Haiti: Nearly a Million People Took to the Streets.They Want the Western-imposed government out of

loyola llothta

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Here are some of the coup-plotting colonizers in #Haiti who met with the criminal president to fund and intensify the repression and killings. Rene Max Auguste was quoted in the Miami Herald calling for more weapons to deal with protesters and activists who he refers to as gangs
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loyola llothta

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Word now is former head of Judicial Police in #Haiti, Michel Lucius, was running several gangs for #PHTK ruling party. Several other police, gang leaders & Lucius killed over the past two weeks. Believed by a few solid analysts to be a cleanup/coverup operation

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loyola llothta

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loyola llothta

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Gregory Brandt of the coup-plotting oligarch Brandt family in #Haiti. His nephew Clifford Brandt is in prison for running a murder-kidnapping ring. They want to maintain Haiti as a neo-colony with millions of black peons and a few white and Arab families controlling the wealth.

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loyola llothta

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1915 - US invaded #Haiti and occupied until 1934.

1918 - US rewrote the constitution to give whites control.

1920 - Oswald Brandt migrated from colonial Jamaica to Haiti. The Brandt family became one of few white families given control as local subsidiaries of US imperialism.

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loyola llothta

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The real faces of crime in #Haiti CNN will never expose. Clifford Brandt, Great Grandson of robber baron Oswald Brandt, who migrated to Haiti in 1920 as a local subsidiary of US imperialism, has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for running a murder-kidnapping ring.

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loyola llothta

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The wealthy Brandt Crime Family has been looting #Haiti, committing crimes, and financing coups for over 100 years, but we're only seeing some justice because he kidnapped members of another wealthy robber baron family after losing a bid for a lucrative state contract to them.

 

loyola llothta

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The Brandt family maintains its power & wealth in #Haiti via murders, kidnappings and coups. Oswald Brandt's great-grandson Clifford, has been imprisoned since 2012 for running a murder-kidnapping ring. His family financed the bloody 1991 and 2004 coups that killed thousands.

 

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2014 article on the family (Brandt)

The Jamaican link in Haitian prison break

Published:Sunday | August 24, 2014 | 12:00 AM
cliffordbrandt.jpg


Clifford Brandt is placed against the wall at the police station after his arrest in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Tuesday, August 12. Brandt was taken into custody in the Haitian town of Cornillon, near the border with the Dominican Republic, Communications Minister Rudy Heriveaux said. - AP

haitiprison20140811w.jpg


A police truck passes next to the main prison in Croix-des-Bouquets, Haiti, on August 11. An attack on the prison on the outskirts of the capital to free the son of a prominent businessman being held on kidnapping charges resulted in the escape of 329 inmates. - AP




On Monday, August 11, Jamaicans awoke to a wave of panic, stemming from the news that the Haitian National Police were seeking international help following a prison break that freed a prominent businessman and allowed hundreds of other inmates to escape.



It was reported that a commando of 10 to 15 heavily armed men had pulled off a spectacular jailbreak at the Croix-des-Bouquets maximum-security prison, freeing 329 inmates, and wounding two guards. The police declared that the raid was an inside job, and launched an investigation

Out of the 329 escapees, however, the Haitian government decided to first focus on the search for one fugitive by the name of Clifford Brandt Jr, as it was widely believed that the freeing of Brandt was the reason for the incursion. The government offered one million Haitian gourdes for his capture.

Who is Clifford Brandt Jr, who could have triggered such a brazen assault, and whom the Haitian government was so anxious to apprehend?

The amazing story of O.J. Brandt




It would be impossible to study the history of Haiti from 1920 to 1976 without discussing the power and wealth of Clifford Brandt's great-grandfather, Oswald John Brandt, whose influence on the Haitian economy, and successive governments, is legendary.

Throughout Haiti's turbulent history, powerful political exiles have sought refuge in neighbouring Jamaica. O.J. Brandt was born in Jamaica in 1890. He found himself gravitating towards those exiles, and assisting them in many ways while they were in Jamaica. In 1910, he fell in love with a young Haitian woman by the name of Therese Barthe, who came to visit her father, also exiled in Jamaica. The two married, and when Therese returned home shortly afterwards, O.J. followed his heart, and migrated to Haiti. He was only 20 years old.

In Haiti, Brandt became the toast of the town. His wife's uncle was a powerful army colonel, and all of the exiles he had befriended in Jamaica had returned home to take up prominent positions. Among them, Septimus Marius, who was appointed minister of finance, and established the National Bank of Haiti. Fondly remembering services rendered by Brandt in Jamaica, Marius gave him a job at the bank.

In 1919, the Royal Bank of Canada opened a branch in Haiti. Brandt made a transfer to the Royal Bank. Rapidly rising through the ranks, he was named managing director in 1925. In 1928, Brandt left the bank to go into business for himself.

From 1915 to 1934, Haiti was under US occupation, and opening up to foreign capital. Brandt was well-placed to take advantage of myriad opportunities. When Haiti entered the Second World War on the side of the Allies, the possessions of German families, who were some of the richest in Haiti, were nationalised, and sold at fire-sale prices. Despite his own German origins, Brandt received the lion's share of the House of Reinbold, the biggest conglomerate in Haiti, acquiring cotton, soap, textiles, and cooking oil factories.

He dominated the import-export sector, bringing in pharmaceutical products, European cars, equipment, and luxury items, and exporting agricultural products, coffee, and cacao. He was also in the insurance business, and fully immersed in the black market. He established his empire and completed his meteoric rise to the pinnacle of Haitian society, becoming a powerbroker and kingmaker, putting governments in power, and toppling same, controlling, bribing, corrupting, sponsoring, subsidising, and financing his way to absolute power, until his death in 1976.

The Brandt family maintained its ascendancy after the passing of its patriarch. In 1973, O.J.'s son, Clifford Brandt, the grandfather of Clifford Brandt Jr, founded the first private bank of Haiti. Clifford Brandt Jr went into the family's car-import business, establishing the Mazda dealership. He was an adviser to President Martelly, and the head of the president's security team was also in charge of security for the Brandt family.

In 2004, after the kidnapping of President Aristide by US Special Forces, and his subsequent exile to South Africa, a deadly wave of kidnappings was unleashed on Haitian society, reaching its peak in 2006. The first suspects were outraged Aristide supporters, inner-city gangs, and deportees. But despite several raids by police and UN forces on inner-city slums, resulting in many arrests and extrajudicial killings, the kidnapping scourge persisted.

On October 16, 2012, the two children of one of Clifford Brandt's business rivals, Robert Moscoso, were abducted by armed men wearing police uniforms. A US$2.5-million ransom was demanded from Moscoso, the chairman and CEO of Sogebank, one of Haiti's biggest banks.

One week later, Brandt was arrested, along with 14 other accused members of his criminal syndicate, sending shock waves, and shaking the very foundations of Haitian society. Brandt, in handcuffs, brought police to the empty house where the bound victims were rescued. He was charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment for ransom, assassination attempt, smuggling of firearms, fraud, forgery, usurpation of title, criminal conspiracy, illegal possession of weapons of war, illicit enrichment, money laundering, and issuing death threats

The Brandt kidnapping ring and murder cartel was revealed by local and international investigators to be one of the most sophisticated and powerful criminal syndicates in the Caribbean. During questioning, Brandt allegedly confessed that he was only number 5 within the leadership hierarchy of his organisation, implicating the eldest son of the president, members of the Haitian elite, members of the president's private security, and police brass.

The arrest of one of the richest men in Haiti, bent on destabilising Haitian society, and the implication of his peers, has launched an extensive debate on the function and role of the Haitian elite within the society, reviving age-old, thorny issues of greed, corruption, treachery, and the disconnect and alienation of that class from the rest of Haitian society

Two days after his escape, Brandt and two other fugitives were apprehended by Dominican soldiers, as they tried to enter the Dominican Republic. Twenty more escapees have since been recovered. Brandt is still in pretrial detention

Link:
The Jamaican link in Haitian prison break
 

loyola llothta

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Some of the people who help set up Brandt wealth and power in Haiti.

  • From O.J Brandt Haitian wife(Therese Barthe), which she linked up with him in Jamaica after visiting haitian exile family members and friends
  • Therese Barthe's Uncle Colonel Jules André
  • haitian exiles from Jamaica who returned back in Haiti like Antoine Pierre-Paul and
  • For example: another exile haitian name Septimus Marius who under Antoine Simon was placed as Minister of Finance of Haiti
  • Septimus Marius soon placed the foreigner OJ Brandt in position at the National Bank of Haiti after arriving on the island to start his career in finance
  • The US government through the US Occupation of Haiti 1915
  • OJ Brandt benefit from subsidies under Elie Lescot, with German citizens in Haiti business/ property start getting nationalize
  • Alejandro Grullon who help Clifford H. Brandt start and set up BUH(Bank of the Haitian Union) in Haiti. Boards of directors at the time : President Marcel Léger , Vice President Marcel Ed. Dupuy , Georges Baussan, Clifford H. Brandt, Jehan Dartigue, Raymond Flambert, Faidherbe Guillaume, Maurice Mompoint , Lucien Rousseau
Some old statements from 1946 "La Ruche" Haiti newspaper on OJ Brandt benefiting from subsidies under Elie Lescot :

"Indeed, this mysterious character of Oswald John Brandt, after having, without any doubt," corrupted "his partner Élie Lescot, Grand Public Officer in the exercise of his high office - Offense prescribed by Haitian law - the crook Oswald John Brandt passed himself the factories of Saint-Marc worth at least Two hundred thousand dollars for the scandalous sum of thirty five thousand dollars, thereby making himself guilty of receiving stolen goods which Haitian law punishes much more severely than author "

"If the monopoly of the Lescot-Brandt-Brouez cotton fabric factory and sale is to operate under any heading whatsoever, then you will have nothing more to hope for from our country. , kill yourself . "


The amazing story of O.J. Brandt

It would be impossible to study the history of Haiti from 1920 to 1976 without discussing the power and wealth of Clifford Brandt's great-grandfather, Oswald John Brandt, whose influence on the Haitian economy, and successive governments, is legendary.

Throughout Haiti's turbulent history, powerful political exiles have sought refuge in neighbouring Jamaica. O.J. Brandt was born in Jamaica in 1890. He found himself gravitating towards those exiles, and assisting them in many ways while they were in Jamaica. In 1910, he fell in love with a young Haitian woman by the name of Therese Barthe, who came to visit her father, also exiled in Jamaica. The two married, and when Therese returned home shortly afterwards, O.J. followed his heart, and migrated to Haiti. He was only 20 years old.

In Haiti, Brandt became the toast of the town. His wife's uncle was a powerful army colonel, and all of the exiles he had befriended in Jamaica had returned home to take up prominent positions. Among them, Septimus Marius, who was appointed minister of finance, and established the National Bank of Haiti. Fondly remembering services rendered by Brandt in Jamaica, Marius gave him a job at the bank.

In 1919, the Royal Bank of Canada opened a branch in Haiti. Brandt made a transfer to the Royal Bank. Rapidly rising through the ranks, he was named managing director in 1925. In 1928, Brandt left the bank to go into business for himself.

From 1915 to 1934, Haiti was under US occupation, and opening up to foreign capital. Brandt was well-placed to take advantage of myriad opportunities. When Haiti entered the Second World War on the side of the Allies, the possessions of German families, who were some of the richest in Haiti, were nationalised, and sold at fire-sale prices. Despite his own German origins, Brandt received the lion's share of the House of Reinbold, the biggest conglomerate in Haiti, acquiring cotton, soap, textiles, and cooking oil factories.

He dominated the import-export sector, bringing in pharmaceutical products, European cars, equipment, and luxury items, and exporting agricultural products, coffee, and cacao. He was also in the insurance business, and fully immersed in the black market. He established his empire and completed his meteoric rise to the pinnacle of Haitian society, becoming a powerbroker and kingmaker, putting governments in power, and toppling same, controlling, bribing, corrupting, sponsoring, subsidising, and financing his way to absolute power, until his death in 1976.

The Brandt family maintained its ascendancy after the passing of its patriarch. In 1973, O.J.'s son, Clifford Brandt, the grandfather of Clifford Brandt Jr, founded the first private bank of Haiti. Clifford Brandt Jr went into the family's car-import business, establishing the Mazda dealership. He was an adviser to President Martelly, and the head of the president's security team was also in charge of security for the Brandt family.

In 2004, after the kidnapping of President Aristide by US Special Forces, and his subsequent exile to South Africa, a deadly wave of kidnappings was unleashed on Haitian society, reaching its peak in 2006. The first suspects were outraged Aristide supporters, inner-city gangs, and deportees. But despite several raids by police and UN forces on inner-city slums, resulting in many arrests and extrajudicial killings, the kidnapping scourge persisted.

On October 16, 2012, the two children of one of Clifford Brandt's business rivals, Robert Moscoso, were abducted by armed men wearing police uniforms. A US$2.5-million ransom was demanded from Moscoso, the chairman and CEO of Sogebank, one of Haiti's biggest banks.

One week later, Brandt was arrested, along with 14 other accused members of his criminal syndicate, sending shock waves, and shaking the very foundations of Haitian society. Brandt, in handcuffs, brought police to the empty house where the bound victims were rescued. He was charged with kidnapping, false imprisonment for ransom, assassination attempt, smuggling of firearms, fraud, forgery, usurpation of title, criminal conspiracy, illegal possession of weapons of war, illicit enrichment, money laundering, and issuing death threats

The Brandt kidnapping ring and murder cartel was revealed by local and international investigators to be one of the most sophisticated and powerful criminal syndicates in the Caribbean. During questioning, Brandt allegedly confessed that he was only number 5 within the leadership hierarchy of his organisation, implicating the eldest son of the president, members of the Haitian elite, members of the president's private security, and police brass.

The arrest of one of the richest men in Haiti, bent on destabilising Haitian society, and the implication of his peers, has launched an extensive debate on the function and role of the Haitian elite within the society, reviving age-old, thorny issues of greed, corruption, treachery, and the disconnect and alienation of that class from the rest of Haitian society

Two days after his escape, Brandt and two other fugitives were apprehended by Dominican soldiers, as they tried to enter the Dominican Republic. Twenty more escapees have since been recovered. Brandt is still in pretrial detention

Link:

http://jamaica-gleaner.com/article/focus/20140824/jamaican-link-haitian-prison-break
 
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