On Sunday, July 5th, an employee of the
Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), Wikenson Bazile, was shot and killed in
the busy Delmas 32 neighborhood. Bazile worked in the office of Jaccéus Joseph,
the representative of human rights groups to the CEP. The spokesperson for the
CEP, Frantz Bernadin told Alterpresse on July 6th, “We have no interpretation of what
happened, we leave the judiciary and the police to do their job and we wait for
the results of the investigation [in order] to have more information.”
The electoral advisor, Joseph, however was quick to point
out that it was likely an assassination attempt. Joseph explained that there
was no indication that Bazile had been robbed, and also pointed to threats he
has received. “Taking into account the threats which I am the object of and
assassination attempts during my presence in the CEP, I do not take this action
lightly,” Joseph told
the Nouvelliste, while adding
that he would leave it to the police to do its job. Jaccéus Joseph stated that
he believed the threats were a result of the neutrality shown by the electoral
council.
In a radio interview last week, another CEP member, Nehemy
Joseph, alleged
that a group of disqualified candidates paid $5,000 USD to “a few assassins
whose mission was to kill [CEP member] Jaccéus Joseph, myself and other
councilors.” The allegation was quickly denied by Jonas Coffy, a representative
of the group, who alleged that Nehemy Joseph had solicited bribes from excluded
candidates for their reinstatement.
In May, Professor Emmanual Gouthier, Vice Director at the
Ministry of the Interior was shot and killed. Gouthier was tasked with
investigating potential candidates. There has been no further information
released on the status of the investigation.
Today, the U.N. Special Representative to the Secretary
General and head of the U.N. troop contingent in Haiti, Sandra Honoré, condemned the killing
of Bazile and called on the police to conduct a prompt investigation into the
circumstances. Honoré reiterated a call for all Haitians to reject violence,
especially during the electoral period.
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