Archive for June 18th, 2008




Week 2 Blog 2

One unified demand: Withdraw Brazilian and all foreign occupation troops from Haiti!
 
Demonstrators in many Brazilian cities and San Francisco denounced Brazil’s brutal 4-year military occupation of Haiti — on the occasion of the May 28th visit to Haiti by Brazilian President Luiz Lula da Silva, marking the 4th anniversary of the arrival of Brazilian U.N. troops in Haiti. Organized labor played a key role in coordinating the actions in Brazil.
 
In Mexico City on May 30th, a high-level Mexican labor delegation, responding to the call of their colleagues in Brazil, met at the Brazilian embassy to demand withdrawal of Brazil’s troops from Haiti and respect for Haitian sovereignty.
 
In Brazil, the National Campaign for Brazilian Troops Out of Haiti organized actions as part of the May 28th national day of struggle by the CUT trade union federation, seeking a 40-hour workweek. The banner “Brazilian Soldiers Out of Haiti” flew at rallies and marches in Sao Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Recife, Salvador and state capitals throughout Brazil. Speakers connected the money squandered on the Haiti occupation, with the pressing but unmet needs of people back home in Brazil.
 
Leading forces in the Troops-Out-of-Haiti campaign include the Unified Black Movement (MNU) and Black Youth Network, along with significant elements of Lula’s own Workers Party (PT), the Landless Peasants Movement (MST), and the CUT labor federation. They collected some 6,000 petition signatures, to be presented to President Lula by PT Federal Deputy Fernando Ferro.

 
The San Francisco rally, called by Haiti Action Committee with participation by the anti-war group ANSWER, San Francisco Labor Council, Global Women’s Strike and Gabriela Network, denounced the UN mission in Haiti as having been installed, under Brazilian command, to legitimize the 2004 coup against the democratically-elected government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
 
UN forces arrived in Haiti as a proxy force, 3 months after US troops kidnapped President Jean-Bertrand Aristide on Feb. 29, 2004 and installed a coup regime. In the aftermath of the coup, more than 8,000 Aristide supporters were killed and thousands more ‘disappeared’, exiled or thrown into prison, where most  remain locked up to this day. The entire government apparatus, down to the village level, was ‘cleansed’ of Aristide supporters during the coup.

Brazil commands the 9,000-strong UN ‘peacekeeping’ force in Haiti, which committed massacres in poor working-class neighborhoods on July 6, 2005, on December 22, 2006, February 2007 and many other occasions — attacking the civilians who are the base of support for President Aristide and his widely popular Lavalas political movement. Scores of women, children and men were killed in these massive, day-long raids involving as many as 400 troops, tanks and helicopter gunships. UN troops have also been caught committing rapes, sexual abuse of children and running prostitution rings in the poor neighborhoods. The anger of Brazilian unionists and peace activists was heightened when it was announced that more than 464 million Reais (US$290 million) have been spent over the past four years — funds desperately needed for people’s needs in Brazil — to attack the sovereignty of the Haitian people.
 
Nevertheless, Brazil is feeling growing pressure to withdraw its troops. In Mexico City on May 30th, a delegation of Mexican trade unionists met to dialogue with officials at the Brazilian Embassy in Mexico City, joining their Brazilian comrades in calling for Brazil’s military to leave Haiti now. The delegation included Salome Herber Aguilar, a leader of the Miners and Metal Workers Union (SNT-MMSRM ); Nivardo Rodriguez Morales and Fernando Mendoza, leaders of Section 22 of the SNTE-CNTE; and Armando Pasos Cabrera, from SITUAM. Like the Brazilians, they presented an Open Letter to President Lula raising the Troops Out Now demand.
 

www.haitiaction.net

This article is great news for the Haitians but the people will still be struggeling to fully take back and control Haitian government. Haiti is an extremley poor country and in turn struggles constantly to stay alive and in control. Brazil has not yet given complete control back to the Haitian people and it will take time to give up power but this is taking a step in the right direction for the country of Haiti. This could lead to the ever growing problem of food shortage and government choas. By withdrawling Brazilian troops this can be positive and negative. Stay tunned for more information!

1 comment June 18, 2008

Week 2 Blog 1

the past few months has devastated impoverished Haiti, the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere. Angry crowds smashed shop windows and rampaged through the streets in several Haitian cities in April, leaving six people dead and prompting the resignation of the Caribbean nation’s prime minister.International aid groups and foreign governments rushed in new shipments of emergency aid, and Haitian President Rene Preval quickly announced subsidies to ease prices on staples such as rice and beans, which have doubled in the past year.In a country where about 80 percent of the 9 million residents already were struggling to survive on $2 a day before the price hikes hit, the situation has gone from bad to dire. The main problem is instability,” said Sophie Perez, head of programs in Haiti for Atlanta-based CARE USA, an international aid group. “Without stability and security, there will be no investments by foreign firms, and aid groups will find it difficult to work in Haiti.” The steep rise in food prices has prompted several aid groups and the Haitian government to call for renewed efforts to bolster Haiti’s own food production. But the challenges are severe. Erosion and soil exhaustion are widespread, with much of the island stripped of vegetation by charcoal merchants who supply the poor with the only fuel they can afford. Still, the countryside is filled with small farmers. Haiti’s historical breadbasket is centered on the Artibonite River valley, a few hours north of the capital, where rich soil and adequate water supplies have supported generations of farmers.

Today rice farmers still tend their plots but say they can’t afford to raise more than they need for personal use. “I used to work 50 plots of rice, but now I only raise enough to feed my own family,” said Dieu Maitre Guillaume, 49, who lives with his extended family in two ramshackle huts beside the valley’s main highway. “The price of a bag of fertilizer was 250 gourdes [about $6.50] a few years ago, and now it is 2,500 gourdes [about $65]. That’s killing us.”

www.ajc.com

I think throughout this summer I will continuously be informing everyone with the ever growing issue of starvation and poverty in Haiti. This article is just another example of how Haiti struggles on a day to day basis with food.  I truly do not know how to fix the problem of Haiti’s food shortages. We can continue to give the Haitian people aid but how long can anyone do that for. Haiti’s land is continuously being destroyed by either rain or fire. People are dying at an alarming rate but how much can any do without sustainability. The government and the people of Haiti are fed up with being hungry. They want to experience what it is like to be full again. Rising food prices and fuel costs are helping add to the every growing death tolls. The earth is only so big and only has so many resources if we deplete our resources and stop renewing them many other countries with have the same problem as the Haitians. I do not know how to cure this problem, but it is a problem that we cannot ignore.

 

 

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