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FANMI LAVALAS OF HAITI IS COMING TO OAKLAND!

On the 20th anniversary of the 2004 coup that overthrew the democratically elected administration of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and the Fanmi Lavalas Party, we commemorate the continued resistance of Haiti’s grassroots movement. 

The program will be held at Eastside Arts Alliance in Oakland and live-streamed on YouTube.

Click on YouTube or copy-paste https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s-1QoZ095FQ

Featured speakers are Dr. Maryse Narcisse and Joel Edouard “Pacha” Vorbe, members of the Fanmi Lavalas Executive Committee; Dr. Rama Ali Kased, US Palestinian Community Network, Assistant Professor of Race and Resistance Studies at San Francisco State University; Pierre Labossiere, co-founder of the Haiti Action Committee; and Professor Walter Turner, host of KPFA Africa Today and president of the Global Exchange Board of Directors. 

Marvin X will read poetry accompanied by Andrew Reynolds on drums.

Haiti’s Lavalas governments made historic advances in health care, women’s rights, housing, economic justice, food sovereignty, and education. The 2004 coup reversed these gains and ushered in 20 years of foreign occupation, dictatorship, terror, and a wave of neoliberal economic policies that have created a disaster in Haiti. 

However, the achievements of the Aristide administration are etched deep in Haiti’s soul and remain a foundation for Haiti’s future.


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Mme. Mildred Aristide is coming to the Bay Area!

For more information: www.haitisolidarity.net

To Donate for Haiti:https://haitiemergencyrelief.org/support-our-work/

ENDORSERS:Advancing the Research, Africa Today KPFA, Afrikan Children’s Advanced Learning Center, All African People’s Revolutionary Party, American Indian Movement-West, ANSWER Coalition – SF Bay Area, Anti-Police Terror Project (APTP), Arab Resource and Organizing Center, Avotcja KPOO, BAYAN-USA, Bay Area Alliance for a Sustainable Puerto Rico, Bay Area Black Alliance for Peace, Bay Area CISPES, Black Cultural Zone Collaborative, Bay Area Cuba Solidarity Network, California Poor People’s Campaign, Caminante Cultural Foundation, Catalyst Project, Center for Gender & Refugee Studies, Center For Political Education, Centro del Poder Popular/ Center for People Power, Chiapas Support Committee, Code Pink – Golden Gate Chapter, Committee of Anti-Imperialists in Solidarity with Iran, East Bay Gray Panthers, East Bay Sanctuary Covenant, Ecumenical Peace Institute/CALC, Fighting-Words.net, 4 Nations Solidarity Coalition, Freedom Archives, GABRIELA USA, Global Exchange, Global Women’s Strike, Haiti Information Project, Haiti Support Group – Guyana, Human Agenda, Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti, International Action Center, International Committee of the National Lawyers Guild, International League of People’s Struggles – Bay Area, Justice Vanguard, Kemet Foundation, LAGAI-Queer InsurrectionLavender Phoenix, Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Marcus Books, Members of N’COBRA, Moratorium Now Coalition – Detroit, National Jericho Movement, National Lawyers Guild – SF Bay Area Chapter, New Afrikan People’s Organization, NorCal TPS Coalition, Pan-African Peoples’ Organization, Payday Men’s Network, Peninsula Peace and Justice Center, People’s Eye Photography, People’s Organization for Progress, Poor Magazine, Prison Radio, San Francisco Living Wage Coalition, San José Peace & Justice Center, SHARE Foundation, Socialist Action, Spirit of Mandela, Task Force On The Americas, UC Law San Francisco Haiti Justice Partnership,UNAC – Northern California, United Black Association for Development Educational Foundation – Belize, US Palestinian Community Network, Venceremos Brigade – Bay Area Committee, Venceremos Brigade – Northern California, Veterans For Peace – SF Chapter #69, Western States Legal Foundation, Women of Color of the Global Women’s Strike, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom – Santa Cruz Co. Branch, Women United Against Genocide, Workers World Party


WHAT’S GOING ON IN HAITI?

A demonstration [mid-December, 2014] in Port -au – Prince: UN soldiers fire at protestors in Haiti. This video shows the bravery of two young fellows getting close to UN soldiers shooting at demonstrators to throw rocks at them in self-defense. The second young man is bolder as he gets closer to them unseen.

REZISTANS!

Dear Friends:

With all this talk/propaganda for a UN or other military force to “save” Haiti and Haitians, we need to remember some of the acts of cruelty of the 19 + year US-UN occupation. The policies of the US, France, and Canada have led to Haiti’s hellish conditions.   

Five videos & links [in chronological order] illustrate the violence of the UN occupation in Haiti since the bloody kidnapping/coup d’etat of February 29, 2004. 

The first two links, What’s Going on in Haiti? (Since 2005) and Grand Ravine, Haiti massacre interview, August 24, 2006 (Human rights delegation)are age restricted to play only on YouTube’s platform.

The last three videos in the chronology are visible below.

Haiti Action Committee was listening over the phone when the UN firing occurred; the community reporter in Cite Soleil, Jean Ristil, recording some of these scenes, was describing them to me while urging me to let the world know. 

Please keep in mind that Brazil under Lula (now as before) has been in charge of the UN military mission from its beginning in 2004 and continues to be one of the 9-member Core Group (known by Haitians as Core Gang) that runs the day-to-day US/UN occupation of Haiti.

The US/UN occupation forces train and supervise the Haitian police and prison guards. They are in charge of the justice system, which includes the police and prisons. The unspeakable brutality and killings have gone on in Haiti’s past & present. Documented are the UN forces providing backup and logistical support to the police and their affiliated death squads.

Focus on Margaret Prescod’s analysis in part 2 of “Special Report: Massacres in Haiti.” 

Thank you so much for all your great support! 

All the very best,

Haiti Action Committee

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3) Video – Demo in Port-au-Prince: UN soldiers fire at protestors in Haiti (mid-December 2014)

This video shows the bravery of two young fellows getting close to UN soldiers shooting at demonstrators to throw rocks at them in self-defense. The second young man is more brazen as he gets much closer to them unseen.

4) SPECIAL REPORT: MASSACRES IN HAITI (NOV. 2018) – PACIFICA’S MARGARET PRESCOD (1/2) 

5) SPECIAL REPORT: MASSACRES IN HAITI (NOV. 2018) – PACIFICA’S MARGARET PRESCOD (2/2) 

Special Report: Haitian Resistance is Rising; US Complicity in Atrocities (Pt 2/2)


MAY 18, 2023: HAITIAN FLAG DAY

Actions in Haiti’s Fight4 Dignity Sovereignty Freedom & “Sali Piblik” will happen GLOBALLY in Atlanta, GA.; Belize, England, Guyana, San Francisco, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, & more.

Support the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund #StandWithHaiti

On Haitian Flag Day May 18th, Haiti Action Committee is calling for local actions everywhere to demand an end to US and Core Group support for the illegitimate government of Ariel Henry and funding for the murderous Haitian police and army! In the Bay Area we will be holding a demonstration starting in UN Plaza, and we encourage local actions wherever you are – demonstrations, educational events, social media blasts, calls to elected officials – to build momentum to support the movement for democracy in Haiti. End the ongoing nightmare Haitians are forced to endure, as they are shot dead in the streets, burned alive in their homes, and their resources plundered by an unelected cabal of murderers and thieves.

Trotting out the familiar argument that “gang warfare” is the root of Haiti’s problem, the US and Canada are ramping up funding and training for Haiti’s notorious and corrupt national police force, including sending tactical and armored vehicles. As they did during the notorious Lasalin massacre, police, security forces and affiliated paramilitary forces terrorize opposition neighborhoods, most recently Bele, murdering and sexually assaulting residents, kidnapping, wrecking homes and accelerating land grabs.

These crises have their roots in the 2004 coup that ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and in the subsequent imposition of foreign occupation, coordinated through the United Nations.  And yet, without a trace of irony, the same foreign powers and corrupt rulers responsible for this situation are now asking Haitians to believe that more intervention and more elite anti-democratic rule will somehow change all of this.

Only a fundamental change in Haiti of the kind envisioned, articulated and fought for by Haiti’s powerful grassroots movement, can reverse any of this. And the US government, as it has been so often, is the biggest obstacle that stands in the way.

Nineteen years after the February 29, 2004 coup that overthrew democratic and progressive governance in Haiti, the Haitian popular movement remains powerful and dynamic. As the people of Haiti deepen their fight to end this oppressive system, the US is orchestrating a new series of maneuvers to keep it squarely in place.  The crisis is sharpening and the stakes could not be higher.

We demand:

  • Stop the massacres. Stop using our tax dollars to fund the brutal Haitian police and affiliated death squads
  • Stop supporting the Ariel Henry dictatorship
  • Stop attacking and deporting Haitian refugees
  • Support the Haitian people’s struggle for liberation
  • End the occupation. Sovereignty and self-detemination for Haiti

Partial List of Co-sponsors: All African People’s Revolutionary Party [A-APRP], ANSWER Coalition-SF Bay Area, BAYAN-USA, Bay Area Cuba Solidarity Network, Bay Area Alliance for A Sustainable Puerto Rico [BAASPR], Black Alliance for Peace, Caminante Cultural Foundation, Center for Gender & Refugee Studies, CODE PINK, Communist Workers’ League, East Bay Sanctuary Covenant [EBSC], Ecumenical Peace Institute, Four Nations Solidarity Coalition/California, Fuerza Mundial – Women of the Americas, Global Exchange, Global Women’s Strike, Haiti Justice Committee of Minnesota, Human Agenda, International Action Center, Justice Vanguard, Malcolm X Grassroots Movement, Moratorium Now, National Lawyers Guild SF, New Afrikan People’s Organization [NAPO], New York City Jericho Movement, Payday Men’s Network, People’s Eye Photography, People’s Organization for Progress, SF Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines [SF CHRP], Task Force on the Americas, United Black Association for Development Educational Foundation [UEF, Belize], US Palestinian Community Network [USPCN], Venceremos Brigade Bay Area Committee, Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) Santa Cruz, CA, USA branch, Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike, Workers World Party

PLEASE SHARE & USE THE HASHTAG: #StandWithHaiti on all of your social media and email posts.

HAITI IS NOT ALONE! : #StandWithHaiti

Thank You!


DIGNITY & UNITY, SOVEREIGNTY & FREEDOM FOR HAITI!

Demand the following:

LIST OF ENDORSING ORGANIZATIONS

All African People’s Revolutionary Party [A-APRP]

ANSWER Coalition-SF Bay Area, BAYAN-USA

Bay Area Cuba Solidarity Network,

Bay Area Alliance for A Sustainable Puerto Rico [BAASPR],

Black Alliance for Peace,

Center for Gender & Refugee Studies,

Communist Workers’ League,

East Bay Sanctuary Covenant [EBSC],

Ecumenical Peace Institute,

Four Nations Solidarity Coalition/California,

Global Exchange, Global Women’s Strike,

Justice Vanguard,

Moratorium Now,

National Lawyers Guild SF,

New York City Jericho Movement,

Payday Men’s Network,

People’s Eye Photography,

People’s Organization for Progress,

SF Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines [SF CHRP],

Task Force on the Americas,

United Black Association for Development Educational Foundation [UEF, Belize],

Venceremos Brigade Bay Area Committee,

Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike,

Workers World


HAITI: 196 New Graduates at the University of the Aristide Foundation

3/15/2022

GREAT NEWS!

This past Sunday, March 13, 2022, 196 students graduated from the University of Dr. Aristide Foundation (UNIFA). 

Among the graduates are:

(1) One hundred twenty-eight (128) students from the school of medicine and health sciences, 

(2) Twelve (12) students from the school of engineering and architecture, 

(3) Eighteen (18) from the school of legal and political sciences, 

(4) Twenty-two (22) from the school of nursing, and 

(5) Sixteen (16) from the school of physiotherapy.

There will be more information and photos later. 

Please visit the University of the Aristide Foundation‘s

ABOUT  page to learn about the university and its work.

TO MAKE A DONATION TO SUPPORT UNIFA, please visit the FRIENDS OF UNIFA website.

There, you can use the University’s DONATE button or mail a check to the University’s fiscal

sponsor. All donations are tax-deductible in the United States and will be acknowledged.

Thank you very much for all your continued support for UNIFA!

Eleven years after UNIFA’s founding, on 3/18/2011, UNIFA’s student body is over 4000 students

and growing!

Tout Moun Se Moun – Every human is a human being.

The Haiti Action Committee


March & Rally in Solidarity with the People of Haiti! End the U.S. / UN Terror Regime! No More Coups!

SAVE THE DATE!


NO MORE OCCUPIED HAITI! Haiti at the Crossroads: Rebuilding Popular Democracy!

LAVALAS: THE GREAT FLOOD OF LIBERTY

SAVE THIS DATE! JANUARY 29, 2022 11 AM – 1 PM WEBINAR

MODERATOR: Professor Walter Turner, College of Marin

SPEAKERS: Margaret Prescod, Sojourner Truth Radio Show; Borgela Jeantine – aka – Kafenol, Community Organizer and Radio Show Emisyon Fanmi Lavalas/Montreal Canada; Leslie Mullin, Haiti Action Committee; Professor Frantz Jerome, Community Organizer/Editorialist/Translator, Dekantasyon Radio Show.

Haiti’s fight for liberation is intense. She is now at a crossroads, and a lot is happening. 

Hundreds of organizations, including Fanmi Lavalas, the people’s partyhave signed onto the Montana Accord, calling for the end of the dictatorship and a new transitional government. 

The ruling PHTK party is now totally isolated, dependent on U.S. support for survival.

Please join the Haiti Action Committee for a webinar as we begin our 30th year of solidarity with the popular movement in Haiti.

We will discuss the fast-changing events on the ground in Haiti, and the ongoing refugee crisis, which has seen over 15,000 Haitians deported back to Haiti from the U.S. over the last few months.

REGISTER HERE: 

(Or copy-paste the registration link)

https://us02web.zoom.us/…/reg./WN_77cGvweBS6SRfXDSTfkyVA


Press Release from Peasant Organizations in Haiti, Port-au-Prince May 31, 2020

Haiti Action Committee is honored to distribute this message of solidarity  from peasant organization in Haiti. It was translated from the original Kreyol version, illustrated below. As the signers to clearly state, “Hand in hand, let’s struggle together to eradicate racism and injustice.”

FROM HAITI TO THE U.S. — ONE STRUGGLE, ONE FIGHT. WE STAND IN SOLIDARITY TO DEMAND AN END TO POLICE TERROR.

“We strongly denounce the brutal acts of the police against people in the United States who are demonstrating to demand justice for George Floyd, who died tragically at the hands of racist police in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020. We know also that there are many other Black people who are victims at the hands of racist police in the United States. This includes:

  1. Breonna  Taylor, who the police in Kentucky killed inside her home.
  2. Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia who was killed by two racist whites connected with the police.
  3. And the list goes on.

The police in Haiti act with the same brutality against the Haitian people, especially when we demand our rights  guaranteed by the Constitution. Here are the names of some of the people who the police in Haiti assassinated in the past several days:

  1. May 30, 2020 —Walking Blanc and another young man were shot by the police at about 8:00 p.m. in Kazo (Port-au-Prince) because they were in the street during curfew.
  2. May 22, 2020 —Louis, an employee of the Ministry for Social Affairs, shot by police while on his way to buy milk for his child.
  3. May 16, 2020 —James, a young man on St. Martin St., shot by police armored vehicle as he was helping his brother, who had difficulty walking, cross the street.
  4. May 10, 2020 —Two young men killed as a police armored vehicle opened fire on a group of young men on Dechant St. in the area of Pont-Rouge.
  5. We cannot forget Roberto Badio Thelusma, 14 years old. The police shot him in February 2019 as he was helping his mother with her soft drinks business.
  6. And the list goes on.

 

EPSON MFP image

 

These crimes were committed just in Port-au-Prince alone. It is the police from the US and Canada that train the police of Haiti.

People in the U.S. have always acted in solidarity with the people of Haiti as we struggle to become a country with full respect for human rights. Today, we follow the history of our ancestors as we stand in solidarity with the people of the U.S., particularly the Black community that is subjected to racist attacks and oppression.

Hand in hand, let us struggle together to eradicate racism and injustice.

 

Signers below are Representatives of Peasant Organizations:

Potoprens: Jeanette Denis, Oswald Jean

SenMak: Frantz Malherbe, Dorain Pierre

Jeremie: Marie Carmelle Destin, Thony Francois

Lenbe: Paul Godin, Ignace Celestin

Terye Wouj: Marie Rene Janvier, Paul Desmarais

Jan Rabel: Octavius Pierre, Ronald Jacques

Lazil: Kesnel Solitaire, Justin Sanon

Aken: Sonel Piercin, Marc Evalis

Bene: Jean Marc Leger, Sony Sanon

Belade: Pierre Noel

 

 


Learning from Haiti in the Pandemic

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Pierre Labossiere,who has long had his finger on the pulse of his native country Haiti, writes in “Resisting COVID-19 in Haiti” that Haitians can see through the lies broadcast by the rulers of their country: “They know that the vast majority of the money raised around the world after the devastating 2010 earthquake, estimated at $11 billion, never reached them. They … have no faith in a government that has stolen elections and then ramped up repression even as the corona virus has begun its deadly march.”

Because I’m familiar with the struggle in Haiti I know what he says is true. Because I’m familiar with the political landscape of my own country, I have my doubts whether my compatriots have the same clarity of vision as the Haitians. Are they seeing through the lies that spill out of Washington every day? Do they realize that the vast majority of the money taken from taxpayers to bail the country out of recession in 2008 benefitted the banks that were too big to fail, but not the people, who lost their homes in foreclosure? Are they aware that today’s bailouts help an airline industry that pays its CEOs $5 to $10 million dollars a year? Our taxes are coming back to us in stimulus checks of over a thousand dollars. But the checks going out to the airline executives are for millions. And do our taxpayers wonder what it would look like today if the $740 billion a year we spend on war were going into health services and research?

Before the United Nations ever admitted responsibility, the Haitian people knew the UN was responsible for the cholera epidemic that swept across the island. Does the American voter understand who was responsible for ignoring the gravity of the COVID-19 pandemic—blaming first China, then the World Health Organization, for its spread? Are they smart enough to cast blame on the U.S. president for his indolence, his
ignorance, his arrogance, and his responsibility for making the United States the epicenter of the pandemic? What about the shortage of test sites, PPEs, ventilators, and hospital beds? Will they demand that he take responsibility for the upward of 30,000 American deaths on record as of April 15, our historical tax day?

Pierre Labossiere reports that people in Haiti have no faith in a government that has stolen elections and then ramped up repression even as the coronavirus has begun its deadly march. Have voters in the United States figured out yet that the electoral process is rife with voter suppression, polling place manipulation, unreliable electronics, hacking, voter intimidation, and corporate bribes, as well as threats of foreign interference? Do they feel safe from repression in a country where the chief executive has no respect for the Bill of Rights and the Congress tolerates his unlawful behavior?

As Labossiere points out, the struggle against the corona virus demands that we stand in solidarity with each other, across all borders, because it is a world-wide fight. The Haitian people have recognized a dual crisis: a corrupt and repressive system, and COVID-19. “It is essential,” he says, “that we see their struggle as our own.” Indeed, it is essential that we learn from them how to interpret our own crisis, so that we can be strong partners with them in the struggle for justice and health.
–Adrianne Aron April 15, 2020


Haiti in the time of COVID-19

imagePacha Vorbe, a globally respected community leader, “is a member of the Executive Committee of the Fanmi Lavalas political party and an associate of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. He is also a successful businessman, a quadriplegic, and a passionate advocate for disadvantaged people and people with disabilities in Haiti.” —Congresswoman Maxine Waters

This is a great and informative interview of Joel “Pacha” Vorbe with Firoze Manji of Daraja Press, entitled: “Haiti in the time of COVID-19” on April 18, 2020.

It is part of the series by Daraja Press titled “Organizing in the Time of Covid.”

 

 


Emmanuel “Toto” Constant

5-9-2020
It was reported by The Center for Economic and Policy Research’s Haiti Relief and Reconstruction Watch blog that on May 11, 2020, Emmanuel “Toto” Constant, a CIA asset by his own admission and FRAPH death squad leader, is being returned by US ICE transport to re-join his old teammates in Haiti; he is not going to be jailed there. The high command of the reconstituted Haitian army is made up mostly of the old high command during the bloody 1991-1994 coup d’etat. A number of them are known for their role in the atrocities. In those days Toto Constant’s FRAPH killed, mutilated and gang-raped women openly with impunity.

Actually gang-rape was one of their major campaigns. In the US he was jailed only for mortgage fraud.

Attorney Moira Feeney in this Democracy Now interview in 2006 speaks on the case involving Toto Constant and FRAPH.

Another more deadly but shadowy paramilitary death squad at that time was called NINJA.  It is well-known among Haitians but not as much among human rights circles. This is all connected with the present-day death squads in Haiti commonly referred to as “gangs.”

Haiti Action Committee


Congresswoman Waters’ Statement on the Attempted Assassination of Joel Edouard “Pacha” Vorbe in Haiti

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
March 30, 2020
Contact: Rykia.Dorsey@mail.house.gov

Rep. Waters Statement on the Attempted Assassination of Joel Edouard ‘Pacha’ Vorbe in Haiti

“Pacha Vorbe is a passionate advocate for disadvantaged people and people with disabilities in Haiti.  It is deeply disturbing that would-be assassins would use the cover of the global coronavirus pandemic as an opportunity to threaten the life of this widely respected community leader.”

WASHINGTON – Congresswoman Maxine Waters (CA-43), the Chair of the House Financial Services Committee and a long-time friend of Haiti, issued the following statement today upon learning of the attempted assassination this morning of Joel Edouard “Pacha” Vorbe, a member of the Executive Committee of the Fanmi Lavalas political party and an associate of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide:

“I am shocked and appalled to learn of the attempted assassination of Joel Edouard ‘Pacha’ Vorbe in Haiti.  I have been informed that violent assassins broke into his house this morning, searched the house, and harassed the people who were there. When they failed to find Pacha in the house, they announced that they had saved two bullets for him.  I condemn this outrageous attack, and I call upon the Government of Haiti to fully investigate this incident and prosecute those responsible.

“Pacha Vorbe is a member of the Executive Committee of the Fanmi Lavalas political party and an associate of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.  He is also a successful businessman, a quadriplegic, and a passionate advocate for disadvantaged people and people with disabilities in Haiti.  It is deeply disturbing that would-be assassins would use the cover of the global coronavirus pandemic as an opportunity to threaten the life of this widely respected community leader.

“As a longtime friend of Haiti, I have been deeply concerned about the escalation in politically motivated violence over the past two years.  In April 2019, I led a delegation to Haiti, which met with residents of Lasalin and surrounding areas, who described acts of unconscionable violence that occurred the previous November.  Survivors expressed concern that government-connected gangs, working with police officers, carried out the attacks to punish the neighborhood for participation in anti-government protests.  In the months since my trip to Haiti, credible investigations of the Lasalin massacre by Haiti’s National Human Rights Defense Network (RNDDH),[1] the United Nations (UN) Mission for Justice Support in Haiti together with the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR),[2] and Haiti’s national directorate of judicial police[3] have all consistently pointed to politically motivated violence. Yet the alleged perpetrators have never been brought to justice.

“I warned last April that impunity for the Lasalin massacre would encourage more violence, and unfortunately, I was right.  A politically motivated attack in the Bel-Air neighborhood killed at least 15 people, November 4-8, 2019, and it may have been carried out by the very same gang leaders implicated in the Lasalin massacre.[4]  Furthermore, OHCHR verified that Haitian security forces were responsible for at least 19 killings between September 15 and November 1,[5] and Amnesty International reported that Haitian police repeatedly used excessive force during anti-government protests in late 2019, including unlawfully firing live ammunition at protesters and indiscriminately launching tear gas.[6]

“Today’s attempted assassination of Pacha Vorbe reminds us that impunity for brutality against innocent civilians enables and perpetuates politically motivated violence.  Those responsible for the attempted assassination of Pacha Vorbe must be held accountable.  Anyfurther threats against Pacha Vorbe or his family cannot be tolerated by the international community or the people of Haiti.”

# # #

[1] National Human Rights Defense Network (RNDDH), The Events in La Saline from power struggle between armed gangs to state-sanctioned massacreDecember 1, 2018, pp. 7-8.

[2] United Nations, MINUJUSTH and OHCHR release a report on the violent events of 13 and 14 November in La Saline, June 21, 2019.

[3] Charles, Jacqueline, Dozens brutally killed, raped in Haiti massacre, police say. ‘even young children were not spared’, Miami Herald, July 15, 2019.

[4] HaitiLibre, Haiti – Security: Violence in Bel-Air neighborhood, at least 15 dead,November 10, 2019.

[5] Hurtado, Marta, Press briefing note on Haiti unrestUnited Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, November 1, 2019.

[6] Tucker, Duncan, Haiti: Amnesty International verifies evidence of excessive use of force against protesters, Amnesty International, October 31, 2019.


March 9, 2020: AFRICA TODAY on KPFA: Host Walter Turner Interviews Professor Oba T Shaka & Pierre Labossiere; devorah major & Tongo Eisen-Martin to host Poetry for Haiti event, March 18th

March 9, 2020

AFRICA TODAY host Walter Turner interviews Professor Oba T Shaka about Ancestor Raye Gilbert Richardson and Haiti Action Committee co-founder Pierre Labossiere updates the Diaspora about Haiti’s Fight4Freedom.

These powerful interviews can also be downloaded from the KPFA Archives; AFRICA TODAY, March 9, 2020

Download and post the pamphlet, “We Will Not Forget! The Achievements of LAVALAS in Haiti” from the Haiti Action Committee website.

 

SAVE THE DATE: March 18, 2020

devorah major & Tongo Eisen-Martin will read:

 

HERF poetry 2020 flyer.V2A

 


Anti-#PetroCaribeCorruption Protesters in front of the National Palace – in Haiti

Anti-#PetroCaribeCorruption protestors take over the road in front of the National Palace in Haiti, demanding the resignation of Pres. Jovenel Moise

twitter.com/serious2020/status/1139295376182108161


HAITI ACTION COMMITTEE UPDATE

July 9, 2018
WARNING: GRAPHIC PHOTO
A demonstration by the people in Port-au-Prince was attacked with tear gas and gunfire. The US/UN-imposed dictator Jovenel Moise has ordered the police to “wash” the streets. As a radio commentator stated, this recent order is clearly a call for brutal repression; the police only have weapons and they do not have a mission nor any equipment to “wash” the streets.
Various neighborhoods and communities were reporting shootings of protestors by the police and their affiliated armed groups. According to customers, the two phone companies in Haiti, particularly Digicel, which openly campaigned for the former imposed president Martelly and Jovenel Moise, have been blocking and interfering with phone communication in the country.
This has also greatly hampered news gathering and broadcasting.

More than ever, there is a pressing need to support independent media in Haiti that is reporting accurately from the ground on this powerful upsurge of popular protest.

Please donate to support grassroots radio, the voice of Haiti’s people in resistance: https://www.crowdrise.com/o/en/campaign/voice-of-the-resistance-in-haiti1/haiti-actioncommittee

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Dechoukaj Restitisyon-Uproot the Corrupt System/Make govt thieves give us back our stolen money!

Please donate to support Radio Timoun, the voice of the Haitian people in resistance! All contributions go to Radio Timoun via the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund

Yesterday Friday 7/6/18 at about 5:30 p.m. Haiti time, Radio Timoun reported demonstrations and flaming barricades blocking city streets in many neighborhoods of Port-au-Prince. People are demanding the resignation of the US-UN occupation government of Jovenel Moise. Radio Timoun journalists had reported 5 deaths as of yesterday afternoon with many wounded by gunfire at the hands of the Haitian police and government-sponsored paramilitary.

The government announcement of an increase of about $1.20 a gallon in the price of gasoline added to the people’s outrage against the blatant corruption, repression, home demolitions, land and property thefts by the US/UN occupation-imposed government. These past few days were marked by an intensification of what appears to be a systematic campaign of land grabs resulting in home burnings and demolitions to drive out impoverished families in working-class neighborhoods. People on social media and Radio Tele Timoun saw and heard the heart-wrenching testimony and images of long-term residents of the Port-au-Prince neighborhood of Pelerin 5 in front of their illegally demolished homes. According news reports and the stunned and suddenly homeless residents about 35 to 40 homes were demolished without warning under orders of their new neighbor, the imposed dictator Jovenel Moise; he did not want his working-class neighbors near the upscale house he recently moved into.

By the evening of Friday 7/6/18 and continuing into today Saturday 7/7/18 people in most of the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area including Petion-Ville, Delmas, Carrefour, Tabarre… had joined the mobilization. Reports are that highways and streets are blocked by barricades and demonstrations occurring in other cities throughout Haiti.

A call is beginning to capture this grassroots resistance mobilization “Dechoukaj/Restitisyon” meaning uprooting the corrupt system and making the thieves in the government give back the money that they have been stealing from the Haitian people.

Haiti Action Committee

 

Photos show: flaming road blocks by demonstrators at Petionville and Pelerin as of 7-6-18; @moisejovenel letter of illegal land grabs by fiat; National gas station burning in Petionville; govt thugs armed w/ state of the art automatic weapons being used to kill demonstrators; govt violence: starvation/high food & gas prices/land grabs are forcing Haitians out of Haiti by unsafe boats ( photos of Haitians in boats by Journalist Dei Andre)

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Poetry for Peace and Justice: a benefit for Haiti Emergency Relief Fund

UNIFA Graduation Laureates - 20180318_115155-1

_1996_Kiilu Nyasha & Pres Jean-Bertrand Aristide of Haiti

Revolutionary journalist/death penalty abolitionist/and supporter of political prisoners, Kiilu Nyasha, who joined the Black Panther Party in 1969, shared a powerful moment w/President Jean-Bertrand Aristide of Haiti who had come to the Bay Area in 1996. While here he spoke at UC Berkeley and at Martin Luther King Jr. Middle School. The late, legendary 20 year Berkeley City Councilwoman Maudelle Shirek, (6/18/1912 – 4/11/2013) looks on. Known widely as the “heart and soul of the progressive movement” and the “godmother of progressive politics” the veteran councilwoman always stood up for the poor, loved Haiti, and was a fierce advocate for healthy living and nutrition.

It is with great sadness that Haiti Action Committee learned of the passing of our beloved sister and revolutionary warrior, Kiilu Nyasha who joined the ancestors peacefully in her sleep in the early morning of April 10. Kiilu loved Haiti, and the Haitian grassroots movement inspired her and guided her work, just as her solidarity, her intellect, her passion and her rock solid integrity continue to inspire and guide us. We invite you to join us globally as we dedicate this event, “Poetry for Peace and Justice” to the indomitable fighting spirit of Kiilu Nyasha  and to the indomitable people of Haiti.

We who love Haiti cordially invite everyone to come to the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund’s dynamic beginning of the new year Poetry for Peace and Justice event! It will be held on Saturday April 14, 2018, at St John’s  Presbyterian Church; 2727 College Ave, Berkeley,CA; between 3-5:00 pm!

And if you can’t be there in person, you can still make a tax-deductible donation. Please click here to do so  or send a check to our fiscal sponsor: East Bay Sanctuary Covenant, 2362 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, CA, 94704  Thank you!

SO SAVE THIS DATE!

We have an outstanding line up of internationally acclaimed poets:

Poet/Playwright/Multi-Percussionist/Photographer/Teacher AVOTCJA,  Professor Emeritus of Creative Writing and Literature (retired) and Poet Laureate of the City of Berkeley Rafael Jesús González; and full time 30 year peace activist, mathematician, and formidable poet  Carolyn Scarr, followed by Open Mic!

Haiti Emergency Relief Fund gives concrete aid to Haiti’s democratic movement and grassroots community groups organizing to meet Haitians’ needs directly.

Poetry for Peace and Justice: a benefit for the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund is being Co-sponsored by the Haiti Action Committee, Ecumenical Peace Institute & the Mission & Justice Commission of St. John’s Presbyterian Church

It is wheelchair accessible, the suggested donation is $10 – $30, however no one will be turned away for lack of funds. This is a not-to-be-missed-event!

Directions:

St John’s Presbyterian is at 2727 College Ave. between Garber St. and Forest Ave., three blocks north of Ashby. The wheelchair ramp is on Garber. There is underground parking with an accessible elevator at the Garber Street entrance.

The AC Transit #51B bus runs on College between Rockridge BART and downtown  Berkeley.

 

 

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Haiti Action Committee • PO Box 2040, Berkeley, CA 94702 • For more information, call: 510-483-7481


BENEFIT SHOW for the HAITI EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND

BENEFIT SHOW for the HAITI EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND

 

Two days ago, on November 5, 2017 demonstrators in Haiti were attacked by militarized police as they protested the corrupt government of Jovenel Moise and the rise of a “new” militarized army reminiscent of the hated regimes of Papa and Baby Doc Duvalier.

We hope everyone can come to the benefit concert for the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund — we have a great line up of musicians!  But if you can’t be there in person, you can still make a tax-deductible donation here  or send a check to fiscal sponsor Women in Dialogue, P.O. Box 14512, San Francisco, CA 94114.  Thank you!

Haiti Action Committee

Omni Commons, 4799 Shattuck Ave Oakland
Saturday, December 9th  7-10pm                                                                                                   Sliding Scale $10+ 
Tickets at the door.  Wheelchair accessible.

For info on Haiti: Go to http://haitisolidarity.net
Contact: Haiti Omni Event Planning Group, c/o GWS Omni Collective, 415-626-4114 or sf@allwomencount.net


Haiti Action Committee Statement: “We Denounce the Trump Administration’s Decision to End TPS for 59,000 Haitians”

Haiti Action CommitteeHaiti Action Committee adds its voice to denounce the decision by the Trump Administration to end Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for an estimated 59,000 Haitians. As we witness the implementation of a previously announced anti-immigrant agenda, we stand in solidarity with TPS and DACA recipients as well as all refugees and immigrants under attack. It is time for the passage of legislation such as HR 4253 and S 2144 or other alternative that is inclusive and beneficial for the broader immigrant community, which allows DACA and TPS recipients to stay, and gives them a path to permanent legal status.

The Immigration Act of 1990 created TPS to benefit people unable to return safely to their home country because of ongoing armed conflict, environmental disaster or other extraordinary and temporary conditions. Haiti received TPS after the earthquake of 2010. Thirteen countries had TPS status when Trump came to power. His administration ended the programs for Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone in April, Nicaragua and Haiti in November 2017. Decisions on Hondurans and Salvadorans will come soon. Haitian recipients of TPS have until July 22, 2019 to leave the US. Including TPS Haitians, their US-born children and spouses. Haiti could face the return of up to 200,000 people.

It is outrageous that the Trump administration has ended TPS for Haitians, given the dire country conditions that make TPS renewal such an absolute necessity. Members of Haiti Action Committee, an organization that works in solidarity with grassroots organizations, frequently visit Haiti. We are appalled at the unchanging miserable conditions – the lack of basic services including clean drinking water, sanitation, and health care. The very, very slow process of recovery from hurricanes and the earthquake has negatively impacted the health and well being of the population. The basic needs of the majority population are not being met. Returning 200,000 people to Haiti unconscionably exposes them to these conditions and will greatly exacerbate the present crisis.

Compounding the above challenges is the on-going political crisis in the country since the bloody 2004 coup d’état against the democratic government of President Aristide. Almost daily, demonstrations break out in cities and towns against the government of Jovenel Moise, increasingly seen as being totally corrupt by a large segment of the population inside Haiti and in the diaspora. Peaceful protests of the government’s abusive extortion practices of women and other small retailers, motorists and transportation workers are met with brutal repression by the police that too frequently result in death or serious injuries.

Sweatshop workers striking for higher wages, teachers owed months of unpaid salaries, students protesting the lack of educational material are similarly beaten and brutalized either in the streets or in filthy, overcrowded jails with most having no access to a judge for years. To many these increasingly frequent killings, arbitrary arrests and deadly acts by government security forces recreate/repeat the impunity that characterized the Duvalier years as shown in the following article –

Mass killing by Haitian police in Port-au-Prince: http://sfbayview.com/…/us-un-backed-haitian-police-massacr…/

The estimated 59,000 TPS recipients provide a major source of support for their families and network of relatives. The remittances keep their dependents in Haiti alive and local economies afloat. Repatriation will result in family break up and deprive former TPS recipients, now returnees, and their dependents of the means to live.

The conservative statistics below are alarming even as other reports claim higher numbers. Though hurricanes Irma and Maria did not hit Haiti directly, the heavy rains and strong winds caused great damage to houses and the local agriculture in northern Haiti. These and hurricane Matthew that struck the south in 2016 compounded the massive devastation of the earthquake from which Haiti has yet to recover. The situation in Haiti is dire according to a report by the Global Justice Clinic of NYU School of Law: http://www.ijdh.org/…/Extraordinary-Conditions_A-Statutory-…

– Hurricane Matthew displaced 180,000 people, destroyed 104,000 houses and damaged an additional 133,000, affecting the well being of more than two million people. Housing loss and damage totaled USD 856 million. The hurricane destroyed or damaged 133 hospitals, clinics, and health posts and affected 1670 schools. People have not received sufficient aid to rebuild their homes, farms and businesses. A severe hunger crisis is spreading in that area and people are migrating to Port-au-Prince to live with family in order to survive.
– Matthew killed 350,000 farm animals
– 200,000 people live in Canaan, a makeshift settlement created after the earthquake, without drinking water or sanitation
– 30,000 new cholera cases were projected to develop in 2017. Cholera has killed 10,000 people and sickened 815,000 [some reports conclude almost 15,000 dead.]
– 60% of the population live under $2 a day; 1 in 4 lives on less than $1 a day. Haiti is the most food insecure nation in the western hemisphere according to the Global Hunger Index
– 22% Haitians face food insecurity; 50% Haitians are undernourished
– Haiti imports more than half its food, including 80% of its rice, and prices keep rising

The income from TPS recipients and other Haitian immigrants plays a vital role in Haiti’s recovery by providing economic support for friends and relatives back home. The resources they send regularly are reliable, received directly and are put to good use by community residents striving to rebuild their lives. Similar situations exist for other countries that are also striving to recover from wars, natural and human-made disasters, and who do not have the capacity to repatriate tens of thousands of people. We call for the passage of inclusive legislation that benefits the broader immigrant community, which allows DACA and TPS recipients to stay, and gives them a path to permanent residency and citizenship.


AN APPEAL FOR SOLIDARITY FROM THE HAITI EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND

HERF

HAITI EMERGENCY RELIEF FUND

c/o EAST BAY SANCTUARY COVENANT, 2362 BANCROFT WAY, BERKELEY CA 94704

EBSC is a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, tax ID# 94-3249753

510-595-4650 – herf1804@hotmail.comhttp://www.haitiemergencyrelief.org 

Since its inception in March 2004, following the brutal coup d’etat against the
democratically-elected President, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the Haiti Emergency Relief
Fund (HERF) has given concrete aid to Haiti’s democratic movement. HERF supports
grassroots organizations on the ground in Haiti including emergency disaster relief,
women’s agricultural cooperatives, schools for the most impoverished Haitian children,
mobile health clinics, the University of the Aristide Foundation (UNIFA) and more.
Donations go directly to grassroots organizations in Haiti. HERF pays no wages and takes
no cut – volunteers do all the work, and all the money HERF collects goes directly to those
who need it, starting with women – the primary caregivers in every community. Help
support HERF’s important work, which is a lifeline especially for the most impoverished
Haitians in order to support the long-run development of human rights, sustainable
agriculture and economic justice in Haiti.

Popular organizations in Haiti are hard at work trying to ensure that families and
communities can survive and rebuild. Though hurricanes Irma and Maria did not hit Haiti directly in September 2017, the heavy rains and strong winds caused great damage to houses and the local agriculture in northern Haiti. Communities are struggling to rebuild from Hurricane Matthew that devastated cities and villages in the south in October 2016. More than 2 million people were affected; the widespread destruction of crops and livestock reversed the gains in food production made by women’s agricultural cooperatives and other local farmers. The massive flooding from this year’s hurricane season and recent torrential rains has caused a deadly spike in water-borne diseases, particularly cholera (brought to Haiti by UN troops), severely taxing the much limited resources of already overburdened communities.

We urge all friends of Haiti donate as much as they can to the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund. Your donations will go directly to grassroots organizations in Haiti that are at risk in their work for democracy, human rights, social and economic justice. They save lives by helping people on the ground access education, health care, clean water, food and shelter, and reconstructing their lives.

Here are just a few examples of what your generous contributions have supported:
* The Aristide Foundation For Democracy has organized mobile health clinics for un-derserved communities.
* Women’s Agricultural Cooperatives – Production of locally grown food crops.
* Radio Timoun, based within the Aristide Foundation, and other local independent
radio stations that have received support from the Haiti Emergency Relief Fund, have
provided consistent and needed information on various topics including education and
health.
* HERF-supported schools and women’s organizations in the Port-au-Prince area
provide education for disadvantaged children and support women’s organizing.

This is but a short list of the work that you are supporting. In essence, you are
supporting the work of the democratic movement in Haiti, which is determined to aid Haitians assisting Haitians in the spirit of solidarity and dignity. We are responding to their call and their lead.

Please donate on line at: www.haitiemergencyrelief.org
Or Send Checks To:
Haiti Emergency Relief Fund
c/o East Bay Sanctuary Covenant, 2362 Bancroft Way, Berkeley, California 94704
All donations are tax-deductible. East Bay Sanctuary Covenant is a non-profit 501(c)(3)
organization, tax ID# 94-3249753 Tel: +510-595-4650

We Thank You!
Haiti Emergency Relief Fund Board of Directors: Walter Riley, Maureen Duignan, O.S.F.,
Pierre Labossiere, Marilyn Langlois, Robert Roth


For Immediate Release: Congresswoman Maxine Waters’ Statement on the Termination of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 21, 2017

Contact: Twaun Samuel or Rykia Dorsey

Phone: (202) 225-2201

Rep. Waters’ Statement on the Termination of Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti

WASHINGTONCongresswoman Maxine Waters (CA-43), Ranking Member of the House Financial Services Committee, released the following statement in response to the decision announced by Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Elaine Duke to terminate the Temporary Protected Status (TPS) designation for Haiti effective July 22, 2019, following an 18-month delay:

“As a long-time friend of Haiti, I am deeply dismayed by the decision of Elaine Duke, the Acting Secretary of Homeland Security, to terminate Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Haiti, effective July 22, 2019.  This senseless and heartless decision creates fear and uncertainty for 50,000 Haitians who have been living and working lawfully in the United States for many years.

“Having visited Haiti numerous times during my tenure in Congress, I can say from personal experience that Haiti is in no position to accept the return of 50,000 people over the next 18 months.  Haiti is still struggling to recover from the devastating 2010 earthquake, which killed more than 300,000 people and displaced more than one million people from their homes.  Haiti’s recovery has been hampered by a continuing cholera epidemic and several severe storms, including Hurricane Matthew in October of 2016 and Hurricanes Irma and Maria this year.

“While Secretary Duke stated in her announcement that the number of displaced people in Haiti has decreased by 97 percent since the earthquake, this by no means justifies forcing 50,000 people to return to Haiti, where there is still a severe shortage of housing and widespread unemployment.

“Haitian TPS beneficiaries directly contribute to the American economy.  They work, pay taxes, spend money, and contribute to the Social Security and Medicare systems.  About 30 percent are homeowners, stimulating the real estate industry and paying local property taxes.  One in nine in the labor force is self-employed, and many of them have created jobs for others in their communities.  Indeed, a recent report found that the termination of Haitian TPS would cost the United States $2.8 billion over a decade in lost gross domestic product.

“Haitian TPS beneficiaries have been fully integrated into their communities.  Many of them have children who are U.S. citizens.  They deserve to be treated with compassion and respect.  I will continue working tirelessly to protect all of the law-abiding Haitians who live and work in American communities.”

###

Kathleen Sengstock

Senior Legislative Assistant

Rep. Maxine Waters

2221 Rayburn Building

(202) 225-2201


Reports of a mass killing by the police in Port-au-Prince; brutal beatings of protesting teachers and students in Cap-Haitien on 11/13/17

Dragged from their homes and shot by police

 

Haiti Action Committee

  • Reports of a mass killing by the US/UN occupation trained and supervised Haitian police in Port-au-Prince
  • Police brutally beats teachers and students in Cap-Haitien demanding money for education, not to restore the murderous army

Monday 11/13/17 was a day of extra-judicial killings of men and women estimated by community residents to total 14 not counting a number of disappeared according to Radio Timoun (Youth Radio).

The reporting was live from the Port-au-Prince neighborhood of Grand’Ravine on the Maranatha school grounds and nearby where 8 of the bodies including those of a teacher and the school caretaker still lay as of 2 hours ago this morning, Tuesday 11/14/17. Other bodies were stated by witnesses to be in nearby bushes. Many are reported wounded by police gunfire and beatings with hammers. In addition, news reports make mention of 31 arbitrary arrests.   (See video Masak lapolis fe nan Gran Ravin 13 Novanm 2017: Warning graphic content)

These killings were conducted by units of the Haitian police according to a number of survivors beaten by the police and other witnesses interviewed by Radio Timoun. It is also reported that at the very early hour when the police attack against the community took place, many children and adults were injured by the very potent tear gas used by the police.

Also on Monday 11/13/17 in the northern city of Cap-Haitien, marching students shouting “Down with the army, long live education, long live schools!” were brutally attacked by the police using tear gas and batons. Many teachers and students were beaten and severely injured. Schools have been closed there for the past week. The students were saying no to the government’s plan to restore the old disbanded Haitian military. They are demanding that the money instead should be used to pay long overdue salaries to the already much-underpaid teachers.

The demonstrators are also denouncing a reported plan by the corrupt US/UN-occupation government of Jovenel Moise (PHTK Party) to fire teachers en masse, replace them with his supporters and not pay them the overdue wages.


Grammys 2016: Watch Kendrick Lamar’s stunning performance

A legendary performance of “The Blacker The Berry” and “Alright”

After being teased as a “very controversial” performance by host LL Cool J, Kendrick Lamar hit the 2016 Grammy stage and did not disappoint. The rapper delivered the performance of the night, walking out as part of a chain gang to perform “The Blacker The Berry” with his band locked inside jail cells.

Lamar followed up the striking visuals by performing “Alright” in front of a giant bonfire, and transitioned into a never before heard song utilizing some fast action camera work, before ending the his performance with the word Compton over an image of Africa in one of the most striking performance to hit the Grammy stage in years. The songs, both off Lamar’s critically acclaimed sophomore album To Pimp A Butterfly speak directly to the modern day black experience in America, and his performance delivered that message home better than anyone could’ve hoped for.

Read next: Kendrick Lamar and the Grammys’ hip-hop problem — twice as good still isn’t enough

To Pimp A Butterfly netted Lamar seven Grammy nominations this year (out of a total 11 nominations). Lamar took home four awards before the show began, and picked up another award for Best Rap Album at the beginning of the show. The project is up for Album of The Year, the last award of the night.