Michelle Karshan and staff and participants of Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ in Haiti
 
ALTERNATIVE CHANCE/CHANS ALTENATIV
A self-help, advocacy program for criminal deportees in Haiti
 
 
March 28, 2008 Alternative Chance/Michelle Karshan response to 2007 US State Dept Report issued March 11, 2008
challenges assertions made regarding treatment of Criminal Deportees arriving in Haiti
 
 
Articles about Criminal Deportation to Haiti, Alternative Chance, and Criminal Deportation in general
Articles on Alternative Chance, Criminal Deportees, Criminal Deportation and Haiti
 
 
CONTACT US
Mailing, telephone, email, fax -- contact information
 
 
ATTENTION ATTORNEYS
For attorneys fighting criminal deportation from the United States
 
 
HOW YOU CAN HELP!
Donate money or materials, Volunteer in Haiti or the US.
 
 
Press Releases and Alerts
Alternative Chance Press Releases and Alerts on Haiti and Criminal Deportees/Deportation
 
 
Very Brief Overview of Haitian Government Response to Criminal Deportation to Haiti
Criminal Deportation to Haiti and Haitian government response
 
 
June 2006 Note on Our Work
Overview of Chans Altenativ work and thinking
 
 
Preliminary Report by Michelle Karshan on Police Executions & Torture of Criminal Deportees in Haiti 2004-2006
Criminal Deportees are often targeted for execution solely because of tatoos, the way they wear their clothes, gold teeth, and different behavoir and walk
 
 
Brief Overview of Haiti's Recent History
Haiti history for context
 
 
WHERE AM I? A Guide to Adjusting to Haiti Against Your Will (Excerpt)
This manual provides new criminal deportees in Haiti with an orientation on numerous subjects
 
 
Criminal Deportees in Haiti Receive No Food or Water in Jail
Criminal Deportees receive no food or water when imprisoned upon arriving in Haiti
 
 
Photos & Photo Credits
Photos of Alternative Chance and life in Haiti for criminal deportees
 
 
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Our Outcast Youth
Short documentary by David Belle about Alternative Chance as told by three young men
 
 
LINKS
Resources: Our partners and other valuable resources
 
 
Links to Job Training, Job Readiness, and More
Job training, Job readiness, Job resources
 
 
Alternative Chance Haitian Art Gallery
Help support our work by visiting our Haitian Art Gallery
 
 
Are You a United States Citizen?
Comprehensive breakdown by the Florence Project on what makes someone a US citizen
 
 
Women Criminal Deportees in Haiti
International Women's Day and Women Criminal Deportees in Haiti
 
 
May 21, 2007 Advisory on the Continued Detention of Criminal Deportees Arriving in Haiti
Michelle Karshan documents Haiti's continued detention of Haiti's Criminal Deportees
 
 
New life is no life for U.S. ex-cons in Haiti
Chicago Tribune article about criminal deportees in Haiti
 
 
Haitian government announces it will imprison all Criminal Deportees arriving in Haiti
Metropolehaiti, August 16, 2006, Haitian government announces it will put arriving Criminal Deportees in prison
 
 
Overview of Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ Past and Future Activities for Criminal Deportees in Haiti & those Challenging Criminal Deportation to Haiti, October 15, 2007
Priority Issues, Upcoming Family Camp, Collaborations, Human Rights Awards, Annual Benefit
 
 
Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ 2nd Annual Awards & Fundraising Dinner
Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ to hold annual dinner at Tap Tap Haitian Restaurant in South Beach November 8, 2007
 
 
Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ Family Camp
First camp uniting children with their deported parent in Haiti for structured retreat
 
 
Donation/Reservation form
Fill in form to make donation, donate frequent flyer miles, or make reservations for annual dinner
 
 
Cases of Respondents Who Fear Imprisonment as Criminal Deportees to Haiti:
Haitian CAT cases since J-E
 
 

Criminal Deportees in Haiti Receive No Food or Water in Jail

Drinking tap water can be deadly!

Drawing by Nope warning Criminal Deportees not to drink tap water unless it is treated, and providing other options.

Do Criminal Deportees Receive Meals While Imprisoned?

Revised August 2007

by Michelle Karshan

Persons held in police station holding cells DO NOT receive food. It is expected that their family will bring them food on a daily basis.

When someone is held at a police station holding cell their families can usually drop by at any reasonable time to drop off a meal.

Very often police ask the person delivering the food to actually take a bite of the food before they are allowed to leave it, to assure that the food has not been poisoned.

Criminal Deportees arriving in Haiti are typically detained in a police station holding cell which may be in Port-au-Prince or outside the capital. If the person has family in Haiti they may reside extremely far away or not be reachable by telephone or have no family at all.

Sometimes arrangements are made with relatives living nearby. Very often family does not bring food -- sometimes they can't afford to travel or provide food. The other reality is that there is no refrigeration for foods being delivered so families typically only bring one meal.

We (Alternative Chance/Chans Altenativ - advocacy program for Criminal Deportees in Haiti) experienced a crisis in 1998 when President Preval's government started locking up arriving Criminal Deportees in various police stations throughout the country. It was unfair to expect that family members would feed the prisoners because many of the deportees had no family in Haiti and of course they were being held in jails very far from the towns or cities where their families actually lived.

At that time our program had to respond to that crisis because there were many Criminal Deportees, some very sick with diabetes, high blood pressure, TB or AIDS, who were languishing in jails without any meals. We ended up cooking the food ourselves and delivering meals to various police stations throughout the capital region including Thomasseau and Croix-des-Bouquets. For the Criminal Deportees imprisoned in Archaie and Leogane at the time, we had to hire a local person to cook for the prisoners.

During that period of time, Claudette Etienne, a mother of two from Miami deported to Haiti as a Criminal Deportee, died after four days being held in a police station on Delmas.Ms. Etienne had no food of her own and ate some scraps given her by a police officer, and she drank the tap water. She developed a fierce case of dysentery and died.

What I found amazing at the time, and have reflected on a lot again in the last month, was the general indifference to the problem of Criminal Deportees not being able to eat when in detention. I appealed to many people, both Haitian and American, and clergy, at the time but very few people responded. I think people were not sympathetic because it involved convicted criminals from the US. Some people were appalled and were supportive, and a Haitian woman from the elite donated lots of food that we in turn used to cook the meals with. For us, it was impossible at the time to sit by while anyone was starving to death - convicted felon or not.

When President Aristide returned to the presidency the practice was to detain arriving Criminal Deportees in the National Penitentiary where they did at least receive daily meals.

Recently the new government ordered newly arriving Criminal Deportees to be held in police stations, where once again they are not provided any food, water or medical care.

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