*Video- Haiti: Police clashed with some of the thousands of backers of
former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide who protested against the
government led by Michel Martelly **in Port-au-Prince and in other cities**.
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*http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ysWaexMDbU*
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Aristide supporters protest in Haiti

Thousands mark anniversary of ex-president's ousting in 1991, with some
calling for current president to resign


   - Associated Press in Port-au-Prince
   - theguardian.com <http://www.theguardian.com/>, Tuesday 1 October 2013
   03.50 EDT

[image: Port-au-Prince protest]
A child adds a tyre to a burning barricade in Port-au-Prince. Photograph:
Jean Jacques Augustin/EPA

Riot police in Haiti <http://www.theguardian.com/world/haiti> have broken
up an anti-government demonstration by thousands of people to mark the
anniversary of the ousting in 1991 of the former president Jean-Bertrand
Aristide.

A handful of protesters responded by setting ablaze barricades that blocked
a major thoroughfare through the heart of downtown Port-au-Prince.

Critics of the current president, Michel Martelly, gathered under a heavy
police presence on Monday morning and marched through the capital's
shanties, all Aristide strongholds. Some demonstrators demanded that
Martelly resign because of corruption allegations, while others protested
over the absence of elections. Riot police fired teargas at the
demonstrators after they left the approved route.

Haiti was supposed to have held legislative and local elections two years
ago, but infighting among different branches of the government has delayed
the vote. Martelly has said elections will be held this year, but that
looks unlikely.

Aristide's political party, the Lavalas Family, has said it plans to run,
and its popularity could pose a formidable challenge to Martelly and his
allies. Thousands of people shadowed Aristide in May as he toured the
capital following a court hearingin one of the biggest rallies in
Port-au-Prince this year.

*Popular Forum:
Roadmap Proposed for a Provisional Government*

*Par Yves Pierre-Louis
 *

[image: ...]















On Sep. 30, the 22ndanniversary of the 1991 coup d’état against President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, tens of thousands of demonstrators poured into the
streets of Port-au-Prince and Cap Haïtien to demand two things: “Martelly
must go! MINUSTAH must go!”

            Knowing this agenda, the day before over 100 delegates
representing about two dozen different popular organizations from all of
Haiti’s ten departments gathered at the Fany Villa Reception Center in
Port-au-Prince to reflect on and debate a proposal on how to form a
provisional government which could lead the country to free, fair, and
sovereign elections after Martelly’s departure from power, which all of the
delegates felt would be coming in the days ahead, one way or another.

            The proposal was made by the Kòwòdinasyon Desalin or Dessalines
Coordination (KOD), a new formation headed by several prominent veterans of
Haiti’s democratic struggle over the past 25 years.

            “We are sure that the U.S. Embassy has made its plans for what
to do after the Haitian people have chased Martelly and [Prime Minister
Laurent] Lamothe from power,” said one KOD leader, Yves Pierre-Louis, who
is also*Haïti Liberté*’s Port-au Prince Bureau Chief. “The Haitian people
also have to work out their plans so that Washington, Paris, and Ottawa
don’t simply impose another puppet on Haiti, as they have done so often
over the past two decades.”

            The essence of KOD’s proposal is the formation of a 13 member
Council of State which would lead the country with a judge drawn from
Haiti’s Supreme Court. The Council of State’s members would be drawn from
key sectors of Haitian society: peasant organizations, popular
organizations, political parties, non-aligned parties, women’s
organizations, unions, the business sector, vodou, Protestant, and Catholic
sectors, students, young people, and civil society.

            “The Council of State would sit down with the Supreme Court
judge to find a democratic formula to name a government,” the KOD proposal
reads. “That government would put in place a democratic Provisional
Electoral Council which would hold a general election in the country for
all the empty posts in a time frame of no more than six months.”

            KOD proposed that Haiti should accept no international
financing for those elections which comes with any strings attached. “We
would not refuse” any solidarity offered from foreign nations, “but they
cannot meddle in Haiti’s internal affairs,” the proposal reads. “They can
give their support, but without any conditions.”

            In the same vein, the proposal calls on the 9,000 occupation
troops of the UN Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH) to leave the country
immediately. “The last MINUSTAH soldier should leave the country no later
than May 2014, just as [a Haitian] Senate resolution [passed in May]
demands,” said the proposal.

            KOD works with a host of popular organizations which were also
instrumental in organizing the Popular Forum such as the National Movement
for Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity of Haitians (MOLEGHAF), the Patriotic
Force for Respect of the Constitution (FOPARK), the National Popular
Platform (PNP), the Movement for the Survival of Haitian Society (MOSSOH),
the Organization of Young Progressives of Avenue Pouplar (OJPAP),
Organization for National Progress (OPNA), the Great Space Reflection for
Social Integration (GERES), the Awakened Militants for Another Haiti (MRH),
and the Popular Assembly for Change in La Saline (RPCS).

            Many organizations from Haiti’s provinces also sent delegates
to the Forum, including groups like the Organization of Young Patriots for
the Development of Baradères (OPDB), the League of Progressive Youth from
Grande Rivière du Nord, Pòt la from the Artibonite, and the Revolutionary
Movement for the Development of the North West (MRDNO), and OPDSIC from the
Grande Anse.

            There were also international delegates who attended from the
Guadeloupe Haiti Tour Committee and the International Support Haiti Network
in the United States, and from Travayè e Péyizan (Workers and Peasants)
organization in Guadeloupe. Messages of solidarity were also sent from
unions and parties in Brazil and Argentina.

            The meeting was chaired by two other KOD leaders, Oxygène David
and Pierre Michaël, who kept the speeches moving at an efficient clip.
FOPARK’s Biwon Odigé, whose organization initiated the call for a massive
march on Sep. 30, also shared the podium.

            “Overall, the delegates welcomed and received well KOD’s
proposal which was presented at the beginning of the day,” said another KOD
leader, Mario Joseph, one of Haiti’s most prominent human rights lawyers,
at an Oct. 1 press conference at the Office of International Lawyers (BAI).
“The delegates divided themselves into eight workshops which met for almost
two hours to analyze the proposal. Afterwards, each workshop presented a
summary of the delegates’ reflections on how to reinforce and enrich the
proposal. In the days ahead, a committee of synthesis will review the
reports of each workshop to draw up a final resolution. All popular
organizations who approve the final resolution can sign it, even if there
are some who were not able to participate in the Sep. 29 Popular Forum.”

            Lawyer André Michel, who has been severely persecuted for
bringing a corruption lawsuit against the Martelly government, also
attended the Forum, as did outspoken Sen. Moïse Jean-Charles, who
electrified the room with his address.

            “Today we will try, even if we have only a little time, to
bring a little light to the battle we are leading as political militants,”
said Sen. Moïse. “We are clear about it: the international community has an
agenda for Haiti. In 1990, we disrupted their plans and elected our own
government. Seven months later, they carried out a bloody coup d’état.
Since then, it is they who have imposed what they want in Haiti. This
cannot continue. They imposed President Martelly on us. They imposed
Laurent Lamothe on us.... It is we, the Haitian people, who have to take
our destiny in hand. And that is what we are beginning to do here today.”
            In concluding its proposal, KOD wrote that the Martelly
administration along with the embassies of Washington, Paris, and Ottawa
“will say that what we propose is not legal, is not acceptable.... But when
the imperialists make a coup or an illegal election, even when the people
reject it, they don’t care... What we propose is more democratic, more
authentic, more honest and more sovereign than any of the maneuvers the
imperialists have carried out in Haiti. It is time for the Haitian people
to stop taking orders from the colonists. We have to construct our own
democracy, because we are a nation, not a colony. We are our own masters.”
http://haiti-liberte.com/archives/volume7-12/Popular%20Forum.asp

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