No, Jay doesn't know how to describe Haiti, as far as I know. He's a (willfully) blind man when it comes to describing reality.
Here's Haiti: haitiprogres.com
Here's Haiti:
democracynow.org
Here's Haiti in the crosshairs:
February 20, 2004
This came to Rights Action, via Jennifer Harbury. Below, there is background info from ANSWER. Please re-distribute far and wide. If you want on/ off our elist: info@rightsaction.org <mailto:info@rightsaction.org>
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Jennifer Harbury wrote:
We urgently need your support and telephone calls on the growing crisis in Haiti. I am sure you have all seen the recent press articles about what is described as the popular unrest there, but far more than civil disobedience is at stake now. We are looking at yet another grab for power by the same death squads that ravaged Haiti a few years ago.
The self proclaimed uprising has been extremely violent and people are dying. While members of the political opposition are indeed part of this uprising, so too are many of the most notorious torturers and death squad members who devastated Haiti before Aristide's return to power.
When we remember that FRAPH and many other military human rights violators were in fact backed by the CIA in those years, the recent insinuations by U.S. officials that they would not oppose an ouster of President Aristide take on a rather sinister light. Mr. Aristide was legally and popularly elected by the people of Haiti not once, but twice, in the more recent elections by 92% of the vote. (The claims of electoral error arose in a senate election, not his presidential victory).
Why are we suggesting that he leave office or accept U.S.- dictated changes in his policies?
The opposition demonstrators have seized the town of Gonaives, killing more than 50 people the first week, including three hospital patients and 14 policemen who were mutilated and dragged through the streets. A number of key roads and a bridge have been obstructed, preventing the arrival of badly needed medical personnel as well as humanitarian supplies. According to reports, the "Resistance" has proclaimed that anyone not supporting the overthrow of Aristide would be attacked. They backed up this threat with beatings and killings, and destroyed several homes, two of which happened to belong to the survivors of the Raboteau massacre. (In 1994 the army and paramilitary troops had entered Raboteau, shooting, beating and arresting people in masses. As the people fled towards the harbor to swim to safety, they encountered armed men on the beachfront, who opened fire on them. Undeterred, the people of Raboteau pressed their human rights case through trial, winning a verdict against 16 of the 22 defendants despite the U.S. refusal to hand over thousands of FRAPH documents).
Two of the opposition leaders reported to have engaged in killings of police officers in Haiti's Central Plateau, include Guy Philippe, a U.S.-trained former Haitian soldier who has attempted at least three coups in the last four years, and Louis Jodel Chamblain, the #2 ranked leader of the notorious CIA-backed FRAPH death squad. Chamblain was convicted in both the assassination of Antoine Izmery, a pro-democracy businessman in 1993, and the 1994 Raboteau massacre.
Jean Pierre, alias Tatoune, was a local FRAPH leader and was serving a life sentence for the Raboteau massacre, until his escape in a 2002 jailbreak. The opposition also includes civilians like sweat shop owner and U.S. citizen Andy Apaid, who opposed an increase of the minimum wage last year, when Aristide attempted to raise it from the $1.60 per day where it now stands.
Since so many of the more brutal members of the "opposition" in fact have long standing ties to the U.S. intelligence community, we should be calling off our dogs instead of pressing Aristide to bend his policies to U.S. demands.
Haiti really does not need the FRAPH or other death squads, let alone the CIA, to interfere with a lawfully elected government, let alone to return to power for a new round of blood baths. Who can forget the massacre in the Saint-Jean Bosco Church of 1988, which took place as Aristide was giving his Sunday mass? Thugs and secret police broke down the church doors and opened fire, attacking and stabbing the people as they prayed. A pregnant woman was stabbed through the stomach, more than a dozen others were killed, many more badly hurt, and the Church was burned to the ground.
Miraculously Aristide survived, became President, survived a violent coup, and became President yet again.
The people of Haiti have spoken clearly enough about their choice of their national leader. There are no masses of refugees fleeing Aristide as there were under Duvalier and the FRAPH. We should respect this choice instead of supporting yet more terror.
PLEASE CALL OR WRITE THE STATE DEPARTMENT, HAITI DESK: TEL. 202-736-4628.
Tell Them:
1.. The United States should fully support any legally and popularly elected government, including that of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, President of Haiti.. 2.. Because many of the persons involved in the current violence by the opposition, were in fact death squad members and extreme human rights violators, with long standing links to the U.S. intelligence services, the U.S. government should take all steps possible to control these assets and allies, and require the immediate cessation of violence and intimidation on their part. Any and all covert funding to them should be halted forthwith. 3.. The U.S. government should respect and comply with any request by President Aristide for reasonable assistance to his understaffed and under-equipped police force. 4.. The U.S. should respect the sovereign status of the government of Haiti and not interfere in the socio-economic policies of that country by threatened intervention or sanctions of any kind.
If you wish to make additional calls, please give your support and thanks to Maxine Waters, and ask for help from other allies and friends on the Hill, such as Sen. Leahy, Sen. Dodd, Rep. Conyers, Rep. Rangel, and Rep. Lantos. The Switchboard number is 202-224-3121.
Thank you everyone. Your calls do make a difference, and always have. Abrazos, Jennifer
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BACKGROUND
STATEMENT FROM THE A.N.S.W.E.R. COALITION
The A.N.S.W.E.R. (Act Now to Stop War and End Racism) Caolition denounces any intervention by the Bush Administration against the democratically elected government of Haiti and its President, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. We oppose the financial embargo of this Caribbean country by the International Monetary Fund and World Bank at the instruction of the U.S. government. We condemn any CIA support for the anti-democratic opposition and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED) programs it has in Haiti to funnel money to the opposition.
Today Haiti faces a serious threat to its nascent democracy. Armed gangs led by disbanded military officers, right-wing FRAPH coup makers who overthrew President Aristide in his first term and then conducted a reign of terror, and the death squad Ton Ton Macoutes movement loyal to the old Duvalier regimes, are invading cities, burning police stations, killing and beating Lavalas Movement supporters, and attempting to violently remove the elected government from office.
The whole world (except the CIA and some business interests) took hope when the Haitian people, through the Lavalas Movement headed by former priest Jean Bertrand Aristide, came to office with a landslide victory in 1990. The whole world (except the CIA and some business interests) mourned when a military coup overthrew Aristide in 1991. Aristide is now serving again as elected president and the same forces that opposed him before continue their efforts to overthrow him.
Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. President Aristide's efforts to respond to the desperate needs of Haiti's poorest citizens has been crippled from the beginning by U.S. government manipulation of aid and international loans, and by a complete cut-off of international aid and loans since 2000. In a country as poor as Haiti, whose riches were looted by its colonial masters, cutting off international assistance has had a corrosive effect on society, opening the way for a re-emergence of the violent, right-wing forces of the past. A.N.S.W.E.R. demands that the U.S. government release all aid money appropriated by Congress for the Haitian government and to remove its block on international loans and grants.
Despite being crippled by the aid cut-off, Haiti has implemented admirable literacy campaigns and a Universal Schooling Program, has defended children's rights, and has worked to find alternatives to corporate globalization. Like Nicaragua of the 1980's and Venezuela today, this makes Haiti "the threat of a good example."
Two hundred years ago the Haitian people established the second oldest republic in the Americas. For sixty years the U.S. government refused to recognize the Haitian Republic, which resulted from the only successful slave insurrection in history. From 1849-1913 the U.S. threatened Haiti 26 times by anchoring warships in its harbors to protect U.S. business interests. The U.S. invaded Haiti in 1915 and occupied it until 1934. U.S. marines robbed $500,000 from the National Bank of Haiti in 1915. These stolen monies were then deposited in the National City Bank--now part of the trillion dollar Citibank octopus.
The U.S. government supported some of the hemisphere's bloodiest, most repressive governments including "Papa Doc" and "Baby Doc" Duvalier in the latter half of the 20th century. The U.S. invaded Haiti again in 1994 to return Aristide for the remainder of his first term, but dictated that his term could not be extended to make up for the three years denied him by the coup. U.S. soldiers remain in Haiti today.
The reason why Haiti is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere is that it made so many other countries so rich. It was Haitian sugar--the product of slave labor--that fueled the industrial revolution in Britain and France. French bankers and big business alone owe Haiti at least $21 billion in reparations for a forced loan that took Haiti 120 years to pay off. Over the past few centuries, the Haitian people have also been punished for having the audacity to overthrow their slave masters. This heroic country opened its arms to Simon Bolivar, supplying the liberator with two ships and supplies needed to overthrow Spanish colonial rule. The only thing that Haiti asked in return was freedom for all the enslaved people in Latin America.
For all its problems, the majority of Haiti's eight million people will not support a return to colonial servitude. The aim of the right-wing insurrectionists is to provoke military intervention against the Haitian government, possibly under disguise of a United Nations "humanitarian mission." A.N.S.W.E.R. demands that the U.S., France, and the United Nations keep their hands off Haiti. With the reparations owed Haiti by France; with international aid directed by sovereign Haiti, Haitians can solve their own problems and chart their own destiny.
***
There are a number of excellent sources to learn more about recent events in Haiti. Here are a few: - The Black Commentator, blackcommentator.com - Haiti Progres, <http://www.haiti-progres.com/eng02-04.
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*** So, no, Jay only knows what the slant-eyed slavers of Trinidad-Tobago know about Haiti.
He don't know no downtown Port Au Prince facts.
Maurice, autre.
Comme un Dictat, Robespierre dit en 1792 (and gratefully could not control his mob):
chnm.gmu.edu
we were seditious. Today, we are the agitators and the anarchists.
Citizens, I remind you of the vital importance of the nation's salvation.
*** And that damned Robespierre became guilty of Castro's and Kerry's sin of going on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on, and on,
ad nauseam. |