74. The Independent Expert had proposed, in his first report, that a national commission
be set up to oversee reparation for the victims of the serious human rights violations
committed under the regime of the Duvaliers (father and son) and the military governments
and the violations perpetrated by the groups supporting or opposing President Jean-
Bertrand Aristide. The commission should have been established in 1995, pursuant to the
recommendation of the National Truth and Justice Commission that had been appointed for
the victims of the 1991 coup.
75. The death of Jean-Claude Duvalier makes setting up this commission all the more
necessary so that reparation can be decided and granted for the victims of those large-scale,
systematic human rights violations, bearing in mind that it is no longer possible for the
courts to declare criminal responsibility for the Duvaliers for the violations that occurred
between 1957 and 1986. The commission’s remit could include as well violations that were
perpetrated after Duvalier’s fall and thus provide input for educational activities aimed at
re-establishing the right to memory. The creation of this commission would in no way
impede the launching of a judicial investigation into events involving any living person
responsible for serious crimes committed during the presidency of Jean-Claude Duvalier
(or, as applicable, of his predecessor and father, François Duvalier).
76. During its review of the initial report submitted by Haiti in 2014, the Human Rights
Committee was of the same view as the Independent Expert as to the urgency of taking
action on human rights violations committed in the past. In support of the effort to combat
GE.15-02042 15
the impunity undermining the rule of law in Haiti, the Committee recommended that the
State party continue the investigation into the Duvalier case with a view to bringing to
justice all those responsible for serious violations committed during that regime and
granting victims fair and just redress. The Committee also recommended that the State
party implement the recommendations of the National Truth and Justice Commission
pertaining to the serious violations committed between 1991 and 1994, and it reminded the
State party of its obligation to launch criminal proceedings in all cases of serious human
rights violations (CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, para. 7).
(ii) The need for a stronger and more credible judicial system to combat impunity
77. The Committee further drew attention to the need to strengthen the overall capacity
and credibility of the judicial system in order to combat impunity. This means guaranteeing
the independence and effective operation of the High Council of the Judiciary
(CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, paras. 16 and 17). The Independent Expert wishes to reiterate the
appeal made to the Haitian authorities in this regard.
E. Other factors having an impact on human rights, including
catastrophes and other humanitarian crises
78. The fifth area identified in the Independent Expert’s first report relates to serious
violations of human rights stemming from other factors, such as forced displacement in the
wake of natural catastrophe, statelessness and the cholera epidemic.
(i) Priority action for displaced persons
79. In December 2013, some 140,000 persons were still living in refugee camps. By
July 2014, at the time of the Independent Expert’s second mission, that number had
dropped to 104,000 and, by October 2014, it had dropped further to 85,400, according to
data provided by the Government to the Committee.20 Progress in this direction should not
be allowed to falter. The pace should in fact be stepped up in order to promptly find decent,
long-term housing solutions for the many families who, five years after the earthquake,
continue to live in harsh conditions in these camps.
80. The people in these camps live in constant threat of being forcibly evicted by the
property owners, which represents a further menace to their already flouted rights. The
Independent Expert echoes the Committee’s call to the State party to ensure that no one is
evicted from a camp unless some other solution has been found for the person and his or
her family and ensure that all those displaced by the earthquake receive a long-term
solution for their housing situation (CCPR/C/HTI/CO/1, para. 18).
(ii) Other factors
81. During his visit to Haiti in July 2014, the Secretary-General visited the central plain
region, which is where the first cases of cholera had been recorded. With the Prime
Minister, he launched a campaign to improve access to water and sanitation in rural areas as
part of the effort to halt the cholera epidemic. The Independent Expert hopes that that visit
will spur implementation of the recommendation made in his previous report, specifically,
that a reparations commission be set up for the victims of the epidemic in order to catalogue
20 Based, in turn, on the International Organization of Migration/Camp Coordination and Camp
Management (CCCM) Cluster report available at www.eshelter-cccmhaiti.info/2013/pages/172-dtm-
report-october-2014.php.
16 GE.15-02042
the damage suffered and corresponding compensation, identify those responsible and halt
the epidemic, among other actions.
82. With regard to the issue of statelessness, the Independent Expert is following closely
the progress of talks between the Haitian and Dominican authorities. He had hoped to meet
with the Minister for Haitians Living Abroad, but that was not possible during the mission
in July 2014.
83. In October 2014, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights made public its
judgement of 28 August 2014 in which it found Judgement TC/0168/13 of the
Constitutional Court of the Dominican Republic to be in violation of the American
Convention on Human Rights. According to Judgement TC/0168/13, which had been
issued one year earlier, all persons born in the Dominican Republic after 1929 of parents
who were foreign nationals were deemed illegal aliens and did not have the right to
Dominican nationality. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights rejected the Dominican
court’s decision, thus confirming the position taken by several other international bodies,
including the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, UNICEF, the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights and the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, who had declared that this decision was not in
conformity with international obligations (A/HRC/25/71, para. 79).
84. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights concluded that Judgement TC/0168/13,
given its general scope, did not comply with the obligation assumed under article 2 of the
American Convention on Human Rights to adopt national legislation with regard to the
rights — recognized in the Convention — to juridical personality (art. 3), to a name (art.
18) and to nationality (art. 20) and, in connection with those rights, the right to identity and
the right to equal protection under the law (art. 24); it also failed to respect the obligations
set forth in article 1, paragraph 1, of the Convention.21 The Dominican Republic was thus
obligated to take action within a reasonable time frame to ensure that the aforementioned
acts cease to have any legal force or effect.22
85. The Inter-American Court accordingly ordered the Dominican Government to take
all necessary steps, within a reasonable time frame, so that Judgement TC/0168/13 and the
provisions of articles 6, 8 and 11 of Act No. 169-14 would cease to have legal force and
effect, pursuant to paragraph 468 of the judgement.23
86. This finding of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights should have provided the
necessary basis for action by the Haitian Government vis-à-vis the Dominican authorities to
ensure the protection of the rights of persons of Haitian origin living in the Dominican
Republic. Regrettably, the Constitutional Tribunal of the Dominican Republic issued an
opinion stating its disagreement with the decision of the Inter-American Court and
declaring, on 4 November 2014, the unconstitutionality of the instrument acknowledging
the competence of the Inter-American Court that had been signed by the President of the
Dominican Republic on 19 February 1999.24 This could mean an eventual repudiation by
that country of the jurisdiction of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the
human rights protection system built around the American Convention on Human Rights.
21 Inter-American Court of Human Rights. Case of Expelled Dominicans and Haitians v. Dominican
Republic, judgement of 28 August 2014 (Preliminary objections, merits, reparations and costs), Series
C 282, para. 325. Available (in Spanish only) at http://corteidh.or.cr/docs/casos/articulos/seriec_282
_esp.pdf (consulted 26 January 2015).
22 Ibid., para. 468.
23 Ibid., para. 512, point 18 of the judgement.
24 Dominican Republic, Constitutional Tribunal, Judgement TC/0256/14, 4 November 2014. Available
(in Spanish only) at www.tribunalconstitucional.gob.do/sites/default/files/documentos/Sentencia%20
TC%200256-14%20C.pdf (consulted 26 January 2015).
GE.15-02042 17
The Independent Expert appeals to the international community to deploy all necessary
efforts to ensure that the Dominican Republic continues to honour its obligations under the
American Convention on Human Rights.25
III. Conclusions and recommendations
87. The Independent Expert reaffirms the conclusions contained in his first report,
in particular his perception and belief that the human rights situation in Haiti is
extremely grave but can be surmounted if five basic conditions are met: strong
political will on the part of the Government and the international community, active
involvement by civil society, consensus on the priority problems to be addressed,
focused coordination of work and perseverance in efforts to attain the stated goals.
88. The Independent Expert reiterates the numerous recommendations made
concerning Haiti over the past three decades by human rights experts and bodies of
the United Nations and the inter-American system. He has selected from among their
analyses and recommendations five key areas that should be given priority and be the
focus of future efforts.
89. The five areas are closely interlinked among themselves and with the deep
inequalities present in Haitian society. They relate to the fragile situation of the
economic, social and cultural rights of the vast majority of the population; inhumane
conditions in prisons, especially for persons being held in prolonged pretrial
detention; the absence of legal guarantees in many spheres of life owing to the very
weak rule of law; the blatant impunity of those who committed human rights
violations in the past; and the harsh conditions endured by the many victims of
natural catastrophes and other humanitarian crises, such as the earthquake of
January 2010, the cholera epidemic that broke out in October 2010 and the prospect
of statelessness.
90. The critical situation of human rights in Haiti can obviously not be solved
overnight, but the five areas mentioned above must be addressed promptly inasmuch
as they are a source of ongoing and serious violations. This can be achieved through
the follow actions:
(a) The State should set a reasonably short time frame for eradicating
illiteracy, which afflicts roughly one half of the adult population. Although reducing
inequality takes time, in particular when structural programmes that go beyond mere
social assistance are involved, literacy is a crucial necessity for living with dignity and
for exercising most rights, in particular the right to education, which in turn gives
access to such other rights as the right to work, to food, to housing and to health;
(b) Reducing prison overcrowding, ensuring proper sanitation in prisons,
providing food to inmates and, especially, processing the cases of and defining the
legal status of persons being held in prolonged pretrial detention should all be seen to
promptly, on the basis of studies already conducted by the Prisons Administration;
(c) Strengthening the rule of law by consolidating institutions is a complex
undertaking and requires time, but it is of the utmost urgency to clearly establish and
guarantee the right of Haitians to vote and to be elected. In this regard, it is
encouraging to see that in December 2014 the President welcomed the
25 In this regard, see the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights press release, “IACHR Condemns Judgment of the Constitutional Court of the Dominican Republic”, 6 November 2014. Available at www.oas.org/en/iachr/media_center/PReleases/2014/130.asp.
18 GE.15-02042
recommendations made by a consultative commission that he had set up to resolve the
elections impasse. That led to the appointment of a new Prime Minister on 25
December, as a first step towards forming a government that would include
opposition parties. As of this writing, other urgent measures recommended by the
commission were in the process of being implemented;
(d) With the death of the former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier, it is all the
more important to set up the national commission for reparation that was to have
been established in 1995, as recommended by the National Truth and Justice
Commission created for victims of the 1991 coup. This is important as well for the
victims of other large-scale, systematic and serious human rights violations committed
in the past, whether under the regime of the Duvaliers and the military governments
or in connection with acts of violence perpetrated by groups supporting or opposing
President Aristide. Aside from overseeing material reparations and judicial
declarations of responsibility, the commission could contribute in the medium and
long term to defining educational activities aimed at re-establishing the right to
memory, which would help to improve the human rights situation in the country
immeasurably;
(e) Resources must be increased considerably to guarantee the right to
housing and decent living conditions for the displaced persons still living in camps set
up after the January 2010 earthquake;
(f) A reparations commission should be established for the victims of the
cholera epidemic in order to catalogue the damage suffered and the corresponding
indemnification, identify those responsible and halt the epidemic, among other
actions;
(g) The issue of statelessness covers a vast area and is dealt with by the
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees as the competent
specialized body of the United Nations. The Human Rights Council should call upon
the authorities of the Dominican Republic to ensure the rights of residents of Haitian
origin as ordered by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in its judgement of
28 August 2014;
(h) Special attention needs to be accorded to the rights of women in all the
above-mentioned areas. The Independent Expert supports the recruiting of an expert
to assist with preparing the report of Haiti to the Committee for the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women.
91. The Independent Expert encourages the Government to give due consideration
to these recommendations, and to those transmitted by the Human Rights Committee,
in preparing the action plan to promote and protect human rights in Haiti that is
currently being prepared by the Interministerial Committee on Human Rights.
92. The urgent actions recommended in the preceding paragraphs are necessary
for three reasons: first, to put an end to serious human rights violations that will
otherwise continue to be perpetrated against thousands of individuals; second, to
convey to the people of Haiti and the international community the commitment to
providing redress for human rights violations; and third, to open the way for
implementation of other human rights recommendations made over the past three
decades. The Independent Expert reaffirms his readiness to assist in this effort.