Pubdate: Sun, 16 May 2004 Source: Watertown Daily Times (NY) Copyright: 2004 Watertown Daily Times Contact: http://www.wdt.net Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/792 Author: New York Times Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/areas/haiti DRUG TRAFFICKERS FIND HAITI A HOSPITABLE PORT CHEVALIER, Haiti - The riches that arrived in this tiny village came from the sea - not in fisherman's nets but in an abandoned speedboat that washed up last year stocked with dozens of cellophane-wrapped bricks of Colombian cocaine. "Everyone else was grabbing it, so I took some," said Vital, a young fisherman. I gave it to my father, and the men came from Port-au-Prince to buy it for a lot of money." The cargo taught this southern coastal village what Haitian police and government officials have known for years: The drug trade is one of the few ways in Haiti to amass a fortune. This chaotic, impoverished country has been a bustling crossroads for moving Colombian cocaine to the United States for at least 20 years. But since the departure of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on Feb 29, investigators, diplomats and government officials describe emerging evidence of a state so riddled with drug money that it touched even the presidential palace, through Aristide's chief of security. What is still unanswered is whether those links reached Aristide himself. A senior Western diplomat who has been briefed on a federal investigation under way in Miami into drug ties in the Aristide government said an indictment of Aristide might be "a couple of months away." Aristide denies any corruption, but the accusations against him represent the bottoming out of a long ambivalent relationship United States. The Clinton administration used force to usher Aristide back to power in 1994 after he was ousted in a coup. This year, as Aristide faced a rebellion, the Bush administration provided him with a jet to leave. "We're glade to see him go," Vice President Dick Cheney said. Aristide claimed to have been kidnapped, and his supporters and others say the drug accusations are intended to intimidate the former president and discourage him from trying to reclaim his presidency by saying he was illegally removed. "It seems very much to be a politically driven enterprise," Robert Maguire, director of programs in international affairs at Trinity College in Washington and an expert on Haiti. "Drug traffickers in Haiti has been around a very long time. So why now? I think they may be using this as leverage against him to marginalize his voice." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager