Former Haitian dictator ‘Baby Doc’ dies aged 63

Jean-Claude Duvalier accused by human rights groups of killing thousands of opponents

Jean-Claude Duvalier, the former Haitian leader known as ‘Baby Doc’, consistently denied any responsibility for abuses committed while he was in office. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images
Jean-Claude Duvalier, the former Haitian leader known as ‘Baby Doc’, consistently denied any responsibility for abuses committed while he was in office. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier died of a heart attack today, according to his lawyer Reynold Georges. He was 63.

Duvalier inherited power from his father aged just 19 in 1971, but fled into exile in 1986 after a popular uprising.

After spending 25 years in France, Duvalier returned to his impoverished Caribbean homeland in January 2011 and was briefly detained on charges of corruption, theft and misappropriation of funds.

A Haitian court in February ruled that Duvalier could be charged with crimes against humanity under international law, and that he could also be held responsible for abuses committed by the army and paramilitary forces under his rule.

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Duvlier consistently denied any responsibility for abuses committed while he was in office.

The dictator, who called himself “president-for-life”, was notorious for failing to address the poverty and illiteracy of Haitians, while he and his friends indulged in a luxurious lifestyle.

Duvalier relied on terror to keep his people at heel in the style of his father, Francois “Papa Doc” Duvalier, a former country doctor who employed paramilitary secret police agents and exploited popular superstitions surrounding the native voodoo religion.

Reuters