There are two stories here about the same subject published on the same date. Which story do you suppose most Americans heard? Which story has the most credence? Which story do you suppose the United Nations wishes never was printed? You know I don't have to suggest any answers to these questions but if you haven't figured them out for yourself by now...wake the h--- up! ~ Norman E. HoobenDont't miss the video at the bottom of this page...this is your tax dollars at work!
Story # 1
Bill Clinton tours ravaged Haiti areas
They discussed labor-intensive rehabilitation projects and providing basic services to communities in the Artibonite Valley.
The two men also visited a flood-prevention project on the La Quinte River, which drenched the city last year, and an emergency hospital that has temporarily replaced one destroyed by hurricanes.
Clinton, who met Monday night with Preval and Prime Minister Pierre Louis, also was to tour a garbage recycling project in the poor suburb of Carrefour Feuilles in the capital, Port-au-Prince.
He also was to to meet with members of Parliament, and Wednesday talk with members of the private sector, international and national non-governmental organizations and civil society groups.
U.N. spokeswoman Michele Montas said Clinton would "also focus on how to ensure that the United Nations, civil society and the donor community align their activities with the governments's recovery plan, as well as with each other."
Haiti was hit by four back-to-back tropical storms last year that killed nearly 800 people and affected an estimated 1 million people, the U.N. release said.linton tours ravaged Haiti areas
Bill Clinton arrived in Port au Prince on Monday to assume his post as the new special UN Envoy to Haiti amid much fanfare in the press. Jonathan Katz of the Associated Press (AP) wrote, "Bill Clinton aims to refocus international attention on this Caribbean country's deep economic problems and environmental decay during his first visit as the United Nations' special envoy to Haiti."Clinton stated at UN headquarters in New York prior to his departure, "Haiti, notwithstanding the total devastation wreaked by the four storms last year, has the best chance to escape the darker aspects of its history in the 35 years that I have been going there." Clinton continued, "[Haiti is safer today] because of the work of the United Nations peacekeeping and police forces. No effort like that is without controversy and incident, but they have basically done a good job. I was there in the streets of Cite Soleil. I saw the children walking without fear."
The ‘controversy and incident' referred to by Mr. Clinton stems from accusations of UN involvement in human rights abuses and their oversight of the Haitian police as the force committed summary executions and widespread false arrests following Aristide's ouster in 2004. More importantly, it may betray some recognition on Clinton's part that the day he chose for his debut in Haiti was also the fourth anniversary of what is alleged to be a massacre committed by UN forces in the teaming seaside slum of Cite Soleil.
On July 6, 2005 the residents of Cite Soleil were the objects of a full military assault by UN forces. It resulted in over 22,000 rounds being fired in a raid on the pro-Aristide slum ordered by Brazilian General Heleno Ribera. By the time the gun smoke cleared it revealed a nightmare of blood and screams as people bled to death in close-knit tin roof houses, small alleys and narrow roadways in Cite Soleil.
"For many of them, I knew I couldn't save them so I filmed their last moments of life. For others I filmed their violent death after the U.N. shot up Cite Soleil on July 6, 2005," says Haitian journalist Jean Ristil. He was the only videographer to capture the full impact and terror of the UN raid that fateful day. One example is when Ristil films a headshot victim, Leon Chery, as he bleeds to death on camera. Chery holds his bloody jaw that was separated from his head by a single high-powered gunshot. As Chery dies on camera Jean Ristil comments that it was "casque bleu" or blue helmets that shot him.
The most terrifying images captured by Ristil on July 6, 2005 were those of a family killed in their home. The sole survivor, a tearful father, sits in a chair over the lifeless bodies of his wife and two infant sons lying on the floor. Fredi Romulus explains in detail how UN troops lobbed a red smoke grenade into his house and everyone panicked. He sobbed deeply as he expressed his grief over leaving the house first and turning to see UN soldiers fire into the doorway towards his wife and children. Sonia Romulus was holding her one year-old son Nelson when the UN bullet passed through his small body killing both of them instantly. A separate head shot killed four year-old Stanley Romulus, Nelson's older brother.
Ribera ordered the raid after weeks of intense pressure from Haiti's wealthy elite. In the end he agreed with the likes of Andy Apaid over what they commonly referred to as ‘Bandits in Cite Soleil' and the necessity of eliminating them by force. Apaid was the founder of the Group 184 that was backed by the Haiti Democracy Project (HDP) in Washington D.C. that provided the veneer of mass appeal to the second coup against Aristide in Feb. 2004. Apaid is also cited in several human right reports for having funded gangs in Cite Soleil to attack Aristide supporters. And finally, Mr. Apaid is also an owner of large industrial tracks in Haiti where he builds factories to create partnerships with U.S. and Canadian manufacturers. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently visited one of Apaid's factories in an effort to push the Hope II act in the U.S. Congress that would allow for tax breaks for U.S. apparel manufacturers doing business in Haiti.
The primary U.N. military target on July 6, 2005 was the leader of an armed resistance movement to police and U.N. control of Cite Soleil. Emmanuel Wilmer, a.k.a. Dred Wilme, decided to pick up a gun and resist following regular attacks on the community by paramilitary forces, trigger-happy Haitian police, and finally U.N. military raids. For Wilmer and the community it became clear that the UN was backing the violence of Aristide's opposition and the actions of the Haitian police as they indiscriminately shot at suspected Lavalas supporters in their homes and during peaceful demonstrations. The UN also coordinated huge dragnets with the Haitian police resulting in wholesale arrests of suspected ‘bandits.' This would quickly overwhelm the already nightmarish prison system in Haiti even as the Canadian government claimed responsibility for training the police and reforming the prisons. The killings and prolonged detention of Lavalas political opponents by the Latorture regime continued and even increased during 2005-2006.
Katz would write of Clinton's arrival in the Associated Press, "Still, Clinton remains widely popular - especially among the mostly poor supporters of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide who are old enough to remember Clinton's help in restoring Aristide to power in 1994 after a coup."
Rene Civil of the Lavalas Mobilization Commission does not share Katz's assessment. The commission leaders and the membership of Lavalas embody Katz's description of "mostly poor supporters of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide." It was exactly this movement that recently waged a successful boycott campaign against UN -sponsored Senate elections after Lavalas was barred from participating.
Contact: HIP@teledyol.net
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