Uruguayan President Jose Mujica has apologised to his Haitian counterpart Michel Martelly over the alleged rape of an 18-year-old Haitian man by Uruguayan UN peacekeeping troops in the poor Caribbean state.
Public outrage in Haiti has surged over a video shot by a mobile phone and circulating on the internet that appears to show laughing Uruguayan marines pinning the young Haitian face down on a mattress and apparently sexually assaulting him.
We apologise for the abuse that some soldiers of my country perpetrated, Mujica wrote in a letter to Martelly on Tuesday.
Although the damage is irreparable, have the certainty that we will investigate thoroughly and apply the harshest sanctions against those responsible.
Mujica also apologised on behalf of the country's armed forces, which he said were humiliated by the criminal and embarrassing behaviour by a few soldiers.
Defence Minister Eleuterio Fernandez Huidobro, who also signed the letter, said earlier that Uruguay would compensate the alleged victim, Johnny Jean.
Jean and his mother, Rose Marie Jean, told Haitian radio stations he had been raped by Uruguayan marines and provided testimony to a judge in the southern town of Port-Salut, where the incident allegedly took place on July 28.
Martelly has said the perpetrators of what he called a collective rape carried out against a young Haitian would not go unpunished.
There are now at least three investigations into the video: one by the Haitian authorities; one by the UN Mission in Haiti and one by Uruguay's defence ministry that have also filed a claim before the Uruguayan judiciary.
The four marines suspected of being involved have been detained and Uruguay's navy has replaced the head of its naval contingent within the UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti, known as MINUSTAH.
In a preliminary report, the UN ruled out that Jean was raped but said blue-helmet peacekeepers broke rules when they allowed a civilian to enter a military camp.
UN peacekeepers in Haiti have faced public anger before, especially over allegations that Nepalese UN troops brought a deadly cholera epidemic to the country after their camp latrines contaminated a local river. Haiti had no outbreaks of cholera for over a century and the identified strain was from Asia.
This triggered riots last year against the 12,000-strong UN peacekeeping contingent.
MINUSTAH was established by the UN Security Council in 2004 and headed by Brazil. Uruguay contributes with at least 800 members of the three services and police training plus medical teams.
It has been helping Haiti's short-staffed and ill-equipped police to maintain security in the volatile Caribbean state, especially during elections plagued by fraud and violence.
However Brazil said on Tuesday it wanted to reduce its peacekeeping force, with Celso Amorim, the country's defence minister, telling BBC Brazil that keeping the troops in Haiti will not benefit the country in the long term.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesTWIMC
Sep 08th, 2011 - 05:48 am 0Uruguayans, Argentineans, American or British (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Jensen) troops…….
All the same………….
Potential beasts in uniform that have to be kept on a very short leash by their democratic civilian governments.
Well done Uruguay………………….
The problem is that military forces are trained for one thing and one thing only: to fight battles. They are not a police force - and this type of thing will happen time and again until the UN realises that it cannot count on the military for this job.
Sep 08th, 2011 - 09:45 am 0Didn't see any rape in the video.
Sep 08th, 2011 - 04:54 pm 0Commenting for this story is now closed.
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