Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
05PORTAUPRINCE1313
2005-05-11 15:08:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Port Au Prince
Cable title:  

PORT-DE-PAIX: HAITI'S WILD NORTHWEST

Tags:  PGOV PREL KCRM EAID PINR HA 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 PORT AU PRINCE 001313 

SIPDIS

SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL KCRM EAID PINR HA
SUBJECT: PORT-DE-PAIX: HAITI'S WILD NORTHWEST

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 PORT AU PRINCE 001313

SIPDIS

SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV PREL KCRM EAID PINR HA
SUBJECT: PORT-DE-PAIX: HAITI'S WILD NORTHWEST


1. Summary. Ambassador Foley visited Port-de-Paix on April
20 to meet with political, religious and economic leaders, as
well as U.S. citizens in the region. While petty crime is
high in Port-de-Paix, the city has not had any political
violence recently. MINUSTAH's Argentine forces based out of
Gonaives are making only a window-dressing effort in
Port-de-Paix, but the ex-FAd'H in the region are demobilized.
Nevertheless, the Haitian National Police in the Northwest
Department do not have enough equipment or officers to
successfully enforce law and order. The region is home to a
flourishing smuggling trade in drugs, humans, and contraband.
End Summary.


2. Port-de-Paix, the capital of the Northwest department,
is a city of approximately 150,000 on Haiti's northern coast.
It is sheltered from the ocean by the Ile de La Tortue and
is a common embarkation point for illegal migration to the
U.S. In a welcome briefing, the French Regional CivPol
commander stated that crime is high, the justice system is
nonexistent, major drug traffickers operate in the area and
on neighboring Ile de La Tortue (sometimes in conjunction
with local HNP),and unknown aircraft land at the
Port-de-Paix airstrip regularly. He said he had yet to see
any elections activity in the city (MINUSTAH has no civilian
presence there yet). With respect to the approximately 50
ex-military, he said some of them have received partial
"compensation" payments from the IGOH while others were still
waiting, but they were quiet and he did not anticipate a
remobilization.


3. In a meeting with civic and religious leaders, the
Ambassador asked what pressing needs existed in the region.
Mayor MORANGE Petit and Delegue Henri-Max Thelus both cited
the need to rehabilitate and modernize the roads linking
Port-de-Paix with Gonaives to the South and Cap Haitien to
the East. Without these roads, commerce in the region is
almost exclusively conducted by sea and air, often directly
with Miami and circumventing Haitian customs authorities.
Additionally, city roads are in very rough shape, but there
is little that can be done because heavy equipment cannot
make the trip from Port-au-Prince due to road conditions.

The Mayor and Delegue requested assistance in procuring heavy
construction equipment such as a grader, backhoe and front
end loader. (Note: This summer, USAID will begin
rehabilitating 20 kilometers of the Port-de-Paix-Gonaives
road and will replace two bridges as part of the Tropical
Storm Recovery Project. USAID will also rehab 13 kilometers
of the Gonaives-Cap Haitien road. These projects are
currently in the design stage, but should begin in the next
couple of months.)


4. With respect to roads, police equipment, and general
governmental support, all parties were unanimous in stating
that the central government does nothing for them. Thelus
claimed that his office had made many requests for government
projects and funding, but that no assistance was forthcoming
and that all of his proposals are pending in Port-au-Prince.
The Ambassador asked if contraband is a problem in
Port-de-Paix and received only downturned heads and muted
mumbling in response.


5. HNP Departmental Director Nicolas Adalbert Prato painted
a bleak picture of HNP readiness in Port-de-Paix. The HNP
has only 150 officers for the entire department, 70 of whom
are stationed in Port-de-Paix, which translates into one
officer per 20,000 residents. They have only two vehicles
for the department. While organized gang violence is not a
real threat in the city, crime is high and police resources
are low. Prato also said that the airport is not secure, the
runway is in terrible shape, and air traffic (small planes)
is heavy.


6. Bishop Paulo Pierre-Antoine agreed that there are no
organized gangs at present, but he also noted that there are
weapons in Port-de-Paix that have been hidden since
Aristide's departure. He believes that these weapons could
resurface and the city could erupt in gang violence at a
moment's notice. He also made reference to several thousand
Haitians who had been displaced by Tropical Storm Jeanne in
the Northwest department, and he spoke of a 50-home community
the church is planning with a price tag of USD100,000, for
which funding was not yet available.


7. The Ambassador asked whether safe elections would be
possible in Port-de-Paix. Bishop Pierre-Antoine said it
would be very difficult; the three most important factors
were the pacification of the ex-FAd'H, the equipping of the
HNP, and the presence of MINUSTAH in Port-de-Paix. Lack of
an organized police and military presence was allowing gangs
to become masters of certain areas of the city. Bishop
Pierre-Antoine also stated that "whoever planned for the
departure of Aristide didn't do a good job of planning for
the aftermath", to which the Ambassador responded that the
USG certainly didn't plan Aristide's departure, and it was
clear that Guy Philippe hadn't made many plans for the
aftermath either. The consensus of the participants was that
successful elections are possible, but that no one has begun
planning or talking about it yet.


8. The Ambassador then visited Sonlight Academy, an
English-language immersion school run by American
missionaries, and met briefly with approximately 50 American
citizens from the region. Their questions focused on the
security situation and the prospect for safe elections, as
well as the likelihood of a US military presence. The
majority of the American community in Port-de-Paix is
affiliated with the missionary school in some way.


9. Comment. Despite the lack of security presence, the
city appeared to be less destitute than Port-au-Prince.
While traveling through the town, we noticed a convoy of
Argentine soldiers moving into town, and we later found them
securing the airfield upon our departure. It had the
appearance of a hastily-assembled attempt at showing a
presence, but all those with whom the Ambassador met were
unanimous that the Argentine forces based in Gonaives were
almost completely absent. This is doubly regrettable as the
region is infamous for drug trafficking. End Comment.
GRIFFITHS