Tuesday, March 01, 2005

Haitian Police Open Fire on Nonviolent March for Democracy

Haitian Police Open Fire on Nonviolent March for Democracy
by Bill Quigley, Common Dreams

One year ago today, the elected government of Haiti, led by President Jean Betrand Aristide, was forced out of office and replaced by unlected people more satisfactory to business interests and the US, France and Canada.

Today there was a large nonviolent March for Democracy called for the neighborhood of Bel-Air (Beautiful Air). I attended with Pere Gerard Jean-Juste and others from St. Clare's Parish. We started with prayers in the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in the center of Bel Air. After prayers we joined the larger crowd outside marching and singing through the streets of the old and quite poor neighborhood. Thousands of people were walking and dancing to the beat of drums, loudly chanting, "Bring Back Titi (Aristide)!!!!" in Creole, French and English...

Suddenly, at the corner of Monsiegneur Guillot Street and Des Cesar, there was a loud boom from very close by. People started screaming and running. Another boom, then another...


Early reports document several people shot, including journalists, at least one killed. Others were beaten. Two men showed me where the police wounded them.


As we drove slowly out of the now deserted neighborhood, the faces of the people on the porches who were so happy minutes before, were now somber, many crying.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

With "[p]eople like Louis Jodel Chamblain, the former number 2 man in FRAPH, Guy Philippe, a former police chief who was trained by US Special forces in Ecuador and Jean Tatoune, another leader of FRAPH" [Democracy Now!] there was only one possibile change for the state of human rights in Haiti and that was for it to get worse.