Pubdate: Mon, 16 Oct 2000 Source: Miami Herald (FL) Copyright: 2000 The Miami Herald Contact: One Herald Plaza, Miami FL 33132-1693 Fax: (305) 376-8950 Website: http://www.herald.com/ Forum: http://krwebx.infi.net/webxmulti/cgi-bin/WebX?mherald Author: Yves Colon DRUG TRAFFICKERS WREAK HAVOC IN HAITI Society Blames Cocaine Trade For Its Downfall PORT-AU-PRINCE -- Bernard Louisdhon sits on a dirty mattress that takes up half the airless room. He rubs his eyes and looks at the light that filters through the open door. Louisdhon is waking up from the morning's crack binge. He's a thief who feeds a growing appetite for the drug with stolen goods. Recently, he fell from a third-story balcony with a stolen laptop in his hands, and casually shows the bruises on his side. For the theft, he spent a month locked up. "You can get as much drugs as you want here," Louisdhon said. ". . . The police are dealing. Everybody is a dealer here." While Colombian traffickers use Haiti as a trampoline to ship some of their cocaine to American streets, they're wreaking havoc in Haiti, too. Break-ins and armed robberies, rare a few years ago, are now common, and Haitians believe that to be a product of the drug trade. More than 100 police officers suspected of working for drug dealers have been kicked off the force, raising Haitians' mistrust of the young department. Many Haitians say the cocaine trade has not only worsened the crime problem, but has also contributed to the breakdown of Haitian society. They point to mansions sprouting in the mountains above this city and gas stations under construction as evidence of illicit gains or money laundering. Many Users Researchers found that users, many of them street children addicted to glue, paint thinner or gasoline, are getting younger. Some graduate to cocaine, financing their habit by washing cars or stealing. Older ones become dealers. "Haitian society is in complete denial," said Gaetane Auguste, executive director of Haiti's only treatment center. But Haitians should not expect any help from the United States, the destination for most of the cocaine. The General Accounting Office on Sept. 19 said $70 million to build a new Haitian police force and $27 million to strengthen the legal system had largely been wasted. The police were ineffective, corrupt and politicized, the GAO said, and the legal system was hampered by corruption, government control, a large case backlog, an outdated legal code, poor facilities and by the fact that it conducted business in French, instead of Creole, the country's majority language. Coastline The cocaine to make Louisdhon's crack enters Haiti through hundreds of miles of unguarded coastline, mostly on the Caribbean Sea. The White House Office on National Drug Control Policy estimates that more than 65 metric tons of cocaine gets dropped here from go-fast boats or airplanes before it is repackaged and shipped to the United States through couriers or on freighters that dock on the Miami River. "The fight against the criminal element in Haiti goes through the drug trade," said Camille Leblanc, Haiti's minister of justice. Drug Haven For Louisdhon and his roommate, Richard Miguel, this city is a drug haven. One of the most active drug bazaars is around the block from their second-floor cinder-block room, only yards from the presidential palace and the police department. All they need to satisfy their craving is a little bit of money. A "rock" of crack that would sell for $10 in the United States goes for $1 here. "The guys downstairs is a dealer," said Louisdhon, eyes vacant, pointing with his chin to a room below the steps. "That's why he keeps me here. He makes money from us." Justice Minister Leblanc advocates greater U.S. cooperation, saying that Haiti cannot slow the flood of drugs with 25 agents. More often than they would like to admit, they have come across officers such as Patrick Dormevil, who tried to bribe an agent at the airport to let through 891 pounds of cocaine in March 1998. Hundreds of other officers have been investigated, fired and imprisoned. "We do our share, our part in trying to identify them, kick them off the force and whenever possible arrest them," said Pierre Denize, Haiti's police chief. Denize said he plans to double to 50 the number of anti-drug agents. Leblanc holds 50 Colombian traffickers in jail, some locked up for as long as three years without a trial. For the first time, Haiti expelled a low-level trafficker last month wanted by U.S. prosecutors. Leblanc said he is setting up a special jury for drug cases, along with a translator from the Colombian consulate. "Haiti is ready to set up the mechanism to bring to trial all drug traffickers," Leblanc said, "if the U.S. gives us help. Drug dealers used to drop money to get cases ruled in their favor. They can't do that anymore. I've exposed judges. We're too small to respond to this crisis on our own." High Quality The cocaine that stays in Haiti, reputed to be of high quality, is only a small part of the trade. Young Haitians who have lived overseas have only recently begun to experiment with the drugs. Marijuana and cocaine were rare in Haiti during the 30-year Duvalier family dictatorship, when the state security apparatus eyed suspiciously any "rebel" trends. During that time, major traffickers such as Colombian Carlos Lehder used other available routes, primarily the Bahamas, as transshipment points. As Haiti disbanded its army and the paramilitary Tonton Macoutes, traffickers with mountains of cash found it easy to make new friends there. Estimates from the Association Against Alcohol and other Chemical Dependencies put the number of users at 5 percent of the eight million Haitians. Finding Help Joannie is typical of those who find help there. She lived in New York City for more than 25 years, where she tried marijuana once, and settled in Haiti about a decade ago to be closer to her older parents. She tried crack with a boyfriend, then was buying about $50 worth a day, she said. In six months, she spent her savings of $30,000. "I blew it, just blew it," said Joannie, who asked that her real name not be used. She hasn't touched the drug in years, she said, although it would be easy to get it. There is a market in front of her home in the suburb of Petionville. "There is a lot of use out there, a lot," she said, speaking of drug users. "I see them." Crack Pipe Miguel might be the most carefree of them all. He shrugs off the stain from having a picture of him smoking a crack pipe published on the Internet. He works as a lookout for Louisdhon, spends time in jail, gets out and hustles for money. Getting the drug is the easy part. "All I need to do is stand here and yell," said Miguel, whose mother lives in Miami. "Someone will come up. Now you get people who find this white powder that falls from the sky sometimes and they know that it can change their lives. They kill for it." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens