That 11 years old girl and others did not have to die they could have to fly them to hospitals here, they occupied haiti for 19 years, and now i am hearing that they are turning them away from the Dominican Rep.
Marklon, I hope the "...11 years old girl" you're talking about is not the one with the braids and horn-rimmed glasses. That kid should not have died!
If indeed she is the same person, then that underscores the failure of the "rescue" effort, so far.
Haiti is no more than an hour or two away from most countries in the Americas. It should not take 3-4 days for aid to reach them.
To me, they're playing a cruel joke on these suffering people. Promising much, but delivering little.
If you don't believe me, just ask someone who's been stuck underneath a concrete slab since Tuesday, hoping for someone to lift if off.
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The surest sign other intelligent life exists in the universe is that it hasn't tried to contact us.
This is very painful for me, i cry when i see our people dying, i thank them for even the thought of helping but i know something is not right, racism is still alive and well they have advanced equiptment filed hospitals does not take long to set up, Carver it is up to us. Minister Farrakhan spoke last night he wiil be meeting with the churches and different group and our Doctors and trained proffessionals to go down there,i want to go my self god willing, Jesus spoke of a time of famine, earthquake in divers places, now i am hearing about earthquake in Venezuala, they dont have our peoples interest.
This is very painful for me, i cry when i see our people dying, i thank them for even the thought of helping but i know something is not right, racism is still alive and well they have advanced equiptment filed hospitals does not take long to set up, Carver it is up to us. Minister Farrakhan spoke last night he wiil be meeting with the churches and different group and our Doctors and trained proffessionals to go down there,i want to go my self god willing, Jesus spoke of a time of famine, earthquake in divers places, now i am hearing about earthquake in Venezuala, they dont have our peoples interest.
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In the interim all I can donate is clothes.
However in the long term I plan on contacting our local artists here in California, the city of inglewood(with over 200,000 Hatians) the churches, Red Cross civic groups etc and organise a small benefit concert in one of these local parks with an amphitheater.
Nothing major just putting together people and the organisations and using the social media to help in whatever way possible
As black men its past time now, we have been down too long and now its time to get up. When tragedy strikes instead of waiting on others we need to be the first in line assisting and as Garvey put it "Where is the black man ships"?
So now the focus is on doing whatever we can to help the Hatians NOW! and going forward putting together the foundation for further relief efforts in the future.
There is no excuse for us not to have these things planned. WE aren't idiots, its time to get up now as MEN and start addressing our shortcomings. We don't have to continue suffering so for now the plan is to gather the people together so that they can get information on how they can help and go from there.
Stay strong my people, we will learn and grow from this Time to recapture our music from these jokers and start using it to heal and help each other. Thats what god intended it to be used for
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Leggo the Pearl!!! do me a beg unnu just leggo the Pearl
I could not put it any better, we have to organize and build Haiti, dont believe the hype they never did anything before, the UN. is a tool, how long have they been down there, this is on us and there is a lesson in this for all of us it could have been Jamaica.
Senegal offers land to Haitians File photo of Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade, September 2009 Abdoulaye Wade said Haitians could "return to their origin"
Senegal's president says he will offer free land and "repatriation" to people affected by the earthquake in Haiti.
President Abdoulaye Wade said Haitians were sons and daughters of Africa since Haiti was founded by slaves, including some thought to be from Senegal.
"The president is offering voluntary repatriation to any Haitian that wants to return to their origin," said Mr Wade's spokesman, Mamadou Bemba Ndiaye.
Tuesday's earthquake killed tens of thousands and left many more homeless.
Buildings have been reduced to rubble, the distribution of aid is slow, and people have been flooding out of the devastated capital, Port-au-Prince.
"Senegal is ready to offer them parcels of land - even an entire region. It all depends on how many Haitians come," Mr Bemba Ndiaye said.
"If it's just a few individuals, then we will likely offer them housing or small pieces of land. If they come en masse we are ready to give them a region."
The spokesman emphasised that if a region was given, it would be in a fertile part of the country rather than in its parched deserts, the Associated Press news agency reported.
I was watching the screen and the commentators were urging the united effort to come to Haiti quickly, but it seemed they were more concerned that they came quickly b4 the rioting start.
Yes they mentioned water, diseases, the sick and injured etc, but they were really concerned about the rioting.
Then what do you see.. Groups of guys running round with machetes terrorizing and looting...
Why do we do this...??
Why cant they look around and see that everyone has suffered and if you really have the strenght fi run up and down with lass, why dont you put that energy to use by helping to congregate the weak and defenseless and do the best for shelter for them.
Then mobilize and guh get for everyone and come back and help the weak first and everyone just help each other, are you really gonna chop up a next man just for yourself.
And I say that bcoz I know faced with the same situation Jamaica would eventually breakdown to the same.
Once againblack people look like them cant duh nutten fi dem self. Disasters happen all over the world. Everyone helps each other. Then it happens in a black area they predict we are gonna act like hooligans and we do..
I also feel uneasy with the americans working there way in on the island. I wouldn't be surprised that it turns into a military base right beside cuba. Set up another guantanomo bay b4 we even notice...
Then bush telling every not to send blanket, send money... Obama dont mek mi proud like first time either... A wha di beep a gwaan???
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They make the world so hard
Haiti’s reclusive former dictator has pledged £5m aid to his former subjects and expressed “complete solidarity” with their suffering since the earthquake.
CARICOM should step up bigtime. With the BLACKout being perpetrated we should also relay what the local communities are doing in response to this crisis. There are games being played at many levels.
CARICOM focus on Haiti field hospital; team attends donor meeting
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, January 18, 2010 – The Caribbean Community ( CARICOM) has identified the setting up of a field hospital in earthquake-hit member nation of Haiti as its primary focus and all the money provided by the various regional governments will go toward that effort.
Meantime, a delegation from the regional grouping will meet with other donor representatives at a meeting today in the Dominican Republic to discuss assistance and coordination of efforts for Haiti.
Medical facilities which were not damaged by the 7.0-magnitude earthquake which rocked the country last Tuesday have been unable to adequately treat the thousands of injured survivors. Barbados’ Prime Minister David Thompson, speaking to reporters over the weekend after meeting in Jamaica with some of his regional counterparts, said the field hospital was one of the best ways that the Caribbean could help.
"We wanted to look at a specific area in which we felt CARICOM could make its impact,” he said, noting that all the financial resources from the regional governments and, hopefully, non-governmental organisations would go towards this particular effort.
Thompson noted that while there’s a tendency for people to rush to make donations when there's a natural disaster of this magnitude, the logistical problems in Haiti prevent that aid from getting to the people who need it.
He said money to assist in running the field hospital would therefore be preferred. The cash will be placed into a fund administered by the Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) and the base for the medical equipment and resources will be Jamaica.
"If people really want to give something and they can give some kind of medical supply or ask a question about what is needed, we'd rather you supply that. We want to target our programme on the field hospital and we're certain that the resources would get to the people of Haiti that way,” the Barbados Prime Minister said.
Thompson said the field hospital is something that all member countries will contribute to and he has urged citizens to do the same.
Additionally, electricity companies in the region are exploring the possibility of assisting in the restoration of power to Haiti.
Meantime, the Jamaica Defence Force (JDF) has established a base camp in Haiti from which all CARICOM donations and aid staff are being dispatched.
The United Nations is the leading international support on the ground and the JDF is included in daily morning meetings at their headquarters and will play a role in the relief efforts as required, according to Jamaica’s Minister of Information, Daryl Vaz.
CARICOM countries have kicked into high gear in their support towards Haiti in the aftermath of the powerful earthquake. Member states have offered support to rescue and recovery missions in Haiti in the form of military assistance, search and rescue teams, medical personnel, artisans and aircrafts.
While preliminary discussions for accessing the Caribbean Development Bank’s Emergency Grant of US$200,000 were underway, several CARICOM countries and agencies have already made several pledges.
All across the region, several individual efforts led various groups and businesses, have themselves made donations and encouraged citizens to give to help the survivors of the quake.
A CARICOM delegation led by Chairman, Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit of Dominica, aborted their visit to Haiti last Friday after their plane failed to get clearance to land because of an influx of relief flights entering the country.
Skerrit will, however, attend today's meeting in the Dominican Republic. He will be accompanied by the Prime Ministers of Jamaica, Bruce Golding; Trinidad and Tobago, Patrick Manning; and Barbados, David Thompson, as well as CARICOM Secretary General Edwin Carrington.
Also in attendance will be senior officials of the US State Department, representatives of the European Union, and the United Nations.
The meeting is being convened by the King of Spain, Juan Carlos I, in his capacity as Chairman of the European Union (EU), and will discuss medium and long-term plans for Haiti's reconstruction.
Caricom blocked from landing in HaitiBY RICKEY SINGH Observer Caribbean correspondent
Sunday, January 17, 2010
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados -- The Caribbean Community's emergency aid mission to Haiti, comprising heads of government and leading technical officials, failed to secure permission Friday to land at that devastated country's airport, now under the control of the USA.
Consequently, the Caricom "assessment mission" that was to determine priority humanitarian needs resulting from the mind-boggling earthquake disaster last Tuesday had to travel back from Jamaica to their respective home destinations.
On Friday afternoon, the US State Department confirmed signing two Memoranda of Understanding with the Government of Haiti that made "official that the United States is in charge of all inbound and outbound flights and aid offloading".
Further, according to the agreements signed, US medical personnel "now have the authority to operate on Haitian citizens and otherwise render medical assistance without having to wait for licences from Haiti's Government".
Prior to the US taking control of Haiti's airport, a batch of some 30 Cuban doctors had left Havana, following the earthquake, to join more than 300 of their colleagues who have been working there for more than a year.
Last evening, the frustration suffered by the Caricom mission to get landing permission was expected to be raised in a scheduled meeting at Jamaica's Norman Manley International Airport between Jamaica's Prime Minister Bruce Golding and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
Golding, who was making arrangements for the meeting with Clinton, following her visit earlier in the day to witness the devastation of the capital Port-au-Prince, said he could not comment on details to be discussed.
He, however, told this correspondent: "I appreciate the chaos and confusion at Haiti's airport, where there is just one operational runway. But Haiti is a member of Caricom and we simply have to be facilitated and the truth is there is hardly a functioning government in Haiti."
Asked whether the difficulties encountered by the Caricom mission may be related to reports that US authorities were not anxious to facilitate landing of aircraft from Cuba and Venezuela, Prime Minister Golding said he could "only hope that there is no truth to such immature thinking in the face of the horrific scale of Haiti's tragedy".
Golding, who has lead portfolio responsibility among Caricom leaders for external economic relations, got a first-hand assessment of the damage when he flew to Haiti on Thursday.
A contingent of some 150 members of the Jamaica Defence Force has since established a camp with medical facilities in the vicinity of Haiti's airport.
Ahead of last evening's scheduled meeting with Clinton, Prime Minister Golding had discussed on Friday in Kingston some of the problems to be overcome at a meeting with the prime ministers of Barbados and Dominica and the Community's secretary general Edwin Carrington.
Carrington explained that proper use of the Norman Manley Airport would be consistent with a decision last week for Jamaica to serve as the Sub-regional Operational Focal Point for responses to the Haitian humanitarian crisis.
Caricom Aids Haiti, PM wants summit BARBADOS: CARICOM countries to the rescue of Haiti; PM Gonsalves wants special summit Posted by admin on 1/15/10
BRIDGETOWN, Barbados, CMC – The Prime Minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines on Thursday called for a special summit to deal with what he termed the “catastrophe” in Haiti but said the 15-member Caribbean Community (CARICOM) simply could not wait in dispatching much-needed emergency aid to the earthquake-devastated member state.
“We ought to have a special summit on it because it is a catastrophe and it is a catastrophe that has happened in one of our member states but we don’t have to wait until the meeting comes…we don’t need to talk to send resources immediately,” Ralph Gonsalves told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC), in support of an earlier call made by his Grenadian counterpart Tillman Thomas.
During a live regional television special on “the Horror in Haiti”, Gonsalves, whose government has been meeting on a national response to the situation in Port au Prince, said the circumstances in Haiti demanded that CARICOM “lift its game”.
He further labeled it “an awesome tragedy”, adding that “it is a hell of a beating that they (Haiti) have taken with this one (earthquake) and they need all the help they can get and we have to do the best we can”.
Gonsalves also disclosed that efforts were currently underway within the six independent states of the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union – namely Antigua and Barbuda, Dominica, Grenada, St. Lucia and St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Vincent and the Grenadines – to raise a million US dollars in financial support for Haiti.
He said his country, which operates a rice mill and flour mill, was also in the process of dispatching emergency supplies in conjunction with its regional neighbours. His comments came as a CARICOM fact-finding mission, led by the grouping’s Chairman, Dominica’s Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit, prepared to enter Haiti Friday. A statement from the Georgetown-based regional secretariat said the team also includes CARICOM Secretary General Edwin Carrington, Barbados Prime Minister David Thompson and his Jamaican counterpart Bruce Golding.
“The Caribbean Disaster Emergency Management Agency (CDEMA) is co-coordinating the regional response for its latest member Haiti which joined in September 2009. The regional response mechanism has identified four priority areas in this regard: emergency aid; shelter; search and rescue; and communication,” the CARICOM release said.
It also informed that search and rescue teams were on standby to travel to the disaster area “and CDEMA has also been liaising with its partners, the CARICOM Implementation Agency for Crime and Security (IMPACS), the Regional Security System (RSS), the CARICOM Secretariat, CAREC/PAHO and the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) with a view to putting in place immediately, an assessment team in order to provide appropriate guidance for the immediate needs of the Haitian people”.
The assessment team will also be travelling to Haiti on Friday, the statement said.
Tuesday’s earthquake measuring 7.0 on the Richter scale rocked Haiti Tuesday leaving tens of thousands feared dead and hundreds of millions of dollars in damage to government and private property.
It was the worst to hit the Island for two centuries.
“This latest setback to the development of the country will truly test the resilience of the Haitian people. Their tremendous resolve and determination however, will undoubtedly serve them in great stead as they move forward from this tragic event,” the CARICOM statement said.
While Guyana and other regional territories, and international bodies have pledged financial and other material support for the CARICOM state, coordinating relief efforts have been a challenge.
“In light of the communication difficulties, some of the staff of the CARICOM Representation Office in Haiti (CROH) have not yet been accounted for. The Office has not been damaged,” the release said.
It said “CARICOM has accepted an offer from the Government of Australia for immediate assistance to help the rapid response effort and there has also been collaboration with the United States Office of Disaster Assistance (OFDA) based in Miami, Florida.”
Jamaica has been designated the centre through which the Caribbean Community's (CARICOM) relief intervention for earthquake-hit Haiti will be channelled.
Addressing journalists at a media briefing at Jamaica House on Friday, Minister with responsibility for Information, Telecommunications and Special Projects in the Office of the Prime Minister, Daryl Vaz, disclosed that this decision was reached during a meeting of CARICOM representatives hosted by Prime Minister Bruce Golding at Jamaica House last Thursday.
Golding met with a nine-man delegation led by CARICOM Chairman, and Dominica's Prime Minister, Roosevelt Skerrit, as well as Secretary General, Dr Edwin Carrington, and Barbados' Prime Minister, David Thompson.
Vaz advised that, based on preliminary discussions, CARICOM would focus on providing medicine and medical personnel for Haiti.
"We believe that we will be able to put together, between all of the Governments, a good contingent of doctors and other medical officers to assist with the situation in Haiti," he contended.
He said that the CARICOM delegation left Jamaica early Friday (January 15) for Haiti to get a first hand view of the damage, and for further briefing by the Haitian administration in order to "formalise and concretise" what they are doing.
Director General of the Office of Disaster Preparedness and Emergency Management (ODPEM), Ronald Jackson, said that, regarding the medical response, the CARICOM officials discussed the deployment of additional personnel through the Caribbean Disaster Relief Unit.
"So we are establishing a CARICOM military contingent with skills sets in medical operations and engineering, to work on some of the key issues of establishing temporary medical facilities, medical posts, supported with temporary housing for persons," he explained.
Vaz also advised that the Government has been approached by United Nations interests in Haiti to accommodate their personnel in Jamaica for medical treatment.
"We have already been contacted and the Ministry of Health has made provisions at the University Hospital of the West Indies (UHWI) and the Kingston Public Hospital (KPH), to allow for some United Nations (UN) peacekeeping force members, (who are) critically injured, to get medical attention in Jamaica," he said.
Jackson said CARICOM was also giving consideration to this as part of the medical response, particularly for Haitians who need medical attention which, probably, cannot be administered there.
He added that CARICOM's efforts are being funded through donations from the international community. Approximately US$5 million has been released to support the regional body's activities.
Jackson said that US$1 million have each been forthcoming from the Governments of Australia and Trinidad and Tobago, and discussions have been held with the Caribbean Development Bank to provide resources as well.
Wyclef Jean's Yele Organization Raises $1 Million In Aid For Haiti Yele Haiti has received more than 200,000 text donations since Tuesday's earthquake.
So far, Wyclef Jean's nonprofit organization, Yele Haiti, has raised over $1 million for the victims of Tuesday's devastating earthquake from mobile donations alone. With a series of urgent tweets, an appearance on CNN and the help of his famous friends the singer has mobilized a massive effort on behalf of his homeland, imploring followers to text "Yele" to 501501 to donate $5 to the effort.
According to Albe Angel, CEO of Miami-based Give on the Go, the mobile-communications company working with Yele Haiti to coordinate donations, the organization has raised over $1 million for relief efforts since the earthquake. Yele's goal is to up that figure to $1 million a day as part of the SMS fundraising drive.
"Since the disaster occurred around 5 p.m. Eastern on Tuesday and [by] midnight [Wednesday] we cleared $1 million," said Angel, whose company provides the technology that allows mobile users to make an automatic $5 donation. Give on the Go has announced that 100 percent of the donations raised will go directly to Yele Haiti. More than 200,000 people have donated to the cause, and Angel said he thinks it's possible that the $1 million-per-day goal could be reached, given the volume of donations that have been coming in. "These types of donations really were spawned by the [2004] tsunami relief effort, and the $1 million that Yele has raised already is a watershed event."
Wyclef is not the only celebrity who has stepped up to aid the cause. The Jolie-Pitt Foundation, founded by Angelina Jolie and partner Brad Pitt, has pledged $1 million to the emergency medical operations of Doctors Without Borders.
"It is incredibly horrible to see a catastrophe of this size hit a people who have been suffering from extreme poverty, violence and unrest for so many decades," Jolie said in a statement on Wednesday.
Relief efforts have spawned Facebook and Twitter users to take action, and a number of other celebrities have joined in the fight to send urgently needed supplies to the impoverished Caribbean nation, including Alyssa Milano, Olivia Wilde, LL Cool J, Jessica Alba, Demi Moore and Joel and Benji Madden.
On Thursday, President Obama pledged $100 million in aid from the U.S. The United Nations also announced that $10 million would go to relief efforts in Haiti, while the World Bank pledged $100 million.
Head here to learn more about what you can do to help with earthquake-relief efforts in Haiti, and for more information, see THINK mtv.
_________________________ Blessed are those that buck the system, they make our lives better.
Barcelona Star Thierry Henry Gifts €56,000 To Medecins Sans Frontieres To Aid Haiti Earthquake Victims
By Robin Bairner Jan 22, 2010
Kind-hearted Barcelona attacker Thierry Henry has gifted thousands of euros to Medecins Sans Frontieres to aid their work in earthquake-struck Haiti.
The Caribbean island has been decimated by an earthquake that struck on Tuesday and measured 7.0 on the Richter scale. Funds have been flowing into appeals from various corners of the globe, but Henry appears especially affected as Guadaloupe, the homeland of his ancestors, has been struck by similar tragedies.
“I am very touched by this tragedy and it's very good that everyone is moving to help Haiti,” Henry told Barca’s official website. “It touches me because almost 20 years ago something similar happened in Guadeloupe and I know what the Haitians must go through. I have many friends there.
“Haiti is a former French colony. It's as if they were cousins. They need help. I felt I had to do something. That's why I decided to donate to Medecins Sans B.”
Medecins Sans Frontieres, which translates to Doctors Without Borders, is an organisation that endeavours to provide free healthcare for all, most notably in disaster struck and war-torn areas of the world. It is an organisation independent of political, religious or economic power.
One this we should be doing to help Haiti is to advance Aristede's call for a refund.
Quote:
HAITI: Aristide's Call for Reparations From France Unlikely to Die By Dionne Jackson Miller
KINGSTON, Mar 12, 2004 (IPS) - Whether Jean-Bertrand Aristide ever returns to the homeland he left under such controversial circumstances, his call for France to make reparations to his troubled Caribbean nation of Haiti is as important as ever and must not be allowed to die, say observers.
Some analysts believe that France's refusal to support the deployment of an international peacekeeping force to Haiti until after the president's departure was linked to Aristide's unpopular - in Paris - demand for reparations.
The United Nations Security Council, of which France is a permanent member, rejected a Feb. 26 appeal from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) for international peacekeeping forces to be sent into its member state Haiti, but voted unanimously to send in troops three days later, just hours after Aristide's controversial resignation.
"I believe that (the call for reparations) could have something to do with it, because they (France) were definitely not happy about it, and made some very hostile comments," Myrtha Desulme, chairperson of the Haiti-Jamaica Exchange Committee, told IPS.
"(But) I believe that he did have grounds for that demand, because that is what started the downfall of Haiti," she says.
Last year, Aristide demanded that France pay Haiti over 21 billion U.S. dollars, what he said was the equivalent in today's money of the 90 million gold francs Haiti was forced to pay Paris after winning its freedom from France as the hemisphere's first independent black nation 200 years ago.
Historians say that the massive toll that France exacted on Haiti played a large part in the Caribbean country's subsequent descent into stark poverty and under-development.
How closely the reparations issue influenced French actions in the days leading up to Aristide's departure from Haiti is debatable.
French professor and commentator on Haitian issues at New York University, Michael Dash, says the call is unlikely to have been the major factor.
"This demand certainly did not endear him (Aristide) to the French, but their recent actions in Haiti may have more to do with attempting to form some kind of alliance with the U.S. after the falling out over Iraq," he told IPS.
France refused to back Washington's call for support in the U.N. Security Council as it prepared an invasion of Iraq last year.
But the Haitian crisis has clearly pulled the two countries closer after a chill in relations over the U.S.-led invasion of the Middle Eastern nation.
Days after the intervention in Haiti, U.S. President George W. Bush telephoned French President Jacques Chirac to express pleasure over the two countries' cooperation on the issue.
But with Aristide gone, will the demand for reparations also die?
Desulme, a Haitian now living in Jamaica, is not sure.
"Geopolitics is a matter of how much muscle you can flex and now Haiti has no muscle to flex. It's in such a devastated state that it's a reconstruction process that's needed, and they have no muscle to demand (reparations)," says Desulme.
But the issue, she adds, must be kept alive, by advocates inside Haiti or via its friends outside.
"Haiti has suffered massive injustices. I think that they may have to give up the reparations argument because it seems to be offensive to France, but I believe that (outside advocates) should keep the issue alive."
"They should continue to ask for reparations even if they don't get it. I think it's a massive injustice that was done and the world needs to know that," she adds.
Dash says the issue is unlikely to fade away.
"Aristide got a lot of support for this demand both inside and outside of Haiti. The reality is that he in particular was unlikely to receive a cent from the French. A successor could however ask (more diplomatically), that some gesture be made by the French to compensate for what Haiti has suffered.
"The French, it is true, do not like to face up to their slave-owning colonial past. But we live in an age when reparations of all kinds are being asked for, and this one is a documented sum of money paid to a colonial power to compensate for loss of property, and which plunged Haiti into decades of debt," Dash says.
One avenue to help Haiti could be through development of the country's crippled infrastructure, says Desulme.
"The French have a moral duty to put into Haiti the equivalent of what was paid," she says. "They could put that amount into infrastructure in the country, like roads and water."
"The international community will have to come in and do that, whether they call it reparations or not."
Journalist and reparations activist Barbara Blake Hannah says the Haitian reparations issue touches the entire Caribbean.
"Haiti is part of the same 'slave boat' we all suffered in, and is part of the reparations issue - if only because they have set a precedent by paying it to France," Blake Hannah told IPS.
Coordinator of the Jamaica Reparations Movement, Blake Hannah says there has been little action there recently, as the organisation waits for the government to fulfil a promise to hold a national round-table to discuss restitution from former colonial power the United Kingdom.
In the meantime, demands for reparations have been growing globally.
The Bunyoro-Kitara kingdom, in western Uganda, home to a population of about one million people, has just announced that it will seek three trillion pounds (5.5 trillion dollars) from London in reparations for atrocities alleged to have been committed during the era of British colonialism, reported Agence France Presse recently.
Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan has also called on the United States and England to honour reparation claims.
The U.S. movement received a setback in January, when a Chicago judge dismissed a lawsuit against 18 companies said to have profited from slavery. 'USA Today' quoted U.S. District Judge Charles Norgle as saying the plaintiffs were "trying to assert the legal rights of their ancestors" without proving they had suffered injury.
Norgle also said the courts do not have the constitutional authority to decide the question of reparations for slavery, and that the issue should be dealt with by the U.S. Congress, while noting that the statute of limitations had run out on crimes committed during slavery, which ended in the United States in 1865.
These events are unfolding against the backdrop of U.N. celebrations of 2004 as the International Year for the Commemoration of Slavery and the Slave Trade, and the celebration of the Haitian bicentennial, an event entirely overshadowed by the dramatic events of the past weeks.
Dash says the overall impact on the commemoration depends on the expectations in which it was organised.
"If it was the raising of racial self-esteem or some such folly they will no doubt be disappointed. But Haiti is not just a racial symbol. It's a real Caribbean country going through a long and violent post-Duvalierist transition," he said referring to Francois and Jean-Claude Duvalier, father and son dictators who ruled Haiti from 1957 to 1986, and are accused of massive corruption and numerous incidents of human rights violations during their tenure.
"Celebrations must necessarily take in the reality of the struggle to establish a new social and political order in that country," adds Dash.
But Blake Hannah, a member of Jamaica's organising committee for the bicentennial observances, says that far from diminishing the significance of the year of commemoration, the upheavals in Haiti have deepened its import.
"Haiti is a beacon in the issues of slavery, rebellion and abolition," she says.
"Jamaicans have had their eyes opened on our slave history by Haiti. Jamaicans have bonded with their slave past as never before. It's such an ironic coincidence that it has taken another revolution to bring history into focus again. Whatever the outcome in Haiti, slavery is again in our focus." (END)
_________________________ Blessed are those that buck the system, they make our lives better.
The USA and the rest of the Western powers would block Haiti's reparation request on the same grounds that they did not recognized Haiti's independentce over 200 years ago. Their hands are also dirty and they know that if Haiti receive reparations, blacks throughout the hemisphere, particularly in the USA, would use Haiti as precedent to demand their own reparation, even if their circumstance is somewhat different. They wouldn't want to have that ants nest disturbed.
Actually Haiti should be asking France for both restitution and reparation. Restitution of the money Haiti paid them and reparations for slavery.
This request is better off done from the outside. Any request from a politician inside of Haiti would only bring more sponsored coups and further destabilization.
I can't believe Haitians did not make the world more aware of this injustice prior to now. Maybe the Haitians saw it as a land purchase from France since France supposedly had legal claim to it.