DANGEROUS THREAT TO MARTELLY GOVERNMENT AS LAVALAS AGITATORS WORK TO CREATE CHAOTIC TEACHERS’ STRIKE AND STUDENT PROTEST-Added COMMENTARY By Haitian-Truth

WW4report.com

Haitian public school teachers started an open-ended strike on Jan. 22 around demands for higher salaries, payment of back pay, access to public credit programs and a regularization of job categories. After Jan. 22-23 talks with the national education minister, Vanneur Pierre, and others, a coalition of teachers’ unions—including the National Confederation of Educators of Haiti (CNEH) and the National Federation of Education and Culture Workers (FENATEC)—agreed to suspend the strike and resume classes on Jan. 27 in exchange for raises ranging from 29% to 57%, depending on the job category, to go into effect in April. Negotiations will continue on other issues.

One union, the National Union of Haitian Teachers (UNNOH), rejected the agreement, which UNNOH coordinator Josué Mérilien denounced as a “plot.” The union is calling for a base pay of 50,000 gourdes (about US$ 1,210) a month. Some teachers stayed off the job in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 27 and 28, and students from the capital’s Toussaint Louverture and Daniel Fignolé high schools took to the streets. In Carrefour, on the southwest outskirts of Port-au-Prince, students from the Henri Christophe high school began a march on Jan. 27 to the National Education and Professional Training Ministry (MENFP) in the center of Port-au-Prince. Hundreds of students and teachers joined the march; one Toussaint Louverture student, Jean Wisler Joseph, was arrested on a vandalism charge. Demonstrations continued on Jan. 28, with unidentified people hurling rocks at school buildings; some car windshields were smashed. There were also demonstrations in Petit-Goâve (West department) and Gonaïves (Artibonite department), where police responded with tear gas to rock-throwing students on Jan. 29. (Haïti Libre, Jan. 25; AlterPresse, Jan. 27, Jan. 28, Jan. 29)

Acting Port-au-Prince government commissioner Kherson Darius Charles, the chief prosecutor for the capital, brought charges against UNNOH coordindator Mérilien on Jan. 29 for “disturbances of public security, rock throwing and association with wrongdoers.” A hearing was set for Jan. 30 but ended abruptly because of a dispute between Charles and the union leader’s legal team. Mérilien left the courtroom and headed to the nearby Superior Teachers’ College (ENS), part of the State University of Haiti (UEH). Teachers and students joined Mérilien as he walked, turning the event into a solidarity demonstration. (AlterPresse, Jan. 30)

In related news, tensions over the minimum wage for the country’s 30,000 garment assembly workers continue. On Jan. 20 managers from the One World Apparel S.A. garment assembly plant in the north of Port-au-Prince failed to attend a scheduled meeting at the local office of the Ministry of Social Affairs and Labor (MAST) to discuss the firing of six workers on Jan. 8. The fired workers are all on the executive committee of the Textile and Garment Workers Union (SOTA), a member union in the Collective of Textile Union Organizations (KOSIT), the labor alliance that led militant protests by apparel workers on Dec. 10 and 11 to demand a daily minimum wage of 500 gourdes (about US$12.10). Management claims the six unionists were responsible for acts of vandalism at the plant on Dec. 11.

MAST officials rescheduled the meeting for Jan. 29, apparently without taking any action against the One World Apparel managers for their failure to appear. Jude Pierre, one of the fired workers, said MAST officials seemed to be in complicity with the owners, while the Patriotic Democratic Popular Movement (MPDP), a coalition of 30 groups, called on the ministry to stop being “an instrument of the bosses.” (MPDP statement, Jan. 20; AlterPresse, Jan. 27)

The capital’s garment assembly companies have now fired at least 35 workers for their participation in the protests, KOSIT spokespeople said at a Jan. 28 press conference. The plant owners say they have a video showing vandalism by the protesters, but the unionists dismissed this as a “set-up” to justify repression of union activities. Meanwhile, there have been no negotiations on the minimum wage for piece-rate workers—the majority of employees in the assembly sector—and the government has yet to act on the recommendation of the tripartite Higher Council on Wages (CSS) that the minimum wage be set at 225 gourdes (about US$5.47) a day. KOSIT is demanding that the CSS renegotiate the recommendation. KOSIT spokespeople also announced that the Autonomous Confederation of Haitian Workers (CATH) has been expelled from the alliance because of what the unionists called the “treason” of CATH spokesperson Fignolé St. Cyr, who is one of the three labor representatives on the CCS. He reportedly backed the council’s 225 gourde recommendation. (KOSIT press release, Jan. 28)

From Weekly News Update on the Americas, February 2.

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COMMENT: HAITIAN-TRUTH.ORG

Josué Mérilien is a Lavalas agitator, coordinating his actions with Moise Jean-Charles, Arnel Belizaire, Newton St. Jean and a host of other.

The plan by Security chief Delva, to arrest Josué Mérilien was a part of the game. Had Delva, in his usual heavy-handed manner, arrested Josué Mérilien the Martelly government would really be in trouble. This would have been the action that ignited the powder keg.

Delva is a loose cannon that should be controlled. He should be directed, in his actions. He should not be allowed to take a personal initiative in cases that could well undermine the government.

His ego is much too big for his responsibility.

The fact that some teachers have not been paid for a couple of years is a scandal.

To set a simple figure for a wage is not that simple. Some are more qualified than others. Some have little or no real teacher’s qualifications.

The funny thing is that Josué Mérilien never mentioned all of these things under Aristide or Preval. We don’t know about Aristide, but Rene Preval paid him to stop a similar action.

Education is a very good “pressure point” to use. It influences the life of each and every family in Haiti.

Unfortunately, the Martelly/Lamothe team is not making real progress to keep the President’s promise of a free education for all Haitian children.

Much of the funding, that should be focused upon education, has been removed from the control of the Minister of Education. This will be a major factor in the opposition thrust against the government as they demand an accounting for the massive pool of funding.

If the education crisis is not addressed effectively it will result in an ever-expanding and continuous series of student manifestations, against the Martelly government. Many of those participating will not be students. Many uninvolved people will use the students as a vehicle, against the government, and then abandon this vehicle as they did in the days before Aristide’s departure.

Andy Apaid, and his Group 184, used the students and then abandoned them when victory was sure.

Time for a wake-up call.

Prime Minister Lamothe had better spend more of his time, focused on the real problems and stop adding Advantage Miles to his airline account. The Haitian Crisis will be settled in Port-au-Prince, not the Central African Republic.

The cry EDUCATION NOT CARNIVAL could well become the Bumper Sticker of tomorrow, the cry that unites disparate groups behind the opposition against Michel Martelly’s team.

The result will be an ongoing chaos for the remainder of Michel Martelly’s presidency and a backward slide for the nation.

The game has already started in Gonaives with manifestations yesterday in which the mayor’s car was burned. Carnival may see major violence and disruption.

Tomorrow Arnel Belizair will move some 60 M-14 assault rifles from Azua, in the Dominican Republic, to Haiti. Some members of the Dominican army are said to be involved. Is the Dominican government behind this?

The Martelly/Lamothe team must wake up and smell the roses.

EDUCATION – EDUCATION- EDUCATION is the formula for government survival and also the formula for national success.

Knowing what I know, I am not optimistic.

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1 thought on “DANGEROUS THREAT TO MARTELLY GOVERNMENT AS LAVALAS AGITATORS WORK TO CREATE CHAOTIC TEACHERS’ STRIKE AND STUDENT PROTEST-Added COMMENTARY By Haitian-Truth

  1. Lamothe has a growing scandal with education and a rumored $30,000,000 missing. He has an American named Allison trying to coordinate things. The lid will blow off if anyone really looks towards these matters.

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