12) WITH STRANGE
BEDFELLOWS: MOBILIZATION AGAINST PREVAL GAINS MOMENTUM
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By Kim Ives,
Editor of Haiti Liberté
Thousands of demonstrators
marched through Haiti's capital Port-au-Prince on May 10 calling for
President René Preval's resignation and former President
Jean-Bertrand
Aristide's return from exile in South Africa. Parallel mobilizations
took place in towns throughout Haiti, including Miragoane, Cap Haitien,
Gonaives, and Jacmel.
The giant march came as
Senators, mostly from the President's party, Unity, voted 16 against
two to amend Article 232 of Haiti's 1987 Constitution, extending
Preval's mandate from Feb. 7 until May 14, 2011. Deputies had approved
the change in a May 6 vote of 56 for, three against and three
abstentions.
On May 10, the 48th Legislature also expired, with only one third of
the Senate remaining with a mandate.
Like the drop that overflows the
glass, Preval's three month term extension seems to have finally
released a flood of anger against a host of policies, including last
week's sale of the state telephone company, the maintenance of a
Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) which excluded 14 parties
(including Haiti's largest, the Lavalas Family) from now postponed
elections, and the 18 month "state of emergency law" that puts a
foreign-led commission in charge of Haiti's post-earthquake
reconstruction.
Marchers also reiterated
long-standing demands that include an end to the six-year-old United
Nations military occupation and stronger measures to resolve widespread
homelessness and hunger four months after the Jan. 12 earthquake that
devastated the capital and other nearby towns.
The Port-au-Prince demonstration
was led by an emerging coalition called the Heads Together of Popular
Organizations (Tet Kole Oganizasyon
Popile yo), which is primarily
composed of Lavalas base organizations with a smattering of formerly
anti-Lavalas political personalities and alliances such as Evans Paul's
Alternative for Democracy and Progress, Serge Gilles' social democratic
Fusion, and Himmler Rebu's Platform of Haitian Patriots (PLAPH).
Dubbed "Operation Take No
Breath" (Operasyon san pran souf),
Tet Kole's mobilization aims to
replace Preval with a provisional president and a Council of State
similar to that which brought President Aristide's predecessor, Ertha
Pascale-Trouillot, to power 20 years ago.
"Faced with this situation of
terrible suffering in which society lives today, we, grassroots
organizations, civil society groups, and platforms of principled
political parties have decided in unity to reject the state of
emergency law, the widespread corruption, the Constitutional changes,
the maintenance of the exclusionary CEP, and the extension of the
presidential term," said Tet Kole's Paulette Joseph and Bateau Junior
in a message read at the Champ de Mars' Constitution Place. "We have
decided to launch a mobilization which will continue until the complete
satisfaction of our demands. We demand the immediate resignation of
President Preval for betraying the trust of the people, for violating
the Constitution, and for liquidating the country for foreigners. We
demand the formation of a provisional government to improve the living
conditions of people who were victim of the Jan. 12 disaster. We want
to lay the foundations for rebuilding a better Haiti. We demand the
annulment of the 18 month state of emergency law."
Most of the demonstrators
marched to the crumpled National Palace from St. Jean Bosco, where
Father Aristide used to preach before the church was burned by
neo-Duvalierist thugs on Sept. 11, 1988. Feeder marches from the Belair
et Carrefour Feuilles slums also joined the masses in the Champ de Mars.
Near the Palace, Haitian riot
police fired bullets and teargas at the demonstrators. Witnesses say
that policemen beat several demonstrators including Makenson Pierre and
Robenson Remy, two musicians with the "Easy Rara" street band whose
drums and horns motivated marchers. Haitian police and UN soldiers
arrested four demonstrators, and unconfirmed reports say several
protestors were wounded.
Meanwhile, about 60 miles west
in Miragoane and north in Gonaives, hundreds of people, mostly Lavalas
partisans, also demonstrated with the same demands as the capital.
In Cap Haitien, hundreds of
residents held an action of banging pots and pans to signal unhappiness
with Preval's food policies. In Jacmel, the Alternative Movement for
Haiti's Decentralization and Reconstruction (MADREH) held a sit-in with
hundreds in front of the central government's office to demand Preval's
resignation.
Many eyebrows have been raised
at the sight of 2004 coup supporters like "student" leader Herve
Saintilus, perennial politician Turneb Delpe, and Democratic
Convergence leaders like Paul, Gilles and Rebu marching alongside
Lavalas partisans holding aloft posters of Aristide's smiling face.
"One of our principal demands is
that the government provide former President Aristide with a passport
so he can return to his country," Delpe declared.
But many in Haiti's democracy
movement fear that right-wing politicians are feigning support for
Lavalas demands and will try to hijack the mass mobilization to push
Preval from power and install an even more reactionary government.
"We are organizing now to provide leadership to this mass movement
which is forming," Evans Paul said on Radio Tropical.
But Yves Pierre-Louis, a leader
with the National Platform of Base Organizations and State Victims
(PLONBAVIL), one of Tet Kole's key components, says that Lavalas and
progressive militants are confident they will keep control of the
movement.
"We are very aware of the
dangers posed by allowing former putschists into our alliance and
demonstrations, and we talk about it all the time," he said. "But right
now, Preval has gone too far in selling out the country and trampling
the Constitution. He must be stopped. This requires a broad coalition,
but we are not diluting our demands. Some politicians, who have been
our opponents, are embracing our demands, or at least pretending to.
Whatever the case, the unity and consciousness of the progressive
forces in this mobilization are strong, and we will prevail."
Preval proposed Article 232's
amendment as it has become clear that presidential and parliamentary
elections are unlikely to be held by November, especially if he refuses
to reconstitute the CEP. "I cannot just leave while an unfinished
[electoral] process is underway," Preval said in a May 6 press
conference.
The new Article 232 is worded so that Preval can leave office anytime
between Feb. 7 and May 14, 2011.
Due to difficulties in
organizing elections after the Feb. 29, 2004 coup d'etat against
Aristide, Preval was not elected until Feb. 7, 2006, the date when a
new president should have been inaugurated according to the
Constitution. Preval began his five-year term on May 14, 2006.