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Haiti's Aristide Calls for Peaceful Resistance by Supporters, AFP Says

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TacticalPeek Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 08:45 AM
Original message
Haiti's Aristide Calls for Peaceful Resistance by Supporters, AFP Says
Haiti's Aristide Calls for Resistance by Supporters, AFP Says

March 8 (Bloomberg) -- Exiled former Haitian President Jean- Bertrand Aristide today called on his supporters to peacefully resist foreign peacekeeping troops in the Caribbean nation, a day after six people were killed at an anti-Aristide demonstration, Agence France-Presse reported.

"I am the democratically elected president of the republic of Haiti and I remain the constitutional president," Aristide told French radio from the Central African Republic, according to AFP. "The Haitian people are resisting and must continue their peaceful resistance against this unacceptable occupation, following an equally unacceptable political kidnapping."

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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 08:53 AM
Response to Original message
1. The Haitian people are resisting
Edited on Mon Mar-08-04 09:01 AM by seemslikeadream
"The Haitian people are resisting and must continue their peaceful resistance against this unacceptable occupation, following an equally unacceptable political kidnapping."


"I'm Still President" - Aristide

Josh Pringle
Monday, March 8, 2004

Exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide is calling on his countrymen to peacefully resist what he calls the "unacceptable occupation'' of the Caribbean nation.

During a phone conversation aired on French radio, Aristide said he's still the nation's president. Five people were killed Sunday when gunmen opened fire on an anti-Aristide rally in the capital.
http://www.cfra.com/headlines/index.asp?cat=2&nid=11595
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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 10:37 AM
Response to Reply #1
3.  Bangui Blues: Aristide's African exile
Whatever it means for Haiti, the exile of Jean-Bertrand Aristide has proven a fine opportunity to clarify the pecking order of today's imperial system. It was getting a little confusing, what with the disagreements among the powerful concerning Iraq, and the endless rumble of globalization tossing people and money and goods and images and ideas around the world, drowning the signal in noise.

But one little intervention goes a long way. Now things are clear again, and it turns out not much has changed. The United States has mended the rift with one of its key senior vassals, France. Disagreement over one imperial police action has yielded to splendid harmony over another.

French-speaking black people are not America's cup of tea; France, on the other hand, knows them inside out (and has turned more than a few inside out). So as soon as Aristide surrendered to Washington, Paris was handed the case. The French activated their own network of tributaries. His Excellency El Hadj Omar Bongo Onimba, the perennial president of Gabon, made inquiries among his peers. Somewhere, a docile black leader would be found to act as prison guard-cum-genial host.

A perfect destination emerged. The Central African Republic is a backwater's backwater, a landlocked isolate of jungle and river that no-one ever visits. It makes tiny ripples of news once in a while, usually when there is a coup. The most recent of these was in March 2003, when General François Bozizé led a rebel army to the capital and overthrew the elected-but-contested president, Ange-Félix Patassé, while France — which had once intervened to reinstate Patassé — this time merely looked on. The irony of this storyline will not be lost on General Bozizé and his distinguished guest.
http://www.africana.com/articles/daily/bw20040308exile.asp


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jmcgowanjm Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 09:25 AM
Response to Original message
2. BushCo must kill him or bring him to Haiti
and have someone there kill him. Why Aristide wants
the US to bring him back. The US would then be responsible for his security ( The US is responsible now but they
haven't quite seen it yet).

Because this would be worse than Bay of Pigs in a way.

"You can't even bring off a coup in Haiti, the poorest
country in the Western Hemisphere?" Imagine a
Lawrence Eagleburger type guy in a Power Office/Club
making this statement.

Major tenets that BushCo's pResidency rests on will
be exposed if Aristide is brought back.

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eablair3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 11:58 AM
Response to Original message
4. is this being reported in the corporate mass media?
CNN? CBS? ABC? FoxNews? MSNBC? NBC? NY Times? Wash Post? NPR?
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eablair3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 12:00 PM
Response to Reply #4
5. you can hear Aristide interview this morning on Dem Now
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/03/08/1529222

At approximately 7:20 am EST, Democracy Now! managed to reach exiled Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide by cell phone in the Central African Republic. His comments represent the most extensive English-language interview Aristide has given since he was removed from office and his country.

Moments before the Democracy Now! interview, Aristide appeared publicly for the first time since he was forced out of Haiti in what he has called a US-backed coup. The authorities in the Central African Republic allowed Aristide to hold a news conference after a delegation of visiting US activists charged that the Haitian president was being held under lock and key like a prisoner. The delegation included one of Aristide's lawyers, Brian Concannon, as well as journalists and representatives of former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark. Shortly after they arrived in Bangui on Sunday, the delegation attempted to meet with Aristide at the palace of the Renaissance. The CAR government rebuked them.

Shortly after, the country's foreign minister held a press conference in Bangui. Armed men threatened journalists in the room, warning them not to record the minister's remarks. Mildred Aristide, the Haitian First lady, was brought into the room, but was not permitted to speak. The CAR foreign minister told the journalists that President Aristide would hold a news conference within 72 hours. Hours later, Aristide was allowed to address journalists.

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seemslikeadream Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 12:03 PM
Response to Original message
6. Rep. Maxine Waters on the Overthrow of Haiti
March 4, 2004

Last Sunday, President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the democratically-elected President of Haiti, was effectively overthrown by a group of heavily-armed thugs. Yesterday, Ambassador Roger Noriega, the Assistant Secretary for Western Hemisphere Affairs, the former chief of staff for Senator Jesse Helms and one of the principal architects of our flawed Haiti policy, testified before the Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere of the House International Relations Committee on the situation in Haiti. Despite Ambassador Noriega's best efforts to avoid answering Members= questions, when I and other Members pressed him for answers, he confirmed what was already apparent; the United States conditioned the introduction of military forces to stabilize Haiti on the departure of President Aristide.

We asked Ambassador Noriega why the United States failed to protect President Aristide from the thugs that were trying to force him out of office. We asked Ambassador Noriega if he knew the violent, criminal histories of Guy Philippe and Louis Jodel Chamblain, who led the thugs into Port-au-Prince. We asked Ambassador Noriega if he knew who armed and trained these thugs. We asked Ambassador Noriega why the United States did nothing to disarm them until after President Aristide was forced to leave Haiti. We asked Ambassador Noriega how a group of heavily-armed thugs with criminal histories could overthrow a democratically-elected government.

Ambassador Noriega's testimony made it clear that our government's actions and its inaction encouraged the overthrow of President Aristide's government. At the very least, we were unwilling to take any steps to prevent the overthrow of the democratically-elected President of Haiti.

Ambassador Noriega's responses, while disturbing, were hardly surprising. Ambassador Noriega has pursued a policy of undermining President Aristide's government for many years. Ambassador Noriega has a long history of being aligned with the anti-Aristide business owners in Haiti and undermining the democratically-elected governments of Haiti. Ambassador Noriega has been working closely with the opposition in Haiti. The Ambassador's statements throughout the political crisis that led to President Aristide's removal have been extremely one-sided. The policies underlying them have been equally one-sided.

For several years, the United States blocked $145.9 million in development loans to Haiti by the Inter-American Development Bank. These loans were supposed to fund health, basic education, rural road development, potable water and sanitation programs, but the United States government prevented the money from ever going to Haiti until the Congressional Black Caucus intervened last year. Denying Haiti access to basic development assistance undermined the ability of the elected government of Haiti to serve the needs of its people and further impoverished a poor population.

The United States government also helped to organize and train the political opposition in Haiti. The International Republican Institute (IRI) has been providing the opposition training for political party development, communications strategies, public opinion polling, web site development and public outreach. IRI has a blatantly partisan approach. It trains opposition groups but flatly refuses to work with Lavalas party members or other supporters of President Aristide. IRI's Haiti Program is funded by American taxpayers through the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). IRI is currently operating under a two-year grant from USAID obtained in late 2002.

While I was in Haiti, I met with leaders of the opposition, including Andre Apaid, the leader of the Group of 184. Unfortunately, Andre Apaid is not the democratic leader that the Administration would have us believe. Andre Apaid was a Duvalier-supporter, who allegedly holds an American passport and operates sweatshops in Haiti. Andre Apaid refused to accept the CARICOM proposal as the basis for negotiations to resolve the political crisis. He repeatedly rejected President Aristide's offer to negotiate, and he refused to participate in any negotiations whatsoever.

The opposition has accused President Aristide of drug trafficking and corruption. Yet when asked for documentation, they have not been able to produce anything more than rumors, innuendos and allegations. No one has ever identified any money allegedly stolen by President Aristide.

President Aristide has given the United States special authority to assist with drug interdiction efforts by allowing the United States to interdict drugs in Haitian waters. The government of Haiti does not have the resources needed to wage a tough and consistent war against drugs, and the President of Haiti begged the United States for assistance to eliminate drug trafficking.

Many of the thugs that took over Haiti in the last few weeks are former members of the Haitian military or members of the feared death squad known as the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti (FRAPH). FRAPH members were responsible for numerous human rights violations during the three years following the coup d'etat in 1991. Guy Philippe, who yesterday declared himself the new chief of Haiti's military, is a former police chief and military officer, who was accused of a previous coup attempt in 2002. Louis Jodel Chamblain, was a leader of FRAPH and was convicted in abstentia for his role in a 1994 massacre. He has also been accused of drug trafficking.

When President Aristide disbanded the Haitian military following his return to Haiti in 1994, the former military officers were never disarmed. Many simply went over the border into the Dominican Republic, taking their M-1 and M-14 weapons with them.

I am especially concerned by the possibility that the U.S. government may have armed and trained the former military officers and death squad leaders who carried out last Sunday's coup. In 2002, the United States supplied M-16's to the Dominican Republic, supposedly for use along the Haitian border, and stationed 900 U.S. troops alongside Dominican guards at the border. Many of the thugs that have taken over Haiti are now armed with M-16's. The U.S. government must investigate how these thugs were armed and explain how the M-16's got into their hands.

The United States has also maintained a ban on weapons sales to Haiti. This has left the Haitian police force ill-equipped to maintain law and order in the face of groups of armed thugs, former military officers and death squad members. The people of the city of St. Marc placed boxes, rocks and cars in the roads to protect themselves from the approaching paramilitary groups. The Administration should explain why this ban on weapons sales was maintained against Haiti throughout President Aristide's term in office.

Once the thugs had completely surrounded Port-au-Prince, President Aristide was forced to leave Haiti. President Aristide called me on Monday morning and told me that Luis G. Moreno, the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince, came to his home in the wee hours of the morning with other diplomats and U.S. Marines. He said he was told to leave, and leave now, or he and many Haitians would be killed. He said he was kidnaped.

This certainly has the appearance of a coup.

I and other Members will pursue Congressional investigations in all of the pertinent committees to determine the truth about our government's role in the departure of President Aristide. The American people deserve to know how and why this Administration allowed a democratically-elected government to be overthrown by a group of heavily-armed thugs.

http://www.house.gov/waters/pr040304.htm

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eablair3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 01:42 PM
Response to Original message
7. the Bush White House responds
from another thread, I noticed this fro the Bush White House:

Q Aristide said today from exile that he's calling for a peaceful demonstration against what he calls the occupation, and he's saying that he's still the President of Haiti. Do you have anything on that?

MR. DUFFY: Yes. Mr. Aristide has resigned his office and has left the country. And now the Haitian people are involved with grasping democracy and moving forward on an interim government. And that's where the focus should be right now. And any comments that would stir up more division are not helpful, as the Haitian people move towards a greater democracy.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2004/03/20040308-1.html
_____________

if he "resigned", how come he's telling the world that he was kidnapped? If he resigned, how come he denies it? If he resigned, how come he can't leave CAR?
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eablair3 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-08-04 01:45 PM
Response to Original message
8. Kerry criticises Bush for failing to back Aristide
Kerry criticises Bush for failing to back Aristide

* Says president sent ‘terrible message’ to democracies
* Calls administration’s Haiti policy ‘short-sighted’
* Claims he would have sent troops ‘immediately’

NEW YORK: Sen John Kerry criticised President George W Bush for failing to back Haiti’s elected leader, Jean Bertrand-Aristide, saying the administration’s policy was “short-sighted” and sent “a terrible message” to the region and democracies, the New York Times reported Sunday.

Kerry, the presumptive Democratic presidential candidate, told the newspaper that he would have sent an international force to protect Aristide as rebel forces were threatening to enter the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.

“I would have been prepared to send troops immediately, period,” Kerry said, in a wide-ranging interview on foreign policy issues conducted Friday with Times reporters.

Kerry told the newspaper that it was wrong for the Bush administration to withhold any aid from Aristide, and then help spirit him into exile after saying the United States could not protect him from the rebels.

snip

http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_8-3-2004_pg4_1
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