Yvon Neptune

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Yvon Neptune
Neptune in 2004
11th Prime Minister of Haiti
In office
15 March 2002  12 March 2004
PresidentJean-Bertrand Aristide
Boniface Alexandre (provisional)
Preceded byJean Marie Chérestal
Succeeded byGérard Latortue
President of The Senate
In office
28 August 2000  14 March 2002
Preceded byEdgard Leblanc Fils
Succeeded byFourel Célestin
Senator from Ouest
In office
28 August 2000  14 March 2002
Personal details
Born (1946-11-08) 8 November 1946 (age 79)
PartyFanmi Lavalas
SpouseMarie-José Paul
OccupationArchitect

Yvon Neptune (born 8 November 1946 in Cavaillon, Haiti) is a Haitian politician and architect who served as the Prime Minister of Haïti from 2002 to 2004. He was appointed by President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and took office on 15 March 2002. He had previously served as President of the Senate from 2000 to 2002.

On 2 March 2004, shortly after Aristide's removal, a mob attempted to arrest Neptune on corruption charges, however it was unsuccessful. The mob was reportedly organized by Guy Philippe after Neptune gave an interview to Kevin Pina of KPFA Flashpoints in California and the Black Commentator, and Andrea Nicastro of the Italian daily Corriere della Sera. In the interview[1] Neptune claims he was not even present when interim-president Boniface Alexandre was sworn into office. He also referred to himself as a prisoner in his own office and backed Aristide's claims that he was forced out of office under duress. U.S. Marines guarding his residence killed two gunmen there. Neptune was replaced on 12 March 2004 by an unelected provisional government led by Gérard Latortue, which had been appointed three days earlier.

On 27 March 2004, the provisional government banned Neptune from leaving the country, along with 36 other senior officials of the Aristide administration, in order to more easily investigate corruption allegations. On 27 June 2004, after hearing about a warrant for his arrest on the radio, Neptune turned himself into the Haitian police and was held without charge. According to the Haitian constitution, a hearing before a judge is required within 48 hours for anyone arrested, but Neptune was not given such a hearing. On 4 May 2005, Thierry Fagart, the chief of the human rights division at the UN's Haiti mission, called Neptune's detention illegal.[2]

On 19 February 2005, Neptune was taken into protective custody by United Nations peacekeeping forces and handed himself back[3] to Haitian authorities after a Port-au-Prince penitentiary breakout.

On 18 April 2005, Neptune began a hunger strike, refusing hospitalization and offers of medical attention abroad. On May 5, he was reported as being "near death". On 23 June, Juan Gabriel Valdes - the UN's special envoy to Haïti - criticized the Haitian government's handling of Neptune and called for his release from prison.

On 14 September 2005, 14 months after Neptune was first imprisoned, a formal statement of charges against him appeared. He was accused of participating in the "La Scierie Massacre," an alleged attack by Lavalas supporters in the La Scierie neighborhood of St. Marc. Subsequent investigations, including by the United Nations, revealed the massacre to be a struggle between two armed groups, with casualties on both sides. The Haitian Appeals Court prosecutor found that there was no credible evidence of Neptune’s involvement. Lawyers at the Inter-American Commission of Human Rights said that the statement of charges "contain[ed] no indication that Mr. Neptune directly perpetrated the crimes alleged against him nor is there a clearly defined connection between Mr. Neptune and those who are alleged to have perpetrated the crimes...The mental and factual elements necessary to establish Mr. Neptune’s responsibility…remain entirely unclear.”

In May 2006, the Haitian prosecutor recommended dropping the charges against Neptune because there was no credible evidence to support them.

After spending two years in prison and never having been tried, he was released on 28 July 2006.[4][5] The charges against him were not dropped; he was released on health and humanitarian grounds. Hundreds of other members or supporters of the deposed Aristide administration remained in custody without trial.

On 13 April 2007, the Appeals Court of Gonaives ruled that the courts had never had jurisdiction to try Neptune. Under Haiti’s Constitution, regular courts in Haiti cannot try high public officials unless the High Court of Justice has previously convicted them, a special court formed by the legislature, similar to impeachment in the United States. In September 2009, the Haitian Government served this decision on Neptune and the other parties. When the appeal period elapsed a few days later, the dismissal of all charges became official.

Inter-American System Proceedings

References

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