15+ Years of US's Proxy Occupation of Haiti: US Sponsored Coup d’Etat. The Destabilization of Haiti

Bawon Samedi

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Good bye Coli(2014-2020)
I been discussing Haitian politics A LOT lately with another good Coli poster(not gonna name his name). When it comes to resisting USA/Core group occupation here is what I think Haiti should do. Hate or love Papa Doc but that demon STUDIED Haitian history which sadly is filled with coups. Which was why is govt was near impossible to take down.

Anyway's here is what I believe Haiti should do post-PHTK party should do.


  1. This one I feel is the most important. Which ever opposition party(lets say Lavalas for example) controls Haiti after ousting the PHTK should take note from Hugo Chavez and hell the ANC party of South Africa. They need to POLITICALLY BURY all the western backed parties of Haiti. There is a reason why right-ring parties in Venezuela hardly if at all exist. There is a reason why there are no non-Black majority parties in South Africa. This is what Hugo Chaves did and it worked. Haiti needs to become a one party state similar to Cuba, Vietnam, China, Tanzania and even Angola. I remember an Haitian poster even saying Haitians are an authoritarian people as long as their is stability. And I agree. Politically bury any western backed parties and become a one party state.
  2. Next I would ARREST all members of the PHTK party for their crimes against Haiti. But also the Lebanese/Syrian mafia of Haiti who has been controlling the economy/business of Haiti. Jail or exile ALL of them. If they stay shyt will just remain the same.
  3. Now... This step is VERY important. Probably the most vital one especially if you study Haitian political history. Do what Hugo Chaves and even Papa Doc do. The next Haitian president needs to forcibly purge the Haitian police and military. Instead of making the same mistake that Aristide did, the new Haitian leader should instead fill the police and military with hardcore Lavalas supporters. Again, this is what Hugo did which is why the Venezuelan military is NOT abandoning Maduro. This is what Papa Doc did which is why his govt was difficult to overthrow.
  4. Next... I would have those Haitian soldiers trained to perfection by Cuban special op forces. I would even have the Venezuelan military train them too. To prevent another Aristide situation, I would have wherever the president stays not just guarded by those newly trained Haitian soldiers but Cuban commandos like with Maduro in Venezuela. So yea... If the USA tries to invade they're gonna get a nasty knee to the face even if they win.
  5. I would deploy soldiers to the Dominican Republic border. Why? We don't want another 2004 with western backed Haitian militias coming in and out of the DR to chaos anarchy in Haiti.
  6. Next I would form an anti-USA Latin American alliance with both Cuba and Venezuela and maybe even Bolivia. With USA losing their strategic geo-political region with Haiti things will be difficult for them imo.
  7. Expel all UN forces and NGO forcibly.
  8. Strip foreigners of illegal land they own.
  9. Secure all the gold mines and other valuable resources from western companies.
  10. Form relationship with China for economic growth and infrastructure development. Bush Taiwan as they are basically on burrowed time. Heck form relations to Russia for weapons.
  11. The biggest issue would be sanctions and even invasion.

Anyways @loyola llothta I don't know if you agree.
 

loyola llothta

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Ghosts of Massacre in Haiti Haunt Bolsonaro Government Generals

Members of the controversial peacekeeping mission in the Caribbean country now hold strategic offices in Brasília
Leonardo Fernandes



March 19, 2019 12:13 PM
46697119244_0b2d3f9472_z.jpg


Working abroad would have created a “caste” within the Brazilian Armed Forces, according to experts / Hector Retamal/AFP

In the early morning of July 6, 2005, troops of the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), commanded by the Brazilian army, conducted a “pacification” operation in the largest slum in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince, known as Cité Soleil. According to witnesses, some 300 heavily armed men invaded the neighborhood and murdered 63 people, leaving another 30 wounded.

At the time, the commander of the MINUSTAH was the Brazilian general Augusto Heleno, today the chief minister of the Institutional Security Cabinet (GSI), responsible for intelligence in the Jair Bolsonaro administration.

The action was the subject of a complaint to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR), based on testimonies from residents and a report prepared by the Center for Global Justice and Harvard University (USA). In the document, the MINUSTAH was accused of allowing abuses to occur, favoring impunity and contributing to the wave of violence in the Caribbean country.

The case seemed to have caused discomfort in Brasília, then led by former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. A source linked to the Ministry of Defense confirmed to Brasil de Fato that the Brazilian government had received a request from the UN to replace the command of troops in Haiti, which was done days later, when general Urano da Teixeira da Matta Bacellar took office.

In response to the accusations, Bacellar stated that the number of deaths did not coincide with the information collected by the army. According to the general, “nine or ten people” would have died after confronting the security forces.

“The fact is that [Augusto] Heleno was removed from Haiti and it began to stoke the anger of the Workers' Party administrations [of Lula and Dilma Rousseff]. The trigger was really the National Truth Commission. From then on, he became a fierce anti-Workers' Party advocate,” the source said.

The Haitians and the MINUSTAH

Experts point to the international missions of the Brazilian army, especially in Haiti and Congo, as a kind of training course for the Armed Forces in direct work with public security, a new vision in the institution. The results can be measured by the perception of the populations of these countries about foreign military action.

Luis Felipe Magalhães, a researcher at the Observatório das Migrações and post-doctoral fellow in Social Sciences at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, was in Haiti, where he conducted field research and interviewed researchers and residents in the Haitian capital about, among other things, the activities of MINUSTAH forces in that country.

“MINUSTAH has often produced conflicts in places where there were no conflicts, and most interviews speak specifically of Cité Soleil: ‘MINUSTAH is there, does not know how to operate, does not know the political dynamics and the local territorial disputes, and from the moment it enters and undertakes actions without strategy, it worsens the conflict.’ This I heard from several researchers and many people that I interviewed there.”

According to Magalhães, the earthquake that occurred in 2010 revealed the inoperability of MINUSTAH in peacekeeping and the worsening of conflicts caused precisely by the lack of strategic planning for contingency.

“MINUSTAH had not created any territorial logistics for maintaining food security, which is an indispensable aspect for the maintenance of peace, for reducing conflicts. MINUSTAH had not developed such logistics, did not know how to conduct operations, donations, everything that the world was donating and transferring to Port-au-Prince. And in this case, it made manifest the same mistakes it made in specific military actions: they made matters worse.”

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MINUSTAH soldier patrols poor neighbourhood in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince | Tony Beliza

The MINUSTAH in the Bolsonaro administration

On Feb. 18, president Jair Bolsonaro announced the resignation of Gustavo Bebianno (PSL) from the General Secretariat of the Presidency of the Republic and his replacement by General Floriano Peixoto. On the same day, the newspaper Valor Econômico published a report in which it highlighted the increase in power of the “Haitian clique” in the government.

According to Paulo Cunha, a professor of political science at the State University of São Paulo (UNESP), it is “undeniable” that the group has been organized based on the experiences they have had in external Army missions.

“Although the Armed Forces, the armies in particular, in their history, are not a monolithic bloc, this group was undeniably constituted as an articulated bloc.”

In addition to Peixoto and General Augusto Heleno, three other ministers were in the Caribbean country: General Fernando Azevedo e Silva (Defense), General Carlos Alberto dos Santos Cruz (Government Secretariat) and Captain Tarcísio Gomes de Freitas (Infrastructure). In addition to the ministers, four strategic secretariats are occupied by military personnel who participated in the mission in Haiti: Colonels José Arnon dos Santos Guerra and Freibergue Rubem do Nascimento of the Ministry of Justice, General Edson Leal Pujol, of Defense, and the official spokesman of the Presidency of the Republic, linked to the Government Secretariat, General Otávio Santana do Rêgo Barros.

For Cunha, the involvement of the military with politics in Brazil is nothing new. “People are a little surprised by the military in politics. The military never ceased to be in politics and never ceased to be involved or to engage in politics.”

Outside the government, at the Supreme Court, General Ajax Porto Pinheiro holds the position of Special Advisor to the president of the court, Minister Dias Toffoli. He was the commander of the MINUSTAH between October 2015 and October 2017.

What General Minister Augusto Heleno says

In response to questions raised by Brasil de Fato through the press office of the Institutional Security Cabinet, Minister Augusto Heleno denied any coordination between these military forces within the government and stated that “the MINUSTAH mission in Cité Soleil, in July 2005, was praised by the UN.” The statement also called the denunciations made by human rights organizations “unfounded,” which, he said, “were politically motivated.”

Finally, the statement quotes a supposed “private document of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, addressed, at the time, to the Ambassador of Brazil to the UN.” In the “private document,” the Brazilian government explains that the replacement of General Augusto Heleno is the “practice observed by the Ministry of Defense (of) replacing, after one year of service, military officers assigned” to that job.

Ghosts of Massacre in Haiti Haunt Bolsonaro Government Generals | Brasil de Fato
 
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Jammer22

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Real shyt

You saying some interesting stuff, breh.

I talk with my pops about stuff like this all time. I personally don't think Carribean gov't have any business with two party systems. It's incredibly divisive for the politics in the region and their populations are too small to withstand it, especially with regional and superpowers nearby.
 

loyola llothta

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This was happening during the US proxy UN occupation

So any of yall heard about the capture of Clifford Brandt? Dude was like behind most those abductions and murders occuring in Haiti :wtf:

Getting names of Haitians traveling from U.S. and then paying gangs to snatch them off the streets. :damn:

Yeah the US help them. During that time idiot haitian Americans was trick to believe poor haitians was doing it when haitians in Haiti was telling it was wealthy Haitian business family



The @AP blames recent massacre in #Haiti on "gangs." But no coverage of those smuggled weapons of war? Years ago when violence was being blamed on "gangs," the murder-kidnapping ring operated by oligarch Clifford Brandt of the @Brandt9Gregory [Brandt Crime Family] was exposed.


7

1:10 PM - Apr 26, 2019
 

loyola llothta

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In 2015, Israeli "security" firm HLSI signed a $50M,10 years contract with the puppet government of #Haiti for "border security." The same year a PRIVATE port, Port Lafito, was built. Since then we've seen a massive flow of illegal weapons of war in the country. What's going on?

Re:
Before 2004 Guy Phillips had an association with Zionists in Santo Domingo. I covered that in 2009


1

8:27 PM - Apr 25, 2019
 
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loyola llothta

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Currently :





Miami Herald presstitute Jackie Charles is at it again with another propaganda article. 2004 was not an armed revolt, it was a Bush-CIA coup and the Haitian president was kidnapped by US marines. And the UN is the SOURCE of the violence in #Haiti.
https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/haiti/article228678394.html …

RE:

The writer also conveniently leaves out Aristide's name in the article so that he can gloss it over and hope that readers assume that is just your typical coup in Haiti. Names are unimportant.

3
2:45 PM - Apr 3, 2019
 

loyola llothta

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More Haitian sell outs from the past





Marie Yolène Gilles, who was funded by George Bush to promote propaganda for regime change / coup in #Haiti in 2004, and was "honored" for her "courage" by Obama-Hillary in 2012, is now the leading "advocate" for the victims of mass slaughter. That's why NOTHNG is being done.

RE:

The "human rights" groups in #Haiti are working for the puppet government, the local criminal elite, and the US State Dept. Government-issued check to Marie Y. Gilles' former "human rights" organization, RNDDH. This is why the mass killings continue unabated. NO JUSTICE.
 

loyola llothta

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UN "Peacekeepers" from Nepal have finally left #Haiti after 15 years of raping, killing. R.I.P to Gerard Jean Gilles, a 16 years old who was found hanging in their base in 2010 - as well as the tens of thousands who died from cholera. There's no justice for Haitians.
 
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