Contacted on their cellphones after several months of keeping
them off, four former sergeants arranged to meet with The Associated
Press on a hillside clearing in Mariani, a beach resort town southwest
of the Caribbean nation's capital.
They said the group's members have been training at the site.
The meeting came a day after Haiti's Ministry of Defense issued a statement warning the group not to cause disruptions.
The ex-soldiers said they planned to press their campaign without violence.
``They know we can tear down the country _ easily,'' said one of
the former sergeants, David Dorme, 44. ``But if we destroyed this
country where are we going to go?''
The National Armed Forces of Haiti was abolished in 1995 because
of its history of toppling governments and crushing dissent. Many
veterans have long complained that they're owed pensions and back pay.
After police took back the illegally occupied old bases in May,
leaders of the ragtag group of former soldiers and their young recruits
stashed their camouflage uniforms and pistols and returned to their day
jobs.
The ex-sergeants said they spent the time reorganizing and
preparing to renew their campaign to demand that President Michel
Martelly's government honor his campaign pledge to re-establish the
military and appoint one of them as commander.
``Today we want the army to remobilize, to speak in the ears of
the leaders,'' said one of the sergeants, Jean-Fednel Lafalaise, 45.
Spokesmen for the Haitian National Police and government didn't answers calls seeking comment Saturday.
Despite its parades and base takeovers, the pro-army group never
really posed a serious threat to the government or the United Nations
peacekeeping mission, which it accused of being an occupying force.
Still, the group's parading around Port-au-Prince and the
countryside wearing mismatching, ill-fitting uniforms while carrying
pistols did embarrass the U.N. mission and the government, which is
trying to lure foreign investors.
The armed marches made both institutions look weak and
ineffective, raising questions about whether Haiti might be returning to
its paramilitary past.
For several months, the pro-army group defied warnings to leave
several old army bases and to stop posing as military personnel. Then in
May, police cleared out the bases and locked up 50 demonstrators
following a pro-army demonstration that passed in front of the National
Palace.
The group's leaders shut off their cellphones and largely vanished.
Lafalaise denied that he and colleagues went into hiding, saying they were just keeping a low profile.
``The military's not hiding or running away,'' he said. ``We've just retreated.''
The former sergeants, one of whom had a pistol sticking out of a
pants pocket, said they had held meetings and secured the hillside
clearing that affords a broad view of the ocean. They said they have
been using the land as a training ground twice a week.
A white dome tent was described as the group's office. The
red-and-blue Haitian flag hung on a pole tied to a barren tree. Yellow
butterflies fluttered among the bushes.
The ex-sergeants said they held a low-key ceremony on Nov. 18 to
mark a military-themed holiday associated with Haiti's fight for
independence from France. That day, rumors circulated that the group
would march in the nearby city of Carrefour, but it didn't.
Police arrested about 30 pro-army men at an old military base
north of the capital Thursday after they tried to seize it, Dorme said.
A newspaper reported the raid turned up homemade weapons,
uniforms and radio communication. A police spokesman declined to comment
on the report.