Haitians demand roads, schools, water

Mass protests, with barricades of burning tires, kept Construtora OAS, a Brazilian construction company, from moving its equipment out of Jérémie, Haiti, for four days at the end of November. This small city in the southwestern part of the country is still so riled up that schools were closed until the second week of December.

Jérémie, renowned for its poetry, art and architecture, doesn’t have a good road connecting to the rest of Haïti. OAS was tasked with building 42 miles of road connecting it to the southern city of Aux Cayes, but the company claimed it hadn’t been paid and so was pulling out. The Inter-American Development Bank and the Canadian government financed the $95 million project.

The people of Jérémie blamed the Haitian government, so they came out into the streets en masse to block OAS from moving its equipment until construction was restarted. The protests intensified after Haïti’s national SWAT team, the Corps for Intervention and Maintenance of Order, arrived on Nov. 29.

The press says one of the protesters, a young boy named Hilder Victor, was killed by gunfire. However, activists say more deaths occurred, and that about a dozen people had gunshot injuries.

“President Martelly lied to the population of the Grand Anse,” one protester told Haïti-Liberté. “He promised to build an airport, a power plant, schools, supply the city of Jérémie with drinking water, among other things. We have not received anything after more than a year and a half. Today, we have rebelled against the lies, the disrespect for the people of the city of poets, the lung of the country. And they sent Minustah troops and a CIMO force to shoot at us and bombard us with tear gas. Even children were not spared. We’re not afraid of these forces. We are organizing to give them a response with our own means.” (Dec. 9)

Jérémie, and the department surrounding it called Grand Anse, are isolated and were spared from the direct devastation of the 2010 earthquake and recent hurricanes. This relatively prosperous area had given Martelly a lot of support. It even elected senators who were in his party.

However, the complete unwillingness and incapacity of Martelly’s government to do anything at all for the people led to this uprising. It has become clearer that the only reason why Martelly’s government survives is the presence of Minustah, the United Nations military force in Haïti. Minustah is the U.N.’s cover for U.S. and French imperialist control.

G. Dunkel

G.Dunkel@workers.org

Share
Published by
G. Dunkel
Tags: Haiti

Recent Posts

PDF of May 2 issue

Download the PDF. Campus revolts inspire anti-imperialist solidarity Editorial: Behind repression of campus occupations: Follow…

May 2, 2024

Drop ALL charges against pro-Palestinian students!! Cops OFF the campuses!!

Should anyone have illusions that the United States is a bastion of democracy, those illusions…

May 1, 2024

Defying police violence, students extend encampments for Palestine

Reports from Workers World correspondents, supplemented by social media, give a feel of the breadth…

May 1, 2024

Korean American Solidarity Peace March

New York City The Korean American Solidarity Peace March, held on April 27 in New…

May 1, 2024

Qué diferencia hace media decena

Por Mumia Abu-Jamal  La guerra contra Gaza ha entrado ya en su sexto mes y…

May 1, 2024

Campus revolts inspire anti-imperialist solidarity

Faced with the ongoing U.S.-backed Israeli genocide in occupied Gaza that has claimed the lives…

April 30, 2024