US imposes sanctions on Haitian legislators
WASHINGTON, CMC – The United States on Friday continued its crackdown on Haitian legislators by imposing sanctions on Senator Rony Celestin and former Senator, Richard Lenine Hervé Fourcand, accusing them of engaging in international drug trafficking activities.
The US Treasury Department said in a statement it had frozen the US assets of the two Haitians, saying they “are two more examples of corrupt Haitian politicians abusing their power to further drug trafficking activities across the region”.
The Treasury’s Under Secretary for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence, Brian Nelson, said that the Treasury “will continue to hold corrupt officials and malign actors accountable for the illicit drug trafficking that is destabilizing Haiti.”
The Treasury accused Celestin of using his political position to organise the import of drugs from Venezuela into Haiti as well as the export of drugs to the US and The Bahamas.
It said Fourcand uses his aircraft to transport drugs through southern Haiti and accused him of using his “political clout” to install people in government positions that would help facilitate his drug trafficking activities.
As a result of the sanctions, the two Haitian legislators are barred from dealing with Americans. It said Canada had also blacklisted the two politicians.
Canada and the US have over the past few months placed sanctions on a number of Haitian politicians, including Joseph Lambert, former Senate president, Louri Latortue, accusing them of abusing their “public position by participating in corrupt activity that undermined the integrity of Haiti’s government.
Canada and Washington have also claimed that there is “credible information” of their involvement in “a gross violation of human rights, namely an extrajudicial killing”.
The politicians have all denied the accusations and have called on the two countries to provide the evidence to support the allegations.