December 5, 2007 3:33 PM
- Text
Rebels Enter Haitian Capital
(CBS/AP)
Rebels rolled into the Haitian capital Monday and were met by hundreds of residents dancing in the streets and cheering the ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Meanwhile, U.S. Marines and French troops moved to take control of the impoverished country.
In the suburb of Petionville, people clapped and waved as they yelled "Good job!" and the name of Guy Philippe, a key rebel leader in charge of the force approaching the capital.
But not everyone was joyful as the rebels drove past. Some watched indifferently, their arms folded. At one point, the convoy stopped and rebels jumped out, aiming their weapons from side to side, then moved on.
Scores of U.S. Marines and French forces, meanwhile, prepared to fan out from Port-au-Prince's airport and protect key sites — the vanguard of a multinational force approved by the U.N. Security Council.
Fewer than 100 Marines that arrived Sunday night took up defensive positions around the capital's airport to prepare for the arrival of additional forces. A second contingent was due Monday.
Minutes after the Pentagon's Sunday night announcement that U.S. Marines have begun arriving in Haiti, the U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to authorize the immediate deployment of an international military force to restore order in Haiti for three months.
"The U.N. vote for an international military presence paves the way for significant troops to be sent to Haiti," said CBS News Foreign Affairs Analyst Pamela Falk. "France assumes the presidency of the Security Council today and said that there will be quick action on Haiti to restore order and deliver relief supplies."
Early Monday, U.S. and French officers worked together to prepare for the arrival of the full multinational force.
Secretary of State Colin Powell told the CBS News Early Show securing Haiti "will be a major international effort."
"I think initially we will comprise the bulk of the effort. We will have a lead role. But I think over time, those numbers will shift," Powell said. "I suspect our troops and other international troops coming in will help stabilize things. I don't think there will be a great deal of fighting, but they have to be prepared for that."
A U.S. official says the mission of the Marines in Haiti is five-fold: to secure the capital, assisting in the delivery of aid, protect U.S. citizens, repatriate migrants who tried to flee to the United States and prepare the way for a multinational security force.
Aristide, accompanied by his wife and three other people, arrived in the Central African Republic Monday for what will be at least temporary asylum, said Communications Minister Parfait Mbaye. It is unclear where the entourage will head next.
Their departure from Haiti was secured by U.S. forces at Aristide's request, U.S. officials said.
Shortly after arriving in the Central African Republic, Aristide gave a brief address to Central African Republic state radio — his first public comments since leaving Haiti.
"In overthrowing me, they cut down the tree of peace," the exiled leader declared. "But it will grow again, because the roots are well-planted."
In Aristide's wake, the chief justice of Haiti's Supreme Court, Boniface Alexandre, said he was in charge. Announcing the U.S. deployment, President Bush recognized the new government.
"This is the beginning of a new chapter," he said.
After word spread of Aristide's departure, angry Aristide supporters roamed the streets armed with old rifles, pistols, machetes and sticks. Some fired wildly into crowds on the Champs de Mars, the main square in front of the National Palace.
More than 3,000 inmates held in the National Penitentiary were released. Looters emptied a police station and hit pharmacies, supermarkets and other businesses, mostly on the capital's outskirts.
"Chop off their heads and burn their homes," rioters screamed, echoing the war cry of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, the general who ousted French troops and torched plantations to end slavery in Haiti.
Some anti-Aristide militants organized armed posses that prowled the streets in pickup trucks, searching for Aristide supporters.
Police moved in during the afternoon, dispersing the crowd in front of the National Palace, and the violence ebbed.
Half the country was in the hands of the rebels, including former soldiers of the army that Aristide had disbanded.
Haiti's crisis has been brewing since Aristide's party swept legislative elections in 2000 in which several seats were decided using a controversial vote-counting formula. That prompted international donors to freeze millions of dollars in aid.
Opponents accused Aristide of breaking promises to help the poor, allowing corruption fueled by drug trafficking and masterminding attacks on opponents by armed gangs — charges the president denied.
The discontent erupted into violence 3½ weeks ago as rebels began driving police from towns and cities in the north. The uprising killed at least 100 people.
Last week, Aristide accepted a peace deal negotiated by Caribbean leaders, but his opponents insisted he had to go. The White House on Saturday blamed the crisis on Aristide and hinted said he should "examine his position carefully" and "act in the best interests of the people of Haiti."
Sunday was the second time Aristide, a 50-year-old former slum pastor, has fled his country. In 1991 he was ousted just months after being elected president for the first time. President Clinton sent 20,000 troops to restore Aristide to power.
Powell defended the Bush administration's Haiti policy, saying the reason they waited until after Aristide was ousted to act was that "we needed a new political dynamic, either President Aristide to leave or an agreement between all the sides to enter into a new political dynamic. That didn't happen until President Aristide left over the last 24 hours."
Meanwhile, U.S. Marines and French troops moved to take control of the impoverished country.
In the suburb of Petionville, people clapped and waved as they yelled "Good job!" and the name of Guy Philippe, a key rebel leader in charge of the force approaching the capital.
But not everyone was joyful as the rebels drove past. Some watched indifferently, their arms folded. At one point, the convoy stopped and rebels jumped out, aiming their weapons from side to side, then moved on.
Scores of U.S. Marines and French forces, meanwhile, prepared to fan out from Port-au-Prince's airport and protect key sites — the vanguard of a multinational force approved by the U.N. Security Council.
Fewer than 100 Marines that arrived Sunday night took up defensive positions around the capital's airport to prepare for the arrival of additional forces. A second contingent was due Monday.
Minutes after the Pentagon's Sunday night announcement that U.S. Marines have begun arriving in Haiti, the U.N. Security Council voted unanimously to authorize the immediate deployment of an international military force to restore order in Haiti for three months.
"The U.N. vote for an international military presence paves the way for significant troops to be sent to Haiti," said CBS News Foreign Affairs Analyst Pamela Falk. "France assumes the presidency of the Security Council today and said that there will be quick action on Haiti to restore order and deliver relief supplies."
Early Monday, U.S. and French officers worked together to prepare for the arrival of the full multinational force.
Secretary of State Colin Powell told the CBS News Early Show securing Haiti "will be a major international effort."
"I think initially we will comprise the bulk of the effort. We will have a lead role. But I think over time, those numbers will shift," Powell said. "I suspect our troops and other international troops coming in will help stabilize things. I don't think there will be a great deal of fighting, but they have to be prepared for that."
A U.S. official says the mission of the Marines in Haiti is five-fold: to secure the capital, assisting in the delivery of aid, protect U.S. citizens, repatriate migrants who tried to flee to the United States and prepare the way for a multinational security force.
Aristide, accompanied by his wife and three other people, arrived in the Central African Republic Monday for what will be at least temporary asylum, said Communications Minister Parfait Mbaye. It is unclear where the entourage will head next.
Their departure from Haiti was secured by U.S. forces at Aristide's request, U.S. officials said.
Shortly after arriving in the Central African Republic, Aristide gave a brief address to Central African Republic state radio — his first public comments since leaving Haiti.
"In overthrowing me, they cut down the tree of peace," the exiled leader declared. "But it will grow again, because the roots are well-planted."
In Aristide's wake, the chief justice of Haiti's Supreme Court, Boniface Alexandre, said he was in charge. Announcing the U.S. deployment, President Bush recognized the new government.
"This is the beginning of a new chapter," he said.
After word spread of Aristide's departure, angry Aristide supporters roamed the streets armed with old rifles, pistols, machetes and sticks. Some fired wildly into crowds on the Champs de Mars, the main square in front of the National Palace.
More than 3,000 inmates held in the National Penitentiary were released. Looters emptied a police station and hit pharmacies, supermarkets and other businesses, mostly on the capital's outskirts.
"Chop off their heads and burn their homes," rioters screamed, echoing the war cry of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, the general who ousted French troops and torched plantations to end slavery in Haiti.
Some anti-Aristide militants organized armed posses that prowled the streets in pickup trucks, searching for Aristide supporters.
Police moved in during the afternoon, dispersing the crowd in front of the National Palace, and the violence ebbed.
Half the country was in the hands of the rebels, including former soldiers of the army that Aristide had disbanded.
Haiti's crisis has been brewing since Aristide's party swept legislative elections in 2000 in which several seats were decided using a controversial vote-counting formula. That prompted international donors to freeze millions of dollars in aid.
Opponents accused Aristide of breaking promises to help the poor, allowing corruption fueled by drug trafficking and masterminding attacks on opponents by armed gangs — charges the president denied.
The discontent erupted into violence 3½ weeks ago as rebels began driving police from towns and cities in the north. The uprising killed at least 100 people.
Last week, Aristide accepted a peace deal negotiated by Caribbean leaders, but his opponents insisted he had to go. The White House on Saturday blamed the crisis on Aristide and hinted said he should "examine his position carefully" and "act in the best interests of the people of Haiti."
Sunday was the second time Aristide, a 50-year-old former slum pastor, has fled his country. In 1991 he was ousted just months after being elected president for the first time. President Clinton sent 20,000 troops to restore Aristide to power.
Powell defended the Bush administration's Haiti policy, saying the reason they waited until after Aristide was ousted to act was that "we needed a new political dynamic, either President Aristide to leave or an agreement between all the sides to enter into a new political dynamic. That didn't happen until President Aristide left over the last 24 hours."
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