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- Shocking Lancet Study: 8,000 Murders, 35,000 Rapes & Sexual Assaults in Haiti After Aristide Ouster
Shocking Lancet Study: 8,000 Murders, 35,000 Rapes & Sexual Assaults in Haiti After Aristide Ouster
- By S Coward
- Published 31-Aug-06
- Government, Politics, Int'l Relations
- Unrated
.....
Shocking Lancet Study Part 1
Those responsible for the human rights abuses include criminals, the police, United Nations peacekeepers and anti-Lavalas gangs.
The findings are based on a new report published in the British medical journal the Lancet. The study is based on an extensive survey of households in the Port-au-Prince area .
- Athena Kolbe, master's level social worker with the Wayne State University school of social work in Detroit Michigan. In December 2005 she coordinated an extensive survey of households in the Port-au-Prince area to determine rates of human rights abuse under the interim Haitian government.
- Dr. Royce Hutson, assistant professor of social work at Wayne State University. He co-authored the Lancet study on human rights abuses in Haiti.
Athena
Kolbe, these are startling findings. 8,000 murdered. Over what time period? And
how do you know this?
ATHENA
KOLBE: We started -- well, basically what we did is we randomly
selected households in the greater Port-au-Prince area, 1,260 households, and
then went and interviewed them about their experiences with human rights
violations beginning in February 29, 2004 with the departure of Aristide
through December of 2005, which is the one-month period, where we did the
interviews. So based on that, we found that 23 households out of the 1260 had
members who had been assassinated in that time period. And the figure of 8,000
is derived from estimating that based on the population of the greater
Port-au-Prince area.
JUAN
GONZALEZ: Now, when you say “randomly selected,” obviously in Haiti,
one of the poorest -- the poorest country in the western hemisphere, a lot of
people don't have phones -- or even locating folks. Could you explain your use
of GPS to actually develop who would be the random households selected?
ATHENA
KOLBE: This was actually kind of a unique type of a study, because
this methodology hasn't really been used before in public health and human
rights studies. It was a used a little bit in another Lancet study about
Iraq just before and after the U.S. invasion of Iraq. But what we did is we
randomly selected GPS locations, 1,500 of them, and then went and visited each
location, eliminated the ones that weren't actually households, the ones that
were, you know, the side of a mountain or the airport runway or whatever, and
then went and interviewed people at the remaining ones that were households.
And
we had an over 90% response rate, which is extraordinarily high and really
indicates that even those that were legitimate sites, where we went and talked
to people, most people were willing to talk to us, indicating that they had
something to say and wanted their story to be told about their experiences with
human rights.
AMY
GOODMAN: And can you talk about who carried out these killings?
ATHENA
KOLBE: Yeah. We had -- the largest number of perpetrators for most
of the violations were criminals, indicating that there was high rates of
criminal activity. But also, we also had a number of assassinations that were
done by members of the Haitian National Police, as well as killings by UN
soldiers and killings by demobilized soldiers from the ex-Haitian army that was
disbanded by President Aristide in 1995.
JUAN
GONZALEZ: And in terms of the rapes and sexual assaults, because you
said that you had -- you identified actually 23 families that had actually
experienced assassinations or killings within their own families, and in terms
of the raw numbers on the actual rapes and assaults, and then how you
extrapolated those to this astounding number of 35,000.
ATHENA
KOLBE: Dr. Hutson could actually talk a little bit more about that,
because he has the figures right in front of him. But I believe that it was 93
families total out of the 1,260 that had sexual assault victims in their
household. And some of those had multiple victims within one household.
AMY
GOODMAN: Dr. Royce Hutson, could you follow up on that?
DR.
ROYCE HUTSON: Sure, absolutely. Yeah, actually, Athena, it was 94, but
very close. Yeah, so we took 94, and we essentially extrapolated it to the
greater Port-au-Prince area with the estimated number of females in the greater
Port-au-Prince area that we got from our own sample. Census data wasn't really
available with regards to what the average household size, what percentage of
the population is female. So we had to sort of construct those figures for
ourselves. And then we took those constructed figures and extrapolated our
findings to the greater Port-au-Prince area. And we got to 35,000, roughly,
female sexual assault victims.
