Caribbean-Latin America |
Sweet Mickie appoints PM |
2011-05-21 |
[Iran Press TV] Haitian President Michel Martelly has appointed entrepreneur Daniel-Gerard Rouzier as his prime minister, a member of his cabinet says. The president had "written to the presidents of the two chambers of parliament to let them know he has chosen Mr. Daniel Rouzier as his prime minister," AFP quoted the unnamed official as saying late on Friday. Rouzier, who holds a master's degree in accounting, must receive a vote of approval in each of the two chambers of the parliament, which is dominated by the INITE party of former President Rene Preval. The father of three children, Rouzier runs a number of successful Haitian companies. President Martelly took the oath of office in a parliamentary meeting room in the capital Port-au-Prince on May 14. It was the first democratic transfer of power from one party to another in the country's turbulent history. |
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Haiti thanks Iran for humanitarian aid |
2011-03-07 |
![]() According to IRNA, the Haitian chief executive made the remark in a Saturday meeting to receive the credentials of the new Iranian ambassador to Port-au-Prince. Preval thanked the Iranian government and nation for their medical and food aid over the devastating January 2010 quake, which killed 316,000 people and left the Haitian capital in ruins. The calamity in the country also made more than two million people homeless. Iran dispatched about 30 tons of humanitarian aid, including food, tents, and medicine to Haiti a few days after the 7.3 Richter scale earthquake. Thirty tons of fertilizer personally donated by Dinnerjacket and the mad mullahs themselves? I'll bet most of the time it took that "aid" to be delivered was related to logistics. The Islamic Republic also sent a group of 30 doctors and rescuers to the tremor-stricken country. Preval further called for strengthening ties between Iran and Haiti, particularly trade and transfer of technology. Transfer of technology? Haiti? Perhaps you hope to learn construction techniques from the Haitians? |
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Caribbean-Latin America | |
Corruption trial for Duvalier goes forward | |
2011-01-19 | |
A judge will decide whether former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier will be tried on charges that include corruption and embezzlement for allegedly pilfering the treasury before his 1986 ouster, a lawyer for the ex-strongman said Tuesday. A judge questioned the former dictator known as "Baby Doc" in an hourslong, closed-door court session, defense attorney Gervais Charles said. The decision to move toward a trial makes clear that whatever Duvalier's reasons were for returning to Haiti on Sunday, the government is poised to take the opportunity to seek justice for his 15-year regime, widely regarded as brutal and corrupt. Charles said the case is now in the hands of a judge of instruction who will decide whether there is enough evidence to go to trial, a process that can take up to three months.
There are no signs of widespread support for Duvalier, however. Demonstrations on his behalf have been relatively small by Haiti standards. More than half the nation's people are too young to have lived through his government. Haiti's system allows for pretrial detention, but Duvalier was allowed to remain free, though he cannot leave the country. | |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Baby Doc is back in town |
2011-01-17 |
Tan, rested, ready... Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier, a once feared and reviled dictator who was tossed in a popular uprising nearly 25 years ago, has made a stunning return to Haiti, raising concerns he could screw up efforts to solve the nation's interminable political crisis, a cholera plague and the dilatory reconstruction from last year's devastating earthquake. Baby Doc's arrival at the airport Sunday was as mysterious as it was goofy. He greeted a crowd of several hundred cheering knuckle artists and pistoleros but did not say why he chose this tumultuous period to suddenly pop up from his exile in La Belle France -- or what he intended to do while back in Haiti. My guess would be that he intends to hand out some bucks and get the Ton Tons back to work keeping the anarchy level high enough to generate demands for "stability." "I'm not here for politics," Duvalier told Radio Caraibes. "I'm here for the reconstruction of Haiti." Then his lips fell off. His longtime concubine, Veronique Roy, told news hounds at one point that he planned to stay three days. He planned to talk to newsies on Monday. President Rene Preval -- who told news hounds in 2007 that Duvalier could return to Haiti but would face justice for the deaths of thousands of people and the theft of millions of dollars -- made no public comment on the former dictator's re-emergence. But Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive shrugged it off. Meaning they're not going to do anything. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Haiti rivals reject recount plan |
2010-12-12 |
[Al Jizz] Two of the top three candidates from Haiti's presidential election have rejected a planned vote recount amid allegations of irregularities and fraud. Mirlande Manigat, a former first lady, and Michel Martelly, a popular musician, said on Saturday that they would not take part in the planned recount, to be under taken by a new electoral commission. "I don't want to be a part of this," Martelly was quoted by the AFP news agency as saying. "They organised the fraud and I am positive they are prepared to do everything to remain in power. It's a trap." Six Haitian monitoring groups, including the European Union-funded National Observation Council, also rejected the plan. They called instead for a proper dialogue, saying plans to recount the tally sheets "are not sufficient to lead to an eventual end to the crisis". 'Right to choose' Tensions have intensified in Haiti since the November 28 election. Violent protests broke out in Haiti's major cities last week after the Provisional Electoral Council announced that Manigat and Jude Celestin, the outgoing president's protege, had won enough votes to go through to a run-off election. The council said Martelly had come third. His supporters accused Rene Preval, the president, and the ruling Inite (Unity) coalition of rigging the vote. The US embassy in Port-au-Prince expressed concern at the "inconsistent" results, and a top senator called for US aid to be frozen and travel visas to be denied to top Haitian officials to force a fair outcome. "As if Haiti did not have enough problems, now, once again, those in power there are trying to subvert the will of the people," said Patrick Leahy, who chairs the senate committee responsible for funding foreign aid. "The United States must come down squarely in support of the Haitian people's right to choose their leaders freely and fairly." |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Haiti orders vote recount amid protests |
2010-12-11 |
[Iran Press TV] The electoral council in Haiti has ordered the ballots in the country's disputed presidential election to be recounted in the presence of Haitian and international observers. Haitian officials had previously declared the country's national election a success, despite claims of widespread vote fraud and demands for scrapping the ballots. The country's electoral commission had validated the vote in 96 percent of polling stations. Protesters have been demanding that the outcome of the general elections be declared void, claiming incumbent President Rene Preval's government collaborated with the electoral commission to rig the vote. The protesters set up fire barricades and fired gunshots in the streets of the capital, clashing with police forces and UN peacekeepers. Approximately 4.7 million Haitians were eligible to vote in the elections that would name the country's next president, as well as 11 senators and 99 deputies. Meanwhile, ...back at the ranch... Haiti continues to struggle to control the spread of the cholera epidemic in the country, which has so far claimed more than 2,000 lives. The country is also far from recovering from last January's devastating earthquake, which killed over 250,000 people and left the capital in ruins. The United Nations, aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society has urged the international community to urgently fund its emergency appeal to help control the outbreak. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Deadly cholera outbreak hits Haiti |
2010-10-23 |
![]() "I can confirm it is cholera," Preval told Rooters news agency on Friday. He said the government was taking measures to try to stop the disease spreading. More than 1,500 people have been rushed to hospital with severe diarrhoea, vomiting and dehydration in the last few days. Medical facilities in the port city of Saint Marc have been overwhelmed, with hundreds of patients laying on blankets in a car park outside St Nicholas hospital with drips in their arms for rehydration. Al Jizz's Sebastian Walker, reporting from outside a hospital where about 1,400 people were seeking treatment, described the scene as "absolutely horrific". "There was total chaos," he said. "There were streams of patients arriving all the time being driven in from remote villages in the region, with severe cases of dehydration, acute diarrhoea and vomiting. "We're hearing of cases all around the region we are in now. It's a rural region, the farming heartland of Haiti. There is a lot of poverty, high rates of unemployment, and there is very little drinking water available." |
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Caribbean-Latin America | |
Haitian protesters block UN base | |
2010-10-16 | |
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The political violence comes on the heels of Thursday's announcement by the UN that its peacekeeping force will remain in Haiti at least another year. The unanimously approved Security Council resolution extended by one year the presence of nearly 9,000 soldiers and around 4,300 police officers - and called for "credible and legitimate" presidential and legislative elections, which are scheduled for November 28. Rene Preval, who has served as Haiti's president for 10 of the past 15 years, cannot by law run for re-election, and the country remains in a perilous position nine months after a devastating earthquake. The post-election transition to a new government will not happen until next year, and the UN peacekeeping force's mandate was extended to October 15, 2011. The UN resolution passed on Thursday expressed concern with "the rise in the number of weapons in circulation" and condemned "grave violations against children affected by armed violence, as well as widespread rape and other sexual abuse of women and girls". | |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Food Aid Hurts Haiti's Farmers |
2010-04-30 |
About three hours north of Port-au-Prince, the Artibonite Valley is the center of Haiti's rice production. This season, farmer Charles Surfoad is storing his rice rather than selling it. He says food aid from the earthquake relief effort produced a glut that pushed down prices. If he sells now, he says he'll lose money. Adverse effects "Food aid is never good for us," he says. "As a farmer, I'm one of the first affected. You can't send that to a country where that's what they grow." Surfoad says if he can't sell his rice, he won't have money to buy seeds for next season. And because he supplies about 50 neighbors with seeds, their next season will be affected, too. The entire supply chain can be affected, from farmers to wholesalers to merchants selling rice in local markets, many of whom say business is down because people are receiving free rice from donors. Food is one of the most urgent needs in a humanitarian crisis. But, these cases illustrate that when donors bring in food, those who make a living growing and selling food can suffer. Impact of food aid "There is a risk, definitely. And we are very aware of that," says Brooke Isham, director of the Food for Peace program at the US Agency for International Development (USAID). "And that is why we are always looking at the impact of food aid on local markets and whether it is depressing prices in local markets." USAID, the UN World Food Program (WFP) and others monitor markets regularly. Etienne Labonde, head of WFP's program in Haiti, says, as of March, food aid did not cause major disruptions in Haiti's economy. "Maybe it's an impression, but it's not the facts at the moment," he says. Whether impression or fact, Haitian President Rene Preval raised the issue when he came to Washington last month. He said food aid was indispensible right after the earthquake. But, "If we continue to send food and water from abroad," he said, "it will compete with national production of Haiti and with Haitian trade." Scaling back Donors have agreed to scale back. But experts say donors can help the needy and a nation's farmers at the same time if they buy food for humanitarian aid locally rather than importing it. The European Union, Canada and the World Food Program buy locally when possible. But the United States, which is the largest provider, "is lagging a little bit behind the curve of good practice in food aid," says Marc Cohen with the advocacy group Oxfam. U.S. food aid consists almost entirely of American grain. Cohen says that started in the 1950s, when the United States had "what were called, 'burdensome surpluses' of food. So, food aid was, first and foremost, a mechanism to get rid of those surpluses," he says. Congress is considering legislation to allow U.S. food aid to be bought locally. Meanwhile, in Haiti, many donor agencies are pursuing another strategy to avoid market disruption. They're creating jobs so Haitian people can buy their own food. Many of these jobs are aimed at helping farmers at the same time: improving agricultural canals, rural roads, and planting trees to prevent erosion, for example. The question now is whether there will be enough jobs so Haitians can support themselves, or whether the country will again face the dilemma of food aid. |
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Caribbean-Latin America |
Hillary says elections key to Haiti stability |
2010-03-10 |
WASHINGTON - Secretary of State Hillary Clinton urged quake-stricken Haiti on Tuesday to hold legislative elections "as soon as appropriate," saying new polls were key to the stability and legitimacy of the Haitian government. Clinton, speaking to reporters after meeting with Haitian President Rene Preval, said rescheduling elections delayed by the Jan. 12 earthquake should be a top priority "to ensure the stability and legitimacy of the Haitian government." There is no government. There won't be a government after an election. Haiti is a basket case. It needs aid, technical assistance and outside governance until it can recover, not just from the earthquake but from fifty years of dictatorship and turmoil. "I assured President Preval that the United States would work with the international community to hold elections as soon as appropriate," Clinton said. Preval has said he would not seek to extend his term in office beyond its scheduled conclusion on Feb. 11, 2011, and said on Tuesday he was confident that legislative elections -- originally scheduled for Feb. 28 -- could be organized in time to ensure an orderly transition. "What we must absolutely avoid is that we have a temporary provisional government that does not enjoy legitimacy," Preval said during his appearance with Clinton, although he gave no dates for when the elections might be held. |
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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather- | ||
HAITI: Private Contractors 'Like Vultures Coming to Grab the Loot' | ||
2010-02-20 | ||
Anthony Fenton VANCOUVER, Canada, Feb 19 (IPS) - Critics are concerned that private military contractors are positioning themselves at the centre of an emerging "shock doctrine" for earthquake-ravaged Haiti. Next month, a prominent umbrella organisation for private military and logistic corporations, the International Peace Operations Association (IPOA), is co-organising a "Haiti summit" which aims to bring together "leading officials" for "private consultations with attending contractors and investors" in Miami, Florida. Dubbed the "mercenary trade association" by journalist Jeremy Scahill, author of "Blackwater: the Rise of the World' Most Powerful Mercenary Army", the IPOA wasted no time setting up a "Haiti Earthquake Support" page on its website following the Jan. 12 earthquake that devastated the Caribbean country. IPOA's director Doug Brooks says, "The first contacts we got were journalists looking for security when they went in." The website of IPOA member company, Hart Security, says they are currently in Haiti "supporting clients from the fields of media, consultancy and medical in their disaster recovery efforts." Several other IPOA members have either bid on or received contracts for work in Haiti. Likewise, the private military contractor, Raidon Tactics, has at least 30 former U.S. Special Operations soldiers on the ground, where they have been guarding aid convoys and providing security for "news agencies," according to a Raidon employee who told IPS his company received over 1,000 phone calls in response to an ad posting "for open positions for Static Security Positions and Mobile Security Positions" in Haiti. Just over a week following the earthquake, the IPOA teamed up with Global Investment Summits (GIS), a UK-based private company that specialises in bringing private contractors and government officials from "emerging post-conflict countries" together, to host an "Afghanistan Reconstruction Summit", in Istanbul, Turkey. It was there, says IPOA's director Doug Brooks, that the idea for the Haiti summit was hatched "over beers". GIS's CEO, Kevin Lumb, told IPS that the key feature of the Haiti summit will be "what we call roundtables, [where] we put the ministers and their procurement people, and arrange appointments with contractors." Lumb added that his company "specialise[s] in putting governments together [with private contractors]." IPOA was "so pleased" with the Afghanistan summit, says Lumb, they asked GIS to do "all the organising, all the selling" for the Haiti summit. Lumb pointed out that all of the profits from the event will be donated to the Clinton-Bush Haiti relief fund. While acknowledging that there will be a "a commercial angle" to the event and that "major companies, major players in the world" have committed to attend, Lumb declined to name most of the participants. One of the companies Lumb did mention is DACC Associates, a private contractor that specialises in management and security consulting with contracts providing "advice and counsel" to governments in Afghanistan and Pakistan. DACC President Douglas Melvin, a former Special Forces commander, State Department official and director of Security and Administrative Services for President George W. Bush, acknowledged that "from a revenue perspective, yes there's wonderful opportunities at these events." Melvin added that he believes most attendees will be "coming together for the right reasons," a genuine concern for Haiti, are "not coming to exploit" the dire situation there, and does not expect his company to profit off of their potential contracts there. Naomi Klein, author of "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism", is concerned that the thesis of her best-selling book will once again be tested in Haiti. She told IPS in an e-mail, "Haiti doesn't need cookie cutter one-size fits all reconstruction, designed by the same gang that made same such a hash of Iraq, Afghanistan and New Orleans - and indeed the same people responsible for the decimation of Haiti's own economy in the name of 'aid.'" Excuse me, but what "economy" would that be Ms. Klein? Unhappy with critics' characterisation of the IPOA, Brooks said, "If Scahill and Klein have the resources, the capabilities, the equipment, to go in and do it themselves then more power to them." Just send the money, is that the solution? University of California at Los Angeles professor Nandini Gunewardena, co-editor of "Capitalizing on Catastrophe: Neoliberal Strategies in Disaster Reconstruction," told IPS that "privatisation is not the way to go for disaster assistance." Gov't good - privatisation bad. "Traditionally, corporations have positioned themselves in a way that they benefit at the expense of the people. We cannot afford for that to happen in Haiti," she said, adding that "any kind of intermediate or long-term assistance strategy has to be framed within that framework of human security." This is a people's disaster, leave us alone! This, according to the U.N-.based Commission on Human Security, means "creating political, social, environmental, economic, military and cultural systems that together give people the building blocks of survival, livelihood and dignity." Nice words, please show me some of your finished UN projects. Denouncing the "standard recipe of neoliberal policies," Gunewardena said, "If private corporations are going to contribute to Haiti's restoration, they have to be held accountable, not to their own standards, but to those of the people." Haitian voodoo accountability and standards? Reached by telephone, Haiti's former Minister of Defence under the first presidency of Jean Bertand Aristide, Patrick Elie, agreed. He's worried about the potential privatisation of his country's rebuilding, "because these private companies [aren't] liable, you can't take them to the United Nations, you can't take them to The Hague, and they operate in kind of legal limbo. And they are the more dangerous for it." Well if you can't believe Jean Bertand Aristide, who can you believe? Elie, who accepted a position as advisor to President Rene Preval following the earthquake, added "These guys are like vultures coming to grab the loot over this disaster, and probably money that might have been injected into the Haitian economy is going to be just grabbed by these companies and I'm sure that they are not only these mercenary companies but also the other companies like Halliburton or these other ones that always [come] on the heels of the troops." We have our own vultures, we don't need no stinking Special Forces vultures. In its 2008 report, "Private Security Contractors at War: Ending the Culture of Impunity," the NGO Human Rights First decried the "failure of the U.S. government to effectively control their actions, and in particular the inability or unwillingness of the Department of Justice (DoJ) to hold them criminally responsible for their illegal actions." The IPOA's Brooks told IPS that members of the Haitian diaspora and Haiti's embassy have been invited and are "going to be a big part" of the summit. While stressing that it's impossible to know the exact details of an event that is planned outside of public scrutiny, Elie countered that if high-level Haitian officials were to participate, "It's either out of ignorance or complicity." Worried that Haiti is already seeing armed contractors in addition to the presence of more than 20,000 U.S., Canadian, and U.N. soldiers, Elie says he has seen private contractors accompanying NGOs, "walking about carrying assault rifles." Fishing poles would be better eh? If the U.S. military pulls out and hands over the armed presence to private contractors, "It opens the door to all kinds of abuses. Let's face it, the Haitian state is too weak to really deal efficiently with this kind of threat if it materialises," he said. Hey, when that day comes, ask them to leave. I'm sure they'll be happy to oblige. They can sail out on the USN Hospital ship USNS Comfort. The history of post-disaster political economy has shown that such a threat is all too likely, says Elie. "We've seen it happen so many times before that whenever there is a disaster, there are a bunch of vultures trying to profit from it, whether it's a man-made disaster like Iraq, or a nature-made disaster like Haiti." You've "seen it many time before" eh? Will why were you not phueching prepared for this one?
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Caribbean-Latin America |
U.N. confirms death of Haiti mission chief Annabi |
2010-01-17 |
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) - The U.N. mission chief in Haiti, Hedi Annabi, died in Tuesday's earthquake that devastated the country's capital, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced on Saturday. In a statement, Ban also confirmed the death of Annabi's deputy, Brazilian Luiz Carlos da Costa, and of the acting U.N. police commissioner in Haiti, Doug Coates of Canada. Ban gave no details of how the bodies had been found, but the world body said earlier this week that Annabi and his aides were under the rubble of the Hotel Christopher, the U.N. headquarters in Port-au-Prince, and could be alive or dead. Haitian President Rene Preval said on Wednesday that Annabi had died, but the United Nations said at the time it could not confirm that. Annabi is the first U.N. mission chief to die in the line of duty since Sergio Vieira de Mello of Brazil was killed along with 14 other U.N. staff when a truck bomb exploded outside the U.N. headquarters in Baghdad in 2003. After working in the Tunisian foreign service, Annabi joined the United Nations in 1981. For nearly a decade, he worked on a political settlement in Cambodia before joining the U.N. peacekeeping department where he rose to be an assistant secretary-general. He had held the Haiti job since 2007. |
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