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"I was told that to avoid bloodshed I'd better leave. No one should force an elected president to move," Aristide said in an interview on Monday with CNN from the Central African Republic, where he is in exile.
Asked about earlier reports that had him claiming to have been kidnapped, Aristide said: "As I said, I called this coup d'état in a modern way, to have modern kidnapping.
"They were not Haitian forces. They were [unintelligible sound] and Americans and Haitians together, acting to surround the airport, my house, the palace," he said.
People in Port-au-Prince celebrate the news of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's departure from Haiti. (AP photo)
He said he was taken by plane and found out he was headed for the Central African Republic just 20 minutes before the flight landed.
- FROM MARCH 1, 2004: Aristide arrives in Africa after fleeing Haiti
U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell called the allegations "baseless and absurd," saying Aristide asked for American assistance to leave Haiti.
Members of the Canadian special forces, Col. Daniel Leplatois of the French Antilles Army and an unidentified U.S. marines colonel meet at the airport in Port-au-Prince. (AP photo)
"He came back to us and said it was his decision, based on what the security people were also telling him about the deteriorating situation, that he should leave," said Powell.
Chief presidential spokesperson Scott McClellan said the U.S. arranged for a plane to fly to Haiti to pick up Aristide and that he left on his own free will.
Unnamed U.S. officials did acknowledge to The Associated Press that Aristide was told American troops would not protect him from the rebels if he remained in Haiti.
- INDEPTH: Haiti
Aristide's allegations came after rebel forces rolled into Port-au-Prince on Monday along with U.S., French and Canadian troops.
The multinational force began efforts to try to restore order in the Haitian capital. Looting and violence subsided as the soldiers spread out from the airport to protect key sites.
Rebel leader Guy Philippe later met with members of the political coalition who had opposed Aristide.
- FROM FEB. 29, 2004: Canada to join international force in Haiti
Canada has about 50 soldiers in Port-au-Prince already, and Ottawa is deciding how many more to send.
Powell said the United States will have a limited military presence, with 400 marines expected by Monday afternoon.
But the U.S. Secretary of State said the American forces "will have a lead role" initially in restoring order to Haiti in the wake of the three-week old rebellion that killed at least 80 people.
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