Yahoo – AFP, Clarens Renois, Oct 4, 2014
Port-au-Prince
(AFP) - Haiti's former dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier, who
ruled the impoverished Caribbean nation from 1971 until his ouster in 1986,
died Saturday of a heart attack, officials here said. He was 63.
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Former
Haitian president Jean-Claude Duvalier
"Baby Doc" greets people on
March 29, 2011
in Port au Prince (AFP Photo/Hector Retamal)
|
The death
of Duvalier, who returned to Haiti in 2011 after 25 years of exile, was
announced by the nation's health minister, Florence Guillaume Duperval.
"The
family phoned us this morning asking us to send a (medical) helicopter,"
as the former dictator appeared be suffering a heart attack, she told AFP.
"They
tried to administer first aid to him on the scene, but he died" a short
time later, Duperval said.
Duvalier
came to power when he was just 19 years old, after the death of his father
Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier.
For a
decade-and-a-half, the then-portly, boyish-looking Duvalier ruled as Haiti's
self-proclaimed "president for life" until he was forced into exile
in a popular uprising, as pro-democracy forces rallied in the streets amid
international condemnation of the rampant human rights abuses during his
regime.
Like his
father, Baby Doc came to rule Haiti with an iron fist -- barring opposition,
clamping down on dissidents, rubber-stamping his own laws and pocketing
government revenue.
And like
his ruthless father, he also made liberal use of the dreaded Tonton Macoutes, a
secret police force loyal to the Duvalier family.
The
notorious sunglass-toting Macoutes terrorized Haitians, arresting, torturing
untold numbers of political opponents, thousands of whom vanished without ever
being accounted for.
Raised
amid intrigue and paranoia
Born in
Port-au-Prince on July 3, 1951, the young Duvalier watched the intrigue and
paranoia escalate in his father's 14-year government, which began in 1957 and
saw waves of arrests, executions, bombings and 11 failed coups.
At the age
of 11 he survived an attack that killed three of his bodyguards.
An
estimated 30,000 people were killed during the reign of the Duvalier father and
son, rights activists said.
The younger
Duvalier fled Haiti in 1986 for a life of luxury in France, thanks to the
hundreds of millions of dollars allegedly plundered from the coffers of the
western hemisphere's most impoverished country.
Years of
efforts to force his family to return the pilfered funds proved fruitless.
In the late
1990s former political prisoners brought charges of "crimes against
humanity" against Baby Doc in a Paris court, claiming they were tortured
over a period of years, but the lawsuit later foundered.
In 2007,
Duvalier called on Haitians to forgive him for "mistakes" committed
during his rule, even as the government in power at the time insisted he face
trial.
At the time
of his death, he was indeed charged in a slow-moving prosecution on corruption
and embezzlement allegations dating to his years in power. He was said in
reports to have looted as much as $300 million before being forced to flee.
Much of the
money, however, was reported to have been frittered away on a lavish lifestyle
filled with fancy homes, jewelry and cars.
Efforts to
bring him to justice both in exile and after his return encountered numerous
delays brought about by legal motions and appeals, and proved fruitless in the
end.
Duvalier,
who returned home the year after Haiti was leveled by devastating 2010 earthquake,
was meant as a gesture of solidarity with the stricken nation, still mired in
grinding poverty and widespread social turmoil.

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