Printer-friendly Version E-mail this page to a friend Reinforcement of Justice System Funded State Department, 2006-03-08 Haiti Democracy Project web page item #3501 (http://www.haitipolicy.org)
Washington -- The United Nations and Canada have signed a new funding agreement with Haiti that adds to the U.S. government's efforts to reform the Caribbean nation's justice system.
In a March 7 statement, the U.N. Development Program (UNDP) said the main aim of the agreement is to establish a program that provides all people in Haiti with equitable access to the country's justice system.
The program is funded for an initial period of three years, and will include activities in the areas of institution strengthening, reinforcement of case-management procedures, the prison system, legislative reforms and training, said the UNDP.
Olivier Ranaivondrambola, the UNDP's deputy special resident representative in Haiti, who signed the funding agreement, said the new pact seeks "to establish the essential conditions for the people of Haiti to be able to enjoy the benefits of a justice system that is professional, observant of the law, and capable of promoting a greater awareness in people of their rights and obligations."
Canada's ambassador to Haiti, Claude Boucher, added that in the context of the February 7 elections in Haiti, which he said were designed to restore "genuine" democracy to the country, "it is essential to re-establish a justice system capable of encouraging the resolution of conflicts -- and reducing, in the very short term, the grave problems which arise from a non-functioning judicial apparatus."
The United States has been deeply involved in the international effort to build a criminal justice system in Haiti.
The U.S. State Department's Jonathan Farrar said in May 2005 U.S. congressional testimony that the State Department and the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) have developed an overall strategy for justice-sector reform in Haiti and "are working together to move forward in this difficult task." (See related article.)
Farrar, then speaking as the deputy assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs, said USAID is leading a justice reform program in Haiti aimed at developing a functioning judiciary that includes prosecutors and judges, but that it "would be difficult to overstate the challenges that this reform effort faces."
Farrar, whose current position is principal deputy assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, said "all three pillars" of Haiti's criminal justice system (police, judicial sector, and prisons) "are in desperate need of reconstruction."
The United States and other members of an international donors group for Haiti welcomed the February 7 election of René Préval as Haiti's president and expressed their commitment to work with the Caribbean nation's new leaders.
Some $780 million of donor support from the international community has been disbursed to Haiti, as of the end of 2005. The United States has disbursed $277 million of that total amount. (See related article.)
The UNDP's Ranaivondrambola said the new funding agreement is intended to make the justice system in Haiti more independent, effective, transparent and accessible to the Haitian people.
"Improving the justice system will undoubtedly have the effect of enhancing the Haitian people's trust in this important institution, and thereby stimulating their interest in playing an active part in the processes of reform and strategies for sustainable development," said Ranaivondrambola.
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