Reports: President of Haiti Assassinated at Home

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The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other those private electricity companies. and those companies barely held up their part of those contracts.



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As president of the country, you don't get to pass the buck or cop pleas. Sounds good when speaking before a crowd, BUT rational people would think that he understood the dynamics of wealth and power in Haiti BEFORE he was hand picked by Sweet Micky to run for president.

Rest In Peace to him, but am not buying the "we tried to do more for the country, bu bu bu but the rich stopped us" line by his supporters.
 

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@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder

The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other those private electric companies. Those companies barely held up their part of those contracts to provide electricity.


This is why there has to be a strongman that comes and nationalizes the electricity. This makes no sense at all to pay them this amount and for them to provide subpar electricity. Honestly Haiti needs a leader with balls to arrest these boujwa santi kaka. Because they are looting the country. They are different from the elites that was in Cuba before Castro. Send them running.
 

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This is why there has to be a strongman that comes and nationalizes the electricity. This makes no sense at all to pay them this amount and for them to provide subpar electricity. Honestly Haiti needs a leader with balls to arrest these boujwa santi kaka. Because they are looting the country. They are different from the elites that was in Cuba before Castro. Send them running.


Don't you mean no different?
 

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@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder

The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other private electric companies. Those companies barely held up their part of those contracts to provide electricity.





crazy they probably spend 100k a month for electricity. Electricity when there are football games and at night to some parts. Other parts get it at 1-2 Am until 6 AM like what the hell.

Those topics gimme headaches
 

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First Lady Martine Moise interview with CNN



I need to sit down and listen to some of her interviews. Some people say that her story or her version of the events don’t add up.

@Get These Nets @Mirin4rmfar @ZoeGod @LeVraiPapi @intruder

The Haitian Government was paying $12 Million USD a month to Sogener and other private electric companies. Those companies barely held up their part of those contracts to provide electricity.



Many people whom I trust tell me that Jovenel was often the type to say one thing while doing another. So that’s why I take things he says at these rallies with a grain of salt. Many also feel that he could’ve been a good president but him being part of PHTK ruined his chances because PHTK was all about corruption and while he got in bed with them to be president they often dictated everything he did and things that they did as a party was always in line with the American government’s wishes. Which was evident to me win he voted against Venezuela.

Im not saying he’s the super vilain cats like @loyola llothta will have you believe but he wasn’t no Saint either. He calls out the oligarchs while he was appearing to also be in bed with some of them.
 
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Any of you be in the Haitian rooms/clubs in ClubHouse? There be some good discussions in there
 

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Haiti judge charged with overseeing presidential murder probe quits over safety concerns


Updated August 13, 2021 08:47 PM
The investigative judge charged with overseeing the multinational probe into last month’s shocking assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse has quit the case.

Judge Mathieu Chanlatte recused himself Friday, just four days after being handed the case, and two days after one of his court clerks was found dead in a local hospital under circumstances that remain unclear.

Chanlatte cited safety concerns and a lack of support to carry out such a high-profile and difficult investigation, Magistrate Bernard Saint-Vil, the dean of the Court of First Instance in Port-au-Prince, told the Miami Herald. Saint-Vil had named Chanlatte to oversee the case on Monday.

Saint-Vil said he received the investigative judge’s signed letter at 4 p.m. Friday
 

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the press conference from last week where a US govt representative admitted the assassins received training paid for by the DOD at Ft. Polk?





Filmmaker shares his dad's connection with 1964 Haiti coup attempt
Aug. 27, 2021



Roland Chassagne combs through photos and interviews about a plot to overthrow the leader of Haiti. But these aren’t images of the July assassination of President Jovenel Moise. Chassagne is piecing together the story of a group of young Haitian exiles from New York City who set out in 1964 to overthrow the brutal and repressive leader of Haiti, Papa Doc Duvalier. Chassagne's dad was among them.

Roland has photos of his dad at anti-Papa Doc rallies and training with weapons for the coup.

In the house he grew up in Jamaica, Queens, Roland works on "Disposable Souls," his documentary on the mostly forgotten but incredibly personal events.

Chassagne's dad, Albert was the campaign manager for Louis Dejoie, who ran against Duvalier in 1957.

"Doc won the electionm and because my dad was the campaign manager of the other candidatem they were going to kill him. So my father and my mother left Haiti," Chassagne said.

They fled to New York, and Albert got involved with many anti-Duvalier groups.

"One was called 'Jeune Haiti,' which means Young Haiti Haiti. The CIA was training them," Chassagne said.

As it's told in the film, President John F. Kennedy directed the CIA and FBI to train Haitian immigrants to invade Haiti and overthrow Duvalier. After JFK ’s assassination, those plans were scrapped. But 13 members of Young Haiti decided to continue on. In 1964, they landed in the town of Jeremie. All 13, and many others in that town, were killed.

It’s still unknown why Albert didn’t go. He later wrote the book "Blood Bath in Haiti." It’s the basis for the film, which Chassagne dedicates to his late father and his mother.

Many, including Chassagne's mom, do not want him to make the film.

"Mom doesn’t want me to do it because she’s terrified of what might happen to me and the names I might mention," he said. He added that he will be naming names
=======================================
Video was put up years ago as part of a crowdfunding effort. Recent events have jumpstarted his project.
 

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Filmmaker shares his dad's connection with 1964 Haiti coup attempt
Aug. 27, 2021



Roland Chassagne combs through photos and interviews about a plot to overthrow the leader of Haiti. But these aren’t images of the July assassination of President Jovenel Moise. Chassagne is piecing together the story of a group of young Haitian exiles from New York City who set out in 1964 to overthrow the brutal and repressive leader of Haiti, Papa Doc Duvalier. Chassagne's dad was among them.

Roland has photos of his dad at anti-Papa Doc rallies and training with weapons for the coup.

In the house he grew up in Jamaica, Queens, Roland works on "Disposable Souls," his documentary on the mostly forgotten but incredibly personal events.

Chassagne's dad, Albert was the campaign manager for Louis Dejoie, who ran against Duvalier in 1957.

"Doc won the electionm and because my dad was the campaign manager of the other candidatem they were going to kill him. So my father and my mother left Haiti," Chassagne said.

They fled to New York, and Albert got involved with many anti-Duvalier groups.

"One was called 'Jeune Haiti,' which means Young Haiti Haiti. The CIA was training them," Chassagne said.

As it's told in the film, President John F. Kennedy directed the CIA and FBI to train Haitian immigrants to invade Haiti and overthrow Duvalier. After JFK ’s assassination, those plans were scrapped. But 13 members of Young Haiti decided to continue on. In 1964, they landed in the town of Jeremie. All 13, and many others in that town, were killed.

It’s still unknown why Albert didn’t go. He later wrote the book "Blood Bath in Haiti." It’s the basis for the film, which Chassagne dedicates to his late father and his mother.

Many, including Chassagne's mom, do not want him to make the film.

"Mom doesn’t want me to do it because she’s terrified of what might happen to me and the names I might mention," he said. He added that he will be naming names
=======================================
Video was put up years ago as part of a crowdfunding effort. Recent events have jumpstarted his project.


It sickens me how whites arrogantly control Black politics, regardless of locale. It’s why I have no pity on the whites here, whose own government was infiltrated and is now controlled by a foreign element.

Worst of all, the CIA trained those men, then ended up turning the list over to the people they themselves were hoping to overthrow. Smh

You’d have to be a damned fool to believe anything a white man says. More and more I believe what Sara Suten Seti said: when the crakkkas first showed up in Africa we shoulda threw every nikka we had at em until one of us was no more. Anything woulda been better than being held captive to these sick people the way we are today.
 

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His Name Is Barbecue—and He’s Ready to Plunge Haiti Into War

Jonathan Alpeyrie
Mon, August 30, 2021, 4:47 AM


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Courtesy Jonathan Alpeyrie

PORT-AU-PRINCESince the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse on July 7, the small island nation has spiraled even further into chaos. From a devastating earthquake earlier this month, to violent gangs gaining ground, and rampant corruption within its elite, it is hard to see how the country will prosper. In fact, the current political elite’s inability to deal with and then fix any of these issues is a testimony to its unwillingness to care for its people, who are forced to fend for themselves.

In times of crisis, unlikely leaders often emerge. History is full of individuals who decide to take up arms and plunge into the unknown. In Haiti, this void will most likely see a rise of powerful gang bosses, including one of the country’s most notorious, Jimmy Cherizier, also known as Barbecue. The former police officer turned gang leader controls with his small army of armed young men the neighborhood of Delmas. For a few years now, Barbecue and his soldiers have consolidated their power base, amassing a large amount of assault rifles, hand guns, and cash—and the obedience of locals in and around his neighborhood.

“If tomorrow I run for the Senate, I can win because people love me here,” the gang boss said in an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast. “Yet I chose not to run for elections as it is useless... I will lead an armed struggle before I enter politics in a peaceful manner.”

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"BBQ at the Delmas quarter."

Courtesy Jonathan Alpeyrie
This declaration of war against the current government has not gone unnoticed. Barbecue firmly believes, at least publicly, that he is now doing politics, and desires to compete with the current government and give freedom and wealth to the Haitian people. “I’ll lead an armed struggle to liberate this country… against the 5 percent of the Haitian population that controls 85 percent of the entirety of the nation’s wealth,” he tells The Daily Beast, framing himself as a modern-day Haitian Robin Hood.

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Barbecue, like most Haitians, is more than aware that the few families who control all imports into Haiti, its electricity company, and other types of amenities, do not want to see a prosperous nation, as it would directly challenge their power and income. But the gang boss has some obstacles to overcome before he can “fix” that problem; his many enemies accuse him of murder, rape, and theft, and do not want to see him gain further political power.

“I have never ordered kidnapping, murders or rape to anyone in Haiti,” he proclaims loud and clear. Whether or not that is true, it’s safe to say that many people in Haitian politics have struggled to keep their hands clean.

U.S. Admits Training Colombians Accused of Killing Haiti President as Part of Billion Dollar War on Drugs

If what Barbecue is saying about an “armed struggle” is true, then this could spell potential civil war in Haiti. That rather daunting scenario grows more and more likely as the desperation of the Haitian people hits peak levels. Tensions can blow at any moment.

“You can certainly see how dirty my country is, how the garbage is now everywhere. Even animals in other countries live better than poor Haitians,” says Barbecue. “Girls have to survive so they sell their bodies for sex, while some get murdered and left on the side of the road and no one cares. I want to give dignity once more to my people.”

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"The infamous area of Martissant, known for its violence and constant fighting between various gang groups, has now become a no man’s land. Over the past few years, the Haitian government has given up in controlling this rather large portion of its capital as it no longer has the ressources to take it back."

Courtesy Jonathan Alpeyrie
Barbecue does not only see himself as a caregiver, but also as some kind of legend who has a duty to stir Haiti in the right direction. “I am a nationalist and a patriot, it is my duty to put my life on the line for my people,” he proclaims. In the back of his mind he might compare himself to Toussaint Louverture, who fought a difficult guerrilla war against the French at the end of the 18th century. “I dream of a better Haiti,” he adds.

Whether or not Barbecue is the next Toussaint Louverture or not, he certainly has a very arduous path in front of him, with no guarantee that he will survive much longer, let alone succeed. Regardless of his intentions, the gang boss will have to transform himself into a leader who people can follow and believe in. No easy task.

But the timing of Barbecue’s rise might work to his advantage: The situation in Haiti is now so dire that entire neighborhoods in Port-au-Prince, like Aviation, Delmas, or Martissant, just to name a few, have fallen under complete gang control. Shops, banks, and homes in entire neighborhoods have now been deserted. Gangs essentially control all western entrances by road to the capital. This strategic positioning is not a coincidence; it’s meant to show the government who’s really in charge now. Recent Haitian governments have tried to clear the entrances by sending in special police units, but to no avail.

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"BBQ's fighters."

Courtesy Jonathan Alpeyrie
Many locals accuse the government of being in bed with some of the most powerful gangs within the capital. Some even suggest that the government pays some of the gangs in Martissant to control the population, using them as leverage to stay in power.

Haiti Struggles to Dig Out After Earthquake and Flooding

But what if that backfires?

As successive Haitian governments continue to fail in their institutional obligations, underlying powers grow in strength and voracity. The Haitian government under Moïse, and now under Ariel Henry, has little to show for. In fact, their strength on the ground is meager to say the least, with insufficient police and military forces to enforce government rule.

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"General views of streets in Martissant of some courageous locals daring to crosse the area by foot."

Courtesy Jonathan Alpeyrie
“The Haitian people, in our misery, are in a state of shame, drowned in front of the whole world,” Barbecue tells The Daily Beast. “We, the Haitian people, are a people of great empires… It is [the government] who made us lose our dignity, that is why I am waging an armed struggle.”
 
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