[Excerpt: In Cite Soleil, repeated bursts of gunfire were heard and
armed men fired at a car carrying an American freelance photographer and
her driver. A bullet entered the vehicle but no one was
injured....Associated Press reporters saw peacekeepers racing toward the
sound of gunshots, firing their rifles into the air, but it appeared the
offensive into Cite Soleil had not begun. There were no reports of
injuries.]

U.N. Troops, Haiti Police Surround City

http://199.181.132.144/International/wireStory?id=629598

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti Mar 31, 2005 � Sporadic bursts of gunfire rang out
Thursday as hundreds of U.N. troops and police surrounded a teeming
seaside city in advance of an offensive aimed at disarming street gangs
and restoring order to Haiti's violent capital ahead of fall elections,
officials said.

The operation in Cite Soleil, a crowded slum that is built on landfill
from Port-au-Prince and borders the capital, comes amid surging violence
that has killed hundreds since September, and follows recent clashes in
the countryside that left two peacekeepers and two ex-soldiers dead.

Criticized for inaction, leaders of the U.N. mission have pledged to
crack down on armed groups in this volatile Caribbean nation.

In Cite Soleil, repeated bursts of gunfire were heard and armed men
fired at a car carrying an American freelance photographer and her
driver. A bullet entered the vehicle but no one was injured.

Associated Press reporters saw peacekeepers racing toward the sound of
gunshots, firing their rifles into the air, but it appeared the
offensive into Cite Soleil had not begun. There were no reports of
injuries.

More than 1,000 Jordanian troops and Chinese and Haitian police cordoned
off the shantytown of metal-and-wood shacks and trash-strewn streets,
said Lt. Col. Elouafi Boulbars, a U.N. military spokesman. The soldiers
set up road blocks and began searching cars and residents for illegal
weapons.

"This is the first stage. Then we'll enter the community," Boulbars
said, adding that no clashes have been reported yet.

"We will respond appropriately if our soldiers come under fire," he
said. "But the structure of this ghetto makes it very difficult to
penetrate because of the risk of collateral damage. That's our main
concern."

The operation comes as Haiti's caretaker government and a 7,400-member
U.N. force struggle to contain flashpoints of violence more than a year
after an uprising ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. More than 400
people were killed in September in clashes between police, peacekeepers,
pro-and anti-Aristide gangs and former soldiers who led the February
2004 revolt. At least 40 police officers have been killed.

U.N. and interim officials fear more violence could disrupt elections in
October and November. Boulbars said soldiers and police would plan to
sweep the area for illegal guns in an operation that could last days. He
said operations in other communities will begin shortly.

Late Wednesday, clashes between rival gangs left several people dead,
including a powerful anti-Aristide gang leader known as "Labaniere,"
Boulbars said.

Separately, unknown assailants shot at a Filipino soldier guarding the
U.N.'s new headquarters in Port-au-Prince early Thursday, Boulbars said.
The soldier escaped injury because the shots hit him in his helmet and
protective vest.

Earlier this month, U.N. troops fought bands of armed ex-soldiers in two
rural towns that left two peacekeepers dead the first fatalities among
troops since the U.N. force arrived in June 2004. Two ex-soldiers also
died.

Interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue on Wednesday criticized an arms
embargo on Haiti that he said was hurting the country's ill-equipped
police force to curb violence. While Latortue did not mention specific
countries, the United States imposed an arms embargo on Haiti in 1991
after a military coup first ousted Aristide. A U.S.-led military
intervention restored Aristide in 1994 but maintained the embargo.

The State Department has previously said it will consider approving
individual requests for weapons. U.S. officials did not immediately
return calls seeking comment.

"I'm announcing to the international community that my patience has run
out," Latortue told reporters. "The population is asking for security
while we are sending our police to the slaughterhouse."

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.


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