LAVALAS TERRORISTS NECKLACE 2 MEN IN DONTOWN PORT-AU-PRINCE THIS MORNING – CAN ONLY HAPPEN WITH ARISTIDE APPROVAL

10978312_837992842924707_842986456_n <- DOWNLOAD IT YOURSELF AND SPREAD IT AROUND

REALLY, SPREAD THIS STORY TO EVERY CORNER

Fevrier 7, 2015
The Martelly government remains on auto-pilot as ex-Aristide/Lavalas terrorist Evens Paul site frozen in the Primature. Or is Paul’s inaction a part of a plan that sees Lavalas retake dictatorial control of Haiti??

The Americans must do something for Haiti!!

They allowed Aristide’s return, because he promised to remain out of Politics and focus on Education.

Well now, those F#####G idiots in Washington do not understand that Politics and Education are the same thing so far as Aristide is concerned. He has outwitted them, yet again.

Martelly promised to arrest Aritide. Then nothing. Some suggest a payment of $10,000,000 to preserve Aristide’s freedom.

It is time for someone to step in and save Haiti.

Everyone stood by when Martelly moved to fire Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe. Bill Clinton warned of the consequences.

And now we are living with them!!

Some are dying because of this!!

More will die, perhaps on a daily basis, if something is not done and done quickly!!!

The PNH – National Police – have been ordered to stand clear of any violence.

MINUSTAH is invisible.

Aristide terrorists control the streets and will soon control the Nation.
If this video does not force the American hand and see Aristide arrested, there is absolutely no hope for Haiti.

THE TIME IS NOW!!!

ARREST ARISTIDE – IF NOT FOR THE MURDERS OF LAFONTANT, DUROCHER-BERTIN, SYLVIO-CLAUDE, AND DOZENS OF OTHERS…ARREST HIM FOR HIS CONTROL OF THE COCAINE TRAFFIC INTO THE UNITED STATES!!!!

WE NEED 300 MARINES IN SIMPLE COTTON SHIRTS – NO ARMOR – AND SIDEARMS. THE HAITIANS HAVE ALWAYS RESPECTED THE US MARINES.

Share:

Author: `

8 thoughts on “LAVALAS TERRORISTS NECKLACE 2 MEN IN DONTOWN PORT-AU-PRINCE THIS MORNING – CAN ONLY HAPPEN WITH ARISTIDE APPROVAL

  1. (Bill Clinton warned of the consequences), Ha Ha! don’t be so naive “SLICK WILLY ” Bill Clinton is the culprit, this is a systemic mess he purposely created. Lavalas and Bill Clinton are different aspects of the same thing. The only Hope for Haiti is the next U.S. presidential election,(“be advised Haiti usually benefited when there is a different party other than this present one in the white house”). Such party usually get rid of Haiti’s dictators, facts are facts!. Aristide beware! Such party might be baaaaack!

  2. Interesting that this should happen on the anniversary of Aristide’s original inauguration February 7, 1991.

    This mornings Haitian radio broadcasts had Lavalas leaders interviewed and they all claimed credit – for Lavalas/Aristide – with regard to the ongoing violence and threatened worse.

    What could be worse than being burned to death?

    Unless Aristide is eliminated, Haiti will slip back into the abyss.

    And Martelly will be responsible for this.

    For some reason he killed all feeding programs immediately before Lavalas violence started. Is this part of a program?

  3. EVENS PAUL NECKLACED PEOPLE FOR ARISTIDE IN 1990-1991. IS HE ONCE AGAINT INVOLVED. THIS CRIME HAS BEEN CIMMITTED AND PAUL IS SILENT
    Haiti’s new prime minister is a familiar face

    By JACQUELINE CHARLES

    Miami HeraldFebruary 6, 2015

    PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti_ He is one one of the country’s most well-known politicians, but now newly installed Prime Minister Evans Paul is seen by many as little more than a figurehead for a government that appears to be drowning in a sea of political and economic troubles.

    On a political radio talk show on Radio Caraibes, a Haitian journalist recently called him a lifeless “rag doll,” demanding that he “shakes himself off and man up.”

    “I don’t sense there is a prime minister in the country,” Jean Monard Metellus told listeners before directing his comments to Paul, a friend and former radio host and playwright known by the nickname K-Plim (KP). “I don’t think your dream is to die with a line on your (resume) that simply said ‘Prime Minister.’ ”

    Paul, a veteran politician and democracy combatant, is at the height of power as Haiti’s latest – and President Michel Martelly’s third – head of government.

    But the de-facto way in which he got there – he was tapped by Martelly in December and parliament dissolved last month before giving its constitutionally required blessing – has friends and foe wondering: How long will he last? Is he capable of rising to his biggest political challenge yet – steering Haiti to credible long overdue elections?

    “I’ve always carried out difficult battles,” said Paul, 59, a former presidential candidate and longtime leading figure in Haiti’s fractious political opposition. “I’ve never had it easy; it has always been in the context of dictatorship, repression, beatings, hiding, aggression. I’ve always been a victim of these because I’m always fighting in a difficult landscape.”

    While election remains the priority, Paul says he wants to return some dignity to Haiti while making the public administration more responsive. Don’t expect him, however, to continue with former Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe’s Gouvenman An Lakay Ou town hall-like meetings that crisscrossed the country – and even made it to Miami.

    “It cost a lot of money and resembled more of a media show,” Paul told The Miami Herald. “The state doesn’t need to run its affairs in the public sphere. I would like to create something call ‘the Listening Government,’ a call-in system where someone can report something they don’t like or get information.”

    Whether Paul is allowed to accomplish this remains unclear. While he rose from humble beginnings to become mayor of Port-au-Prince in the 1990 election that brought former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power, his managerial skills are limited, say critics. Most of his tenure was spent in hiding, surviving attempts on his life after Aristide’s September 1991 ouster in a military coup.

    Today, Paul is a general without an army, leading a government that is more Martelly’s than his, in a nation crippled with problems – and protests.

    “He’s in a very precarious situation,” said Robert Fatton, a long-time Haiti expert. “I would have understood had he been able to get a certain number of people in the Cabinet but apart from (Social Affairs Minister) Victor Benoit and two or three others, this is essentially the same group of people…with a figurehead, Evans Paul as prime minister.”

    Last month, Haiti logged more than 80 demonstrations countrywide as striking public school teachers demanded higher and back pay; students staged demonstrations demanding teachers return to classrooms and others barricaded the gates of the agriculture ministry, refusing to let a newly-appointed minister take office.

    On Wednesday, anti-government demonstrators, many of them Aristide loyalists, took to the streets in a new round of street protests demanding Martelly’s resignation. The renewed protests came a day after unions representing bus drivers announced that a fuel strike, which had paralyzed the capital Monday, was being temporarily lifted because the government agreed to additional cuts in pump prices to bring them in line with the global drop in oil prices.

    But while the 32 cents and 21 cents reductions in gasoline and diesel, respectively, may help ease tensions, Haiti’s already deeply-indebted treasury can ill-afford the reductions, some economists say. More than three years of fuel subsidies have created a $400 million budget deficit at a time when government projects are stalled in the face of dwindling credits from Venezuela’s PetroCaribe discounted oil program.

    Paul said “it’s too early for people to start criticizing. They need to wait and see how I am going to govern.”

    “Everyone in the government is Haitian,” he said. “And I have the responsibility to coordinate a government, not a club of friends. The consenus is between the government and the opposition, and I am the bridge between the two.”

    One sign of Paul’s weak hand, and that Martelly may be a much more cleaver politician came as the new Cabinet was sworn in. Martelly had tried to appoint a discredited former high-ranking police officer to a top post. In 2000, Paul was among those who denounced corruption and drug trafficking in Haiti’s National Police under Aristide. Asked about the appointment, Paul pointed out that it wasn’t made. The appointment was rejected not because of Paul’s objections but because of international pressure.

    “I have a problem, too, when it is the (international community) that decides who is good and who isn’t good,” Paul said. “I think it’s a weakness of the Haitian state that needs to be resolved.”

    While Paul lacks a political base or a parliament to give him leverage over Martelly, observers say he does have at least one trump card: his resignation or firing would plunge Haiti deeper into crisis.

    “What we have now would look like child’s play,” Fatton said. “There would be a massive crisis because there is no one to replace him at this point. The confrontation would get nasty.”

    Long before he rose to prominence as Aristide’s campaign manger in the 1990 presidential election, Paul was a militant in the popular rebellion that helped overthrow the Duvalier dictatorship.

    After dictator Jean-Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier’s downfall, Paul became Haiti’s uncontested grass-roots leader, credited with all that occurred – good and bad – during the country’s tumultuous transition to democratic rule.

    “I spent six years of my life off and on in hiding,” said Paul, who with former Senator Turneb Delpe recruited the former priest as a candidate for the National Front for Change and Democracy.

    He and Aristide would soon part ways. In February 2004, Paul was a key figure in Aristide’s second presidential ouster. His insistence on Aristide’s departure even after the latter accepted to designate a prime minister from the opposition to break a political stalemate, would lead to a breakdown of the negotiations being brokered by the Caribbean Community, and eventually opened the way for Aristide’s ouster. Two years later, he unsuccessfully ran for president.

    Paul says his history as a change agent is what gives him legitimacy today to help lead Haiti out of its current crisis.

    “I’ve chosen another step in the engagement I’ve always had where I always posed the problems. Today, I’ve put myself in a position where I can resolve the problems,” he said.

    Still, as a member of the presidential commission that called for Lamothe’s removal as part of a series of recommendations to calm Haiti’s worsening political tensions triggered by repeatedly delayed parliamentary and local elections, Paul has come under criticism for going against his own recommendations. The report called for a consensus prime minister who emerged out of negotiations between Martelly and the opposition.

    Delpe, the former political ally who today is pushing for Martelly’s removal and for Haiti to be run by a transition government, said while he’s baffled by Paul’s decision to share power with the president, he isn’t surprised.

    “What’s happening here, it has happened before and it will have the same results,” said Delpe, a member of the Patriotic Movement of the Democratic Opposition, or (MOPOD, coalition.

    In 1999, when then-President Rene Preval found himself ruling by decree after dissolving parliament, Paul agreed to share power with Preval. The political accord didn’t last and a crisis soon ensued after the contested May 2000 legislative and local elections. Those elections eventually led to Aristide’s 2004 ouster.

    “For me, Evans should have learned from the experience he had with Preval,” Delpe said. “These things aren’t going to take the country anywhere, especially with a guy like Martelly who is at the head of a country but doesn’t respect anyone or any institutions.”

    Delpe notes that as an early member of MOPOD before he left to negotiate a political agreement with Martelly, Paul coined the slogan, “Deliver or Desist.”

    “He understood then that Martelly had to resign,” Delpe said.

    Paul said his old friend is entitled to his opinion.

    “Delpe has chosen the streets while I’ve chosen to try and bring the streets to the negotiating table,” he said. “All of the demands they had in the streets, all of them were in the presidential commission’s report and they all make up the government’s program today. Can the streets solve the problem? I think the streets can agitate the problems and the State resolves the problems.

    “If Martelly has the courage to say, ‘There are things I can’t do, come help me do them,’ I believe we need to have the grand courage to come help him with all humility,” he said.

    AT A GLANCE BOX INFO:

    Evans Paul

    Born: Port-au-Prince on Nov. 26, 1955.

    Read more here: http://www.bellinghamherald.com/2015/02/06/4119315/haitis-new-prime-minister-is-a.html#storylink=cpy

  4. I read this and am stunned at the brazen murders in the open. Is that the area where the Presidential Palace once stood?
    Thank GOD that I am in a society that would fight to save the life of another, and be grateful that I live in a society that is nothing like that one in the video where that very thing would mean death for the savior as well.

    There in Haiti, in a time of need, most are alone, even in the middle of a crowd

  5. This Aristide/Lavalas violence is more common that most appreciate. Only someone with a camera exposed the world the truth.

  6. Perhaps the biggest indication of the deeper problems which Haiti faces is that twenty people stood by while the second victim was still very much alive and could have been saved; yet all present stood by and snapped cell phone pictures and videos. No one made ANY attempts to smother the flames. This is both a metaphor for the political circus which is politique de Haiti( a refusal by any opposition to ever recognize any attempt at a democratic process), and a sad reflection of Haitian society which in this video looks like something akin to ISIS in the Middle East.

    With a tolerance on street level of this type of behavior towards people who probably did no more than drive a Tap Tap during the Petro protest, perhaps Haiti deserves whatever it gets. Those of us who have worked very hard for a better Haiti can’t fight this level of opposition; it is so evil it is not of this earth.

    1. I feel the same as Mirasol, but the sad reality of Lavalas murders of this type is that if anyone stepped in to help the victims, they too would have been killed.

Comments are closed.