“Baby Doc” offers regret, no apology, to Haitians

PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – Former Haitian dictator  Jean-Claude Duvalier, in his first public statement since his  surprise return from exile, offered his sympathies yesterday to  those who suffered abuses under his rule.

Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude “ Baby Doc” Duvalier attends a news conference in Port-au-Prince. Photograph by: St-Felix Evens, Reuters

But Duvalier, 59, who faces charges of corruption and  crimes against humanity filed since his unexpected reappearance  in his earthquake-ravaged Caribbean homeland on Sunday, stopped  short of making a clear apology for the killings and torture  that occurred during his 15 years in power from 1971-1986.

“I take this opportunity to express once again my profound  sadness for those of my fellow citizens who genuinely see  themselves as victims under my government,” Duvalier said.

Clad in a dark blue suit and seeming frail, his remarks  came in a prepared statement that he read to journalists at a  private home on a mountainside overlooking the capital  Port-au-Prince, in an enclave of Haiti’s tiny but powerful  elite.

The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere has been  awash with speculation about the reasons for Duvalier’s return  since he stepped off an Air France flight on Sunday.

It has added to political uncertainty fueled by a  protracted electoral impasse in Haiti, as it also grapples with  a national cholera epidemic and slow-going efforts to recover  from a catastrophic earthquake a year ago.

“SHOW SOLIDARITY”

Echoing brief comments made on his arrival, Duvalier said  he had returned “to show solidarity in this extremely difficult  period of the nation’s life.”

Apart from a vague reference to helping “to rebuild the  country,” he failed to detail any specific causes or endeavors,  however.

Although it was billed as a long-awaited first news  conference, Duvalier took no questions from reporters at  Friday’s gathering. A crowd of about 100 supporters on hand for  the event sang “Duvalier, the country is yours, do whatever you  want,” to a song punctuated by beating drums.

Human rights groups accuse Duvalier of plundering state  coffers and of continuing the reign of terror of his father,  Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier, who died in 1971.

In addition to his remarks about “victims” of the bygone  era when he ruled Haiti like his personal fiefdom, Duvalier  voiced sympathy for many supporters who he said had been  targeted by lynch mobs when he fled in the face of a popular  uprising in 1986.

“Thousands were assassinated cowardly, burned, grilled,  burned with tires,’ he said. He did not elaborate, but urged an  end to political bloodletting in a land that has suffered an  unenviable list of woes since a slave revolt threw off French  rule more than 200 years ago.

“When you make sure that the bell of national  reconciliation resounds in all hearts … and in each district,  neighborhood and home, then we will rapidly reach the day where  all of Haiti’s children, men and women, in the country and in  the diaspora, will be able to march hand in hand without  exclusion and to participate together in the rebirth of Haiti,”  Duvalier said.