By: Yves Pierre-Louis & Kim
Ives - Haiti Liberte
Demonstrations erupted across
Haiti this past week as deep-seated anger against the government of President
Michel Martelly and Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe is now surging into the
streets on a daily basis. Marches, picket lines, a mock tribunal, and a general
strike were among the different actions which took place in six out of Haiti’s
10 geographic departments, a new high-water mark for anti-government protests.
Peasants,
small merchants, store owners, slum dwellers, teachers, unions, laid off state
enterprise employees, and the unemployed were among the different sectors
protesting against government indifference, corruption, insecurity, the high
cost of living, environmental degradation, and, above all, Martelly’s broken
promises.
On
Sep. 12, in the northern city of Cap-Haïtien, thousands took to the streets,
called out by 20 popular organizations and outspoken opposition Senator Moïse
Jean-Charles. The demonstrators marched through the city, stopping in front of
different government offices along the way. They accused Martelly of
implementing a policy of "mètdam,
pike devan" (bluff and headlong programs) based on lies, concocting
illegal taxes and shell-game programs to benefit his friends and family, the
Haitian oligarchy, and imperialist powers. Marchers accused the president of
being in cahoots with several big landowners, called "grandon" in
Haiti. Particularly around the northern town of Milot, where Sen. Jean-Charles
hails from and was once mayor, the government and "grandon" are
trying to evict peasants from land they have occupied for decades.