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“Fanmi Lavalas Political Organization continues to stand firmly with the Haitian people to ‘chavire chodyè a (overturn the cauldron).’ No cosmetic solution will bring an effective and lasting solution to the crisis in which we are plunged. This system has run its course. It cannot be patched up. It must be changed.”
In the months since the statement was released, Haiti’s population has been in the streets without let up, risking their lives each and every day as they attempt to oust the Moise-Ceant government. The Petro Caribe scandal, in which some $4.2 billion worth of funds made available through a Venezuelan government program and targeted for infrastructure and social services, was pocketed by Haitian government officials and their business cronies, has proven to be the tipping point—just like the rise in fuel prices last July that led to an earlier massive rebellion.
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This February marked the 15th anniversary of the 2004 coup d’état that ousted the democratically-elected government of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. In these fifteen years, the Haitian popular movement has refused to be silenced, in spite of the kidnapping and forced exile of President Aristide and his wife and colleague, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, a subsequent UN military occupation, continuous and deadly repression against peaceful protestors, and a rigged electoral system. In 2015 and 2016, a series of stolen elections financed by the U.S. government—called an “electoral coup” by Fanmi Lavalas—resulted in the installation of Jovenel Moise, who is now desperately hanging on to power in the face of overwhelming opposition. While Fanmi Lavalas and other opposition parties produced detailed evidence of fraud and voter suppression, the U.S. State Department countered by calling the election “free and fair.”
The Moise government has most recently shown how beholden it is to the Trump regime by voting with the U.S. to recognize Guaido’s self-proclaimed government in Venezuela. The same State Department that has attempted to convince Haitians that a stolen election = democracy is currently railing against Venezuela’s legitimate elected government and attempting to lay the groundwork for yet another coup in the Americas. What hypocrisy.
The consequences of Haiti’s electoral coup in 2016 can be seen today in the dramatic footage of Haitians standing up to heavily armed police, carrying the bodies of their dead relatives, and turning their grief into more determined resistance. Denied free and fair elections, Haitians are now voting in the streets.
It was also revealed that seven heavily armed U.S. mercenaries had been arrested in Haiti while, in their words, “working for the government.” What were they doing there? And why were they whisked out of the country so quickly with no consequence? What was their relationship to the Haitian government and to its repressive actions? Clearly, this is only the tip of the iceberg.
From mainstream news media, we have been subjected to the usual racialized commentary about Haiti—“mobs in the streets,” “police outgunned,” “looters,” “riots.” And from far too many progressives, there has been complete silence. What is acknowledged as revolutionary social movement in other areas of the world is somehow dismissed as chaos in Haiti. Yet what we are seeing today in Haiti is the latest chapter in an unending struggle for democracy, dignity and justice.
In this time of rebellion, crisis and repression, we send our support to the people of Haiti, to the grassroots movement, and to the people’s party, Fanmi Lavalas. It is a time for our voices to be heard, for the silence around Haiti to be broken, and for a dramatic increase in solidarity—something that should be on all of our agenda.
This article was originally published in the San Francisco Bay View and was distributed by the NNPA Newswire.