Sunday, September 22, 2019

PORTANTO NO HAITI OS ESCRAVOS REVOLTARAM-SE MATARAM TODOS OS BRANCOS MESMO OS QUE SE TINHAM RENDIDO E DESDE 1800 QUE CONTINUAM NA MERDA...O TAL TRUMP SHITHOLE...UM EXEMPLO PARA ÁFRICA!

Ghosts of tyrants past stalk proud Haiti as it slides towards the brink
Observer dispatch
Haiti
A nation that suffered under the Duvalier dictators is collapsing as corruption and a failing economy take their toll


Men carry fuel containers in the capital, Port-au-Prince.
Men carry fuel containers in the capital, Port-au-Prince. The yellow plastic cans have become commonplace as a the result of a petrol shortage. Photograph: Andrés Martínez Casares/Reuters
Last Sunday, Rony Marceline was riding his motorbike out of Ouanaminthe, a muggy, colourful town on Haiti’s border with the Dominican Republic, on a mission that within a few days has become commonplace: transporting yellow plastic containers of petrol. He hit a lorry and the canister split, enveloping him and his passenger, an as yet unnamed woman, in flames.

Until that moment, the newly necessary practice of carrying cans of fuel had been the subject of meme humour in this country where the petrol is running out and the usually intense traffic is stuttering to a halt. In one, an elegant woman carries a can under the caption: “the new accessory”. But now there is no joking: now the whole country is ready to explode.

Haiti, on the western end of Hispaniola, has fallen to depths its people cannot fathom. Protests, continuing into this weekend, have seen roads across the country blocked with rocks, trees and burning tyres, while in the capital, Port-au-Prince, senators engaged in fist-fights on the floor of the senate. The president, Jovenel Moïse, was due to fly to the UN on Sunday, his authority draining away.

“It feels like something is going to break, and it needs to,” says Marie Pascal, an economist.

‘Most Haitians would now be willing to work in conditions only just short of slavery’
Didier Dominique, historian
“This president has to go. The parliament has to go. There has to be something new,” says Lyonel Trouillot, a revered novelist.

“I can’t remember a situation this bad,” says Leslie Voltaire, an architect and former presidential candidate.

This view – that it has never been so bad – is repeated again and again across a country that has suffered, in living memory, the Papa and Baby Doc Duvalier dictatorships, a US invasion, and the 2010 earthquake that claimed up to 300,000 lives.

And the anger is worsened by wounded pride. This is the nation born in 1804 from a successful slave revolt. The walls of its cities show murals of the heroes Toussaint and Dessalines in Napoleonic bicorn hats. It’s a history Haitians believe the world ignores due to racism, preferring instead Donald Trump’s claim that Haiti is a “shithole”.

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