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Wahala Brewing In Haiti by AfroBlue(m): 7:31pm On Sep 30, 2012
[b]the people have had enough of the installed imperialist minion


[img]http://www.islandtv.tv/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/207181-michel-martelly.jpg[/img]

[img]http://t3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcTR7xgCf161DtZt7pQao1SwV67gn0ceHUNVmg5m8dNjsNAHwnj9UKAsbC6u[/img]





Posted on Sun, Sep. 30, 2012
Several thousand people protest Haiti gov't


The Associated Press
Several thousand people poured into the streets of Haiti's capital on Sunday to protest the government of President Michel Martelly.

Demonstrators' complaints included the high cost of living and allegations of corruption as they snaked through Port-au-Prince. Some protesters carried small red cards to suggest that Martelly has committed too many fouls since the former pop music star was sworn in as president in May 2011.

The Martelly government had no immediate public reaction to the protest.

Martelly, a pop music star before he turned to politics, presented himself as an outsider when he ran for the presidency. He promised free schooling and houses for people displaced by a massive 2010 earthquake. But some Haitians complain that Martelly has fallen short of improving their lives in one of the poorest countries in the world.

"The president has made so many promises but nothing has become a reality," protester Max Dorlien said. "It's only a clique of his friends who are making money."

The Sunday protest followed several weeks of mostly peaceful demonstrations in the countryside. It also marked the 21st anniversary of the first ouster of two-time President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a former priest who returned to Haiti last year after seven years in exile.

__________________

Haiti: No more words, people want deeds
By G. Dunkel on September 29, 2012

A number of strong, militant protests against the government of Michel Martelly have taken place in Cap-Haitien, the second largest city in Haiti, in the past few weeks. Demonstrators have burned tires and held mass marches. Haitian cops and Minustah — the United Nation’s occupying force in Haiti — using tear gas and live rounds, fired into the air, forcing demonstrations back from government offices.

Some 20 popular organizations and outspoken opposition figures Sen. Moïse Jean-Charles and activist leader Pierrot Augustin called the protests. Michel Martelly is the Haitian president that the U.S. maneuvered to install last year.

These protests condemned government indifference, corruption, lawlessness, the high cost of living, environmental degradation and, above all, Martelly’s broken promises — all general issues throughout Haiti. They also challenged a land-grab local big shots with ties to the Martelly regime were trying to pull off. The high cost of living had become painfully obvious to parents who couldn’t pay for the supplies and fees their children needed to return to school. (Haïti-Liberté, Sept. 19)

Marchers yelled, “Down with Martelly! Down with corruption! Down with expulsions! Down with the high cost of living!” “Expulsions” is the term Haitians use to describe what happens when a big landowner kicks peasants off land that the peasants have been tilling, sometimes for decades, to eke out a living.

Protests, general strikes, picket lines and marches over these issues took place in many other parts of the country, as well as in Cap-Haitien.

In Les Cayes, Haiti’s third largest city, people widely honored the Sept. 14 general strike. Most businesses were closed, including gas stations, public markets and mass transportation. Small business owners in the south of Haiti, where Les Cayes is located, previously supported Martelly but have moved into opposition over growing lawlessness and arbitrary taxation along with blatant corruption. The even poorer workers, peasants and unemployed of Les Cayes gave them plenty of support.

The day before the strike, the state secretary for communications, Joseph Guyler C. Delva, showed up in Les Cayes with 400,000 gourdes ($10,000 U.S.) to bribe local leaders to call it off.

When Delva debated a local opposition figure named Gabriel Fortune at the Les Cayes radio station, demonstrators, many of them former Martelly supporters, gathered outside the station and accused Delva of being “a defender of the devil” and the Martelly government’s “propaganda chief.” (Haïti-Liberté, Sept. 19) The cops had to be called to get Delva out of the station safely.

The many demonstrations in Port-au-Prince, Haiti’s capital, protested the general issues of corruption, incompetence and subservience to foreign financial institutions and raised the particular needs of the organizations calling the protest. On Sept. 10, the National Union of Haiti’s University Teachers (UNNOH), led by professor Josue Merilien, marched through Port-au-Prince to demand open access to the school system in Haiti for all students and decent wages for professors.

The next day, the Movement for Liberty, Equality and Fraternity for Haitians (Moleghaf) demonstrated for job creation, a change in the living conditions of marginalized populations and a lower cost of living.

On Sept. 12, the Platform of Victimized Employees of Public Enterprises (Pevep), consisting of hundreds of people laid off illegally and arbitrarily from state enterprises, demonstrated to get their jobs back. Pevep says these dismissals were the result of neoliberal policies that the U.S. government and international financial institutions forced on Haiti. Even though the children of Pevep members were on the march, when they went by the earthquake-wrecked National Palace, which is currently being torn down by an NGO, the cops attacked with tear gas.

More demonstrations took place in Port-au-Prince and smaller Haitian cities, and there have been calls issued for some later in September. Popular anger against the Martelly clique is growing and events don’t seem to be breaking his way. [/b]
Re: Wahala Brewing In Haiti by AfroBlue(m): 7:38pm On Sep 30, 2012
[b]Renewed protests raise tension in Haiti's second city



SANTO DOMINGO, Sept. 27 (Xinhua) -- A call for more protests Thursday against the Haitian government raised tensions in the country's second largest city, where mass demonstrations erupted last week, local media said.

Tensions were visibly high Thursday after protesters clashed with police late Wednesday in the city of Cap-Haitien, 275 km north of the capital Port-au-Prince.

Last Friday, thousands of people took to the streets to protest the high cost of living and flawed government policies.

Cap-Haitien authorities have asked protesters to be patient and wait to see whether the government's measures against shortages of basic goods and price increases would be effective.

In mid-September, Haitian President Michel Martelly announced several measures to combat price increases of basic products after tropical storm Isaac caused significant losses to the country's agriculture.

Martelly's government has also made some changes in response to the demonstrations, including replacing Haiti's national police general director and its delegate in Cap-Haitien.

But opposition groups and social activists called for more protests Thursday. Martelly's opponents said the changes "only strengthen the repressive regime against popular demonstrations", adding that "the people can't wait."

The storm Isaac hit Haiti hard as it continues to recover from a devastating earthquake on Jan. 12, 2010. The country has also struggled to control a cholera epidemic that has killed more than 7,000 people since October 2010.
[/b]

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