13) MEETINGS ACROSS
CANADA MARK 2004 COUP IN HAITI
(The
following
article is from the April 1-15, 2009, issue of People's Voice,
Canada's
leading communist newspaper. Articles can be reprinted free if the
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Chapters of the Canada Haiti Action Network (CHAN) recently organized
events in nine cities across Canada to mark the fifth anniversary of
the illegal coup d'etat that removed Haiti's elected president and
government in 2004. Canada was a key plotter of that coup, and sent
military forces and police to carry out the dirty deed. Today, CHAN
argues, Canada shares a great responsibility for the deterioration in
living conditions and political rights that has accompanied the past
five years of foreign occupation in Haiti.
A highlight of the network's activity was a
day‑long conference in
Ottawa entitled "Ottawa Initiative on Haiti 2009." The conference was
organized by Haitian people in the Ottawa region with the participation
of CHAN's local chapter, the Ottawa Haiti Solidarity
Committee/Kozayiti. Speakers from Haiti and from the Haitian Diaspora
addressed the conference, as did authors, academics and activists from
Canada, the United States and Britain. Teleconferencing technology was
successfully used.
Several speakers who defend, or downplay, the
coup of 2004 were
invited to participate in order to promote a spirit of dialogue and
informed exchange. One accepted the offer. More than 100 people took
part in the conference.
Filmmaker Kevin Pina brought his new 80‑minute
documentary film,
Haiti: We Must Kill the Bandits, to seven cities from Feb. 28 to March
6: Victoria, Vancouver, Calgary, Saskatoon, Toronto, Guelph and
Hamilton. The tour was a rousing success, with more than 500 people
attending events. The film is a powerful telling of Haiti's modern
history.
Each showing was followed by comments by Pina
on the current
situation in Haiti, notably the total failure of the foreign occupation
to bring any meaningful improvements to the people there. The filmmaker
also offered proposals for what can be done in the coming months to
support the sovereignty struggle in Haiti that, according to him, is
demonstrably on the rise after suffering heavy blows following the coup.
Pina's film also screened in Fredericton and
was attended by 35 people.
Sixty people attended each of the events in
Victoria, Vancouver
and Calgary. The latter event was hosted by the University of Calgary
Consortium for Peace Studies. It was a big success, and future
collaboration with Haiti solidarity activists seems assured. Thirty
five attended in Saskatoon.
In Vancouver, an arts and craft fair was held
at the Delta Baptist
Church. Three thousand dollars was raised and will be shared among
three social projects in Haiti - the SOPUDEP School, Partners in
Health, and the Haiti Baptist Mission.
In Toronto, Guelph and Hamilton, Pina was
joined by former member
of the Haitian Parliament Jean Candio. The latter is currently applying
for refugee status in Canada, arguing that his safety and that of his
family cannot be assured in Haiti at this time. Eighty people attended
the Toronto event and 35 in Hamilton. The largest of Pina's speaking
events was in Guelph, with over 100 people. The major organizers of the
event were students from the University of Guelph and the Toronto‑based
Students in Solidarity with Haiti.
Jean Candio spoke about how he became involved
with the Lavalas
political movement and his harrowing experiences after the 1991 and
2004 coups in Haiti. He also spoke about the repression he has faced
from the U.S. and Canadian governments when attempting to apply for
asylum after being forced to flee Haiti. He underscored that the
persecution he faced in Haiti because of his affiliation with Lavalas
was continued in both the U.S. and Canada.
(Report from
Canada-Haiti Action Network)