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UN to investigate Haiti post-quake prisoner shootings

Dozens of inmates were shot in a riot that took place immediately after the earthquake

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Police order men to line up with their hands in the air at the scene of a crime where two police officers and a bystander were killed in a shootout in La Saline slum in Port-au-Prince, Tuesday, March 16, 2010. (AP photo)

By Jonathon M. Katz
The Ledger

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — The United Nations is investigating the shooting of dozens of prisoners during a jail riot in the chaotic days after Haiti’s earthquake, a spokesman for the U.N. peacekeeping mission confirmed Saturday.

The official commented after The New York Times posted a story on its website reporting the riot and suspected killings by police. The Times said there were indications Haitian officials were covering up what happened in the town of Les Cayes.

“As far as we’re concerned there was a major human rights violation in that prison,” U.N. spokesman David Wimhurst told The Associated Press after the newspaper’s story was released.

The Times’ account concerns a largely unnoticed riot that took place Jan. 19, a week after the quake that killed 230,000 to 300,000 people in Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas, according to government estimates. The Times said it appeared 12 to 19 prisoners were killed and up to 40 wounded by gunshots.

The newspaper said the riot started when some of the 467 prisoners, severely overcrowded and terrified by aftershocks, tried to escape. Haitian police and U.N. peacekeepers from Senegal surrounded the prison to prevent a mass exodus like the one that occurred at Port-au-Prince’s main prison days earlier.

At some point, Haitian police rushed the building and opened fire, Wimhurst said. He said U.N. police saw the bodies of 10 dead prisoners but more people were thought to have been killed and dozens more wounded.

The U.N. opened an internal inquiry about May 12 and a more extensive formal inquiry is possible. Wimhurst said the U.N. investigation was delayed because of the heavy toll the earthquake took on the 9,000-member peacekeeping force, including the collapse of its headquarters - the largest single loss of life in the world body’s history.

Copyright 2010 Lakeland Ledger Publishing Corporation