‘Baby Doc' Duvalier returns to Haiti

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>
‘Baby Doc' Duvalier returns to Haiti:</font size><font size="6">
I 'came to help' country</font size></font size>
<font size="4">

Thousands of supporters greet former President Jean-Claude
Duvalier in his surprise return to the country from exile.</font size></center>


WPduvalier.wide_photo.prod_affiliate.91.jpg


Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier waves to supporters from a hotel balcony after his arrival in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Sunday. Duvalier returned Sunday to Haiti after nearly 25 years in exile, a surprising and perplexing move that comes as his country struggles with a political crisis and the stalled effort to recover from last year's devastating earthquake. | Associated Press



Miami Herald
BY JACQUELINE CHARLES
jcharles@miamiherald.com
January 16, 2011



PORT-AU-PRINCE -- In a move that stunned Haitians here and abroad, former dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc'' Duvalier unexpectedly returned to his homeland Sunday after decades of exile in France.

Duvalier's return comes as the country slowly recovers from last January's catastrophic earthquake, a deadly cholera outbreak and a political crisis stemming from November's flawed elections.

Several thousand people gathered outside the international airport after the news began to spread through the capital.

"Here's my president!'' some in the crowd chanted.

Local journalists who talked with Duvalier inside the airport said he told them that he ‘‘came to help his country." It was unclear how he intended to do so or what his immediate plans were.

Duvalier's dramatic return could have unpredictable consequences for the country, Haitian experts said.

"At least in the short term, the Haitian political chessboard has changed and changed utterly," said Robert Fatton, Jr., a government and foreign affairs professor at the University of Virginia. "We need more information from the French, the United States and the Haitian government before arriving at a sensible idea of this event."

Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said his government didn't know that Duvalier was headed home until the former president was in the air.

"This time I'm totally lost. No way I'm going to believe the French didn't know," Bellerive told The Miami Herald. "We're informed one hour before he landed with his passport ‘perime' (expired) so this should at least have brought some attention!''

Police Chief Mario Andresol said there was no warrant for Duvalier's arrest and he was free to return.

A smiling Duvalier, 59, wearing a dark-blue suit and light blue tie, arrived aboard an Air France flight shortly before 6 p.m. accompanied by Veronique Roy, his longtime companion.

Few knew of his plans. Sources said he traveled on a diplomatic passport that he received in 2005.

For hours after landing, Duvalier was holed up in the diplomatic lounge at the airport as the crowd grew and authorities huddled over what to do. About two hours later, a frail-looking Duvaliar, surrounded by crush of supporters and security, left the airport in the back seat of an SUV. The crowd cheered.

In the chaos at the airport, national police used pepper spray and pointed their weapons at journalists to keep them away from the terminal. The United Nations, which has a peacekeeping force in Haiti, sent tanks to help keep order.

The foreign diplomatic community, which was also caught by surprise, had no immediate response. The U.S. ambassador and other diplomats were attending a meeting in preparation for Monday's visit of Jose Miguel Insulza, the secretary general of the Organization of American States. The OAS has been working with the government to end a crisis stemming from last year's presidential and legislative elections.

The OAS report on the election suggests that the government candidate should be knocked out of the runoff. The U.S. and other major donors have said that they back the report. President René Préval has not spoken publicly on the report but aides have said that he questions some of the findings.

Duvalier, who was handed the presidency at 19 by his father, Francois "Papa Doc'' Duvalier, ruled Haiti from 1971 to 1986. In a U.S.-brokered deal, he fled the country for France amid massive unrest after anti-government demonstrators clashed with security forces and his private militia, the dreaded Tonton Macouts.​

For months, graffiti on walls have read, "Welcome home Jean-Claude Duvalier," indicating that his return may have been in the works for some time. He has said for years that he would like to return to Haiti.

Gesnol Pierre-Louis, who was 2 years old when Duvalier left, said he's always been a fan of the former president.

"My parents always said when he was here, life wasn't expensive, Haitians were not dying of hunger," said Pierre-Louis, 25. "He was not a bad person."

But others remain confused about what the return means and its political impact.

"This whole affair is mystifying," Fatton said.

Gervais Charles, a former Duvalier attorney who now represents presidential candidate Michel "Sweet Micky''Martelly, said Préval could have been involved in orchestrating Sunday's events.

"I'm asking myself if it's Préval, the French and the Americans. What's more important for me is if Préval has something to do with it. It would be very frightful if he's had something to do with it," Charles said. "It would mean he's doing his best to see if he can stay by defying the international community so he could not go into exile."

Charles, who was among the anti-Aristide opposition that led to his eventual ouster, said he's as surprised as everyone that Duvalier was back.

"Right now I really don't know what's going on. The one thing I know is the French knew about it," he said. "I'm at a loss and don't know what to think."

At Karibe hotel, Duvalier was greeted by Martelly supporters. The crowd screamed and nearly tore down the gate trying to get to him. He later waved from the hotel's third floor to throngs of fans and journalists waiting to snap his photograph.

Duvalier, who appeared to have a stiff neck, later enjoyed a late night meal of grilled conch with a side of lima beans. The table was set for 15, but only about 10 people joined him. He took calls and greeted old friends between bites. The dinner crowd gawked.

Haitians say that Duvalier's return could lead to the return of other exile presidents, especially Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was forced out in 2004 and now lives in South Africa. Some of Aristide's supporters have already started calling for his return, many chanting his name at the airport as Duvalier sped away.




http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/01/16/v-fullstory/2019209/newspaper-ousted-president-jean.html
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
`

<font size="3">Observers: Duvalier's return to Haiti puzzling
Longtime Haiti observers were downright bewildered Sunday night after deposed despot Jean-Claude ``Baby Doc'' Duvalier made a surprise return to his country after almost 25 years of exile.</font size>

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<font size="3">Bio on ex-Haiti dictator 'Baby Doc' Duvalier</font size>

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<font size="3">Chronology of ex-dictator 'Baby Doc' Duvalier
Here is a brief chronology of milestones in the life of ex-Haitian dictator Jean-Claude 'Baby Doc' Duvalier:</font size>

Jean-Claude-Baby-Doc-Duva-001.jpg

Jean-Claude 'Baby Doc' Duvalier in Port-au-Prince in 1975



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Damian Stone

I saw a real UFO....
BGOL Investor
It's only surprising because nobody has revealed yet who issued him a passport.
But it's been known that he wished to be back years ago. They even had a few test runs.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>
Who Let 'Baby Doc' Duvalier Back into Haiti?</font size></center>



duvalier_0117.jpg

Jean-Claude Duvalier, the former Haitian leader
known as 'Baby Doc', makes his way through
the Karibe Hotel in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 16,
2011 Allison Shelley / Getty Images


By Tim Padgett Monday, Jan. 17, 2011




In the past 12 months, Haiti — already the western hemisphere's economic basket case — has suffered an epic earthquake that according to latest estimates killed more than 250,000 people and leveled the country's infrastructure, a cholera epidemic that has claimed thousands more lives and a powder-keg political crisis tied to the fraud-tainted Nov. 28 presidential election.


<font size="3">All the country needed now was the return of a brutal exiled dictator.</font size>

This being Haiti, whose chronic tragedy is so often served with a helping of banana-republic bizarreness, that's what it got Sunday afternoon when Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier landed in Port-au-Prince for the first time since being thrown out of the country and packed off to France almost 25 years ago. "I came to help my country," the 59-year-old former despot declared as some 2,000 of his supporters met him at the airport. But it's hard to imagine how Duvalier's reappearance, which Haitian officials insist took them by surprise, could do anything more than throw Haiti into even deeper turmoil as it tries to rebuild after last year's disaster.​


<font size="3">And what's perhaps even harder to imagine is how the government of French President Nicolas Sarkozy could have allowed Duvalier, who arrived from Paris, to board an Air France flight bound for Haiti under the current circumstances.</font size>

"For the French to have even permitted [Duvalier] to leave their territory amidst an electoral and cholera crisis here shows they have not much interest in the welfare of the Haitian people," says a high-ranking Haitian government official.

French officials, who technically had no power to stop Duvalier, weren't responding to that question on Sunday night. But Port-au-Prince media were rife with conflicting conspiracy theories — all of them focused on last week's election report by the Organization of American States (OAS). It concluded that Jude Célestin, the candidate of Haitian President René Préval's party, actually finished third, not second, in the first-round balloting on Nov. 28, and that Célestin should therefore not be eligible for a runoff vote — which, ironically, was originally supposed to have been held Sunday but has been postponed.

The less-than-credible Nov. 28 results, which many if not most Haitians believe the government fixed to eke out a runoff spot for Célestin, were met by violent street protests last month. Even before last week's OAS report, the aloof and unpopular Préval was under ample international pressure, including from the U.S., to recognize the official third-place finisher, Michel Martelly, as the actual runner-up. (He would then face first-place candidate Mirlande Manigat in the runoff.) Last week, France's ambassador to Haiti, Didier Le Bret, was frequently on Haitian radio calling on Préval to respect the OAS recommendation. Préval in turn angrily charged France and the international community with imperialist-style strong-arming.​


<font size="3">The question now is, Who if anyone in this standoff benefits from the sudden presence of Duvalier?</font size>

Some Haitian pundits on Sunday said it might be meant to compel Préval to acquiesce to international demands to sacrifice Célestin. But it's hard to believe, even under Sarkozy, that France and the international community would stoop so low diplomatically as to encourage Duvalier to return to Haiti for that purpose. Others suggested that Duvalier's return instead gives Préval leverage by showing the international powers how much more turbulent things can get if they keep messing with the Haitian President. But again, could even Préval be cynical enough to open the door to one of the 20th century's most notorious dictators for that kind of political gain? Either way, sources close to Duvalier told reporters Sunday that he'd entered Haiti on a diplomatic passport — but if so, it was unclear which country had issued it to him.



<font size="3">What's worse, this drama could actually send many Haitians, albeit with blinders on, to the side of Duvalier</font size>

This drama could actually send many Haitians, albeit with blinders on, to the side of Duvalier, whose stunning return might make him seem a figure of stability and order amid their country's nightmarish uncertainties. Baby Doc had already announced his desire to return to Haiti in 2004, after the ouster of populist President Jean-Bertrand Aristide (whose supporters may now clamor more loudly for his own return from exile in South Africa). Duvalier even said he wanted to run for President himself in the 2006 elections. But Haitian officials made it clear that if Duvalier did return, he'd face trial on charges of corruption and brutality during his 15-year dictatorship, which had succeeded the even harsher regime of his father, François "Papa Doc" Duvalier, who died in 1971.​


<font size="3">Both Papa Doc and Baby Doc ruled through terror</font size>

Both Papa Doc and Baby Doc ruled through terror, relying on bloodthirsty enforcers like the Tonton Macoutes, and each stole the western hemisphere's poorest nation blind. After Baby Doc and his infamously venal wife, Michèle Bennett, were whisked out of Haiti in February of 1986 on a U.S. Air Force plane amid a seething uprising by Haitians, they settled in the south of France and lived in one of the world's most luxurious exiles. (They divorced in 1993; Duvalier arrived in Port-au-Prince on Sunday with his new wife, Véronique Roy, the granddaughter of a former Haitian President.)


Baby Doc apologized for his government's "errors" in 2004. But despite the welcome he received at the Port-au-Prince airport, Haitian police officials said they were "waiting for instructions from prosecutors" as to whether they should arrest him. After stepping off his Air France flight on Sunday, Duvalier declared, "I am here to see how the situation is." Please. He already knew how bad the situation was. And just as he and his monstrous father did when they ruled Haiti, he's there to make it worse.​


— With reporting by Jessica Desvarieux / Port-au-Prince



http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2042762,00.html
 

Damian Stone

I saw a real UFO....
BGOL Investor


Well due to the inability to figure out where exactly the millions being given to Haiti where going I personally found people in need over there that I help and try to give opportunity to fare for themselves.
We are trying to invest in their potential for self sustenance. The whole political aspect of Canadian involvement on Haiti seems a lot like empty talk.
 

JCAL1705

Potential Star
BGOL Investor
Actually unfortunately Canada has been quit involved in the destabilization of Haiti's attempts to have a well functioning democracy. I'm currently reading Canada in Haiti "Waging war on the poor majority". Here's an interview with one of the authors who talks about Canada involvement in the country. I wasn't able to link the video directly maybe someone can help me with that...
http://citizenshift.org/node/1082

Well due to the inability to figure out where exactly the millions being given to Haiti where going I personally found people in need over there that I help and try to give opportunity to fare for themselves.
We are trying to invest in their potential for self sustenance. The whole political aspect of Canadian involvement on Haiti seems a lot like empty talk.
 

Mrfreddygoodbud

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
its so obvious the french are like white folks who never got over the civil war..

france is forever making Haiti pay for being the first black nation... and they use their light skin puppets like baby doc to pull it off...

talk about sore losers...

one day haiti will free itself from the demons within....

crzy shit.... Aristede kidnapped and baby doc bought back, what kind of criminal shit is going on there.....
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
40 Years Ago



<font size="5"><center>The strange day "Baby Doc"
Duvalier took over Haiti</font size></center>



r

April 21, 1971. Jean-Claude "Baby
Doc" Duvalier, Haiti's new President-
for-Life




Reuters
By Robert Evans
January 17, 2011

GENEVA (Reuters) - Watched carefully by a coterie of ministers and aides, the plump teenager remained ensconced on the hard-padded sofa as I and other foreign journalists filed up one by one to meet Haiti's new President-for-Life.

The handshake was limp, the palm pudgy and Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier, in gaudy tie but dark, buttoned-up double-breasted suit despite the heat, gazed vaguely into the distance, avoiding eye contact with his visitors.

It was April 1971, in the gilded reception room of the now wrecked Presidential Palace in Port-au-Prince, just 48 hours after the 19-year-old's father, long-time dictator Francois "Papa Doc" Duvalier, was officially declared dead.

This past weekend, after 15 years as Haiti's official leader followed by 25 years in exile, "Baby Doc" returned to the earthquake-shattered Caribbean country saying he wanted to help in the reconstruction effort.

But human rights groups quickly called for Haiti to arrest and prosecute him for crimes against humanity.

Nearly 40 years ago, on April 21, 1971, Haitian radio began playing funereal music at 7 a.m., then at 8 a.m. it announced -- with no mention of "Papa Doc" -- that President-for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier had official functions to perform that day.

The night before, over a steak supper following a flight into Haiti via Miami from Mexico City where I was based at the time, I had been warned by a veteran Duvalier-watcher: "If the old man dies, dive under your bed and stay there."

The "blood-in-the-streets" warning was repeated by the hotel owner as he fended off an American tourist who was demanding transport to take him to the famous chateau of 19th-century revolutionary figure Henri Christophe in the north.

"Nothing is moving today," the young hotelier, whose father had been abducted and killed some years before by "Papa Doc"'s very unsecret security squads, the Tontons Macoutes, told me.

But for a large fee a taxi driver agreed to drive to the telegraph office -- no internet or mobile phones then -- from where a call could be placed. The streets, at 10 a.m. on a weekday, were all but empty and the driver was silent.

"Nothing has happened," was all he would say -- a phrase repeated by the woman who booked my call to our Washington bureau, which came through promptly.

That was the common refrain, over the following days of ceremonies and speeches sealing Jean-Claude's assumption to his father's title, from a people cowed into abject fear by Papa Doc and the Tontons.

"CLOSET REFORMER" DIDN'T DO MUCH

The old man's ministers and his powerful widow Simone, stood around the stocky, crew-cut youth as he gave a listless news conference at which he took no questions, and was blessed by a bishop long excommunicated by the Vatican.

During that service, in the now also quake-wrecked Catholic cathedral, armed soldiers stood in the aisles and one with an automatic rifle on the ready watched from the pulpit.

But the only deaths linked to Papa Doc's passing came after the religious service, when voodoo-worshipping crowds lining the street thought they saw his spirit in a small whirlwind of dust and fled in panic, many down open drains.

Even the Tontons, for whom he had been the incarnation of mythical voodoo overlord Baron Samedi, ran, shedding their shoes in the process. One, guarding foreign journalists, returned 10 minutes later declaring unconvincingly: "Nothing happened."

During those days, young men proclaiming themselves old schoolfriends of Jean-Claude circulated among the reporters, insisting that he was a closet reformer who was going to turn Haiti into a tropical paradise, or at least a modern state.

The same role was performed by dapper and diminutive Haitian columnist Auberon Jolicoeur -- "Petit Pierre" in Graham Greene's novel on Papa Doc's Haiti "The Comedians" and its film version.

When Baby Doc addressed the puppet parliament a week after his father died, he did declare an amnesty for political prisoners. How many actually got out of jail -- the Tontons kept few prisoners alive for long -- was never known.

Baby Doc did try to brighten Haiti's dark reputation after the violent, despotic era of his father. For example, he renamed the Tontons "the volunteers for national security" -- but did not dissolve the internationally condemned force of state thugs.

He was also dogged by perceptions of repressive rule, corruption and human rights abuses himself before he fled abroad from a groundswell of street protests and U.S. pressure in 1986.

Haiti-watchers had no doubt in April 1971 that real power remained with the group -- both black and mulatto -- Papa Doc had gathered around him after destroying the old mulatto elite that had ruled Haiti since independence from France in 1804.

The role of these people -- including interior minister Luckner Cambronne and army chief Claude Raymond -- became very clear as a U.S. warship appeared in coastal waters, obviously sparking fears of an invasion.

Foreign journalists having a farewell supper in the garden at Olofsson's, the hotel made famous by Greene, were summoned in mid-meal to meet "important people." The Tontons bringing the message left no doubt we were not expected to wait for dessert.

Whisked in some trepidation across town to a building where we found Cambronne, Raymond and company waiting, we soon realized with relief that we were not headed for jail but were to be given an important message to take with us next day.

"All is at peace here," we were told in a dozen different ways in the course of a two-hour pep session. And, of course: "Nothing has happened. You must tell your readers that."

Over the next 15 years in long-suffering Haiti, nothing very much did. (Robert Evans was Reuters bureau chief in Mexico City from 1970 to 1972). (Editing by Mark Heinrich)



http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE70G43M20110117
 

tecumseh7

Potential Star
Registered
<font size="5"><center>
‘Baby Doc' Duvalier returns to Haiti:</font size><font size="6">
I 'came to help' country</font size></font size>
<font size="4">

Thousands of supporters greet former President Jean-Claude
Duvalier in his surprise return to the country from exile.</font size></center>


WPduvalier.wide_photo.prod_affiliate.91.jpg


Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier waves to supporters from a hotel balcony after his arrival in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Sunday. Duvalier returned Sunday to Haiti after nearly 25 years in exile, a surprising and perplexing move that comes as his country struggles with a political crisis and the stalled effort to recover from last year's devastating earthquake. | Associated Press



Miami Herald
BY JACQUELINE CHARLES
jcharles@miamiherald.com
January 16, 2011



PORT-AU-PRINCE -- In a move that stunned Haitians here and abroad, former dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc'' Duvalier unexpectedly returned to his homeland Sunday after decades of exile in France.

Duvalier's return comes as the country slowly recovers from last January's catastrophic earthquake, a deadly cholera outbreak and a political crisis stemming from November's flawed elections.

Several thousand people gathered outside the international airport after the news began to spread through the capital.

"Here's my president!'' some in the crowd chanted.

Local journalists who talked with Duvalier inside the airport said he told them that he ‘‘came to help his country." It was unclear how he intended to do so or what his immediate plans were.

Duvalier's dramatic return could have unpredictable consequences for the country, Haitian experts said.

"At least in the short term, the Haitian political chessboard has changed and changed utterly," said Robert Fatton, Jr., a government and foreign affairs professor at the University of Virginia. "We need more information from the French, the United States and the Haitian government before arriving at a sensible idea of this event."

Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive said his government didn't know that Duvalier was headed home until the former president was in the air.

"This time I'm totally lost. No way I'm going to believe the French didn't know," Bellerive told The Miami Herald. "We're informed one hour before he landed with his passport ‘perime' (expired) so this should at least have brought some attention!''

Police Chief Mario Andresol said there was no warrant for Duvalier's arrest and he was free to return.

A smiling Duvalier, 59, wearing a dark-blue suit and light blue tie, arrived aboard an Air France flight shortly before 6 p.m. accompanied by Veronique Roy, his longtime companion.

Few knew of his plans. Sources said he traveled on a diplomatic passport that he received in 2005.

For hours after landing, Duvalier was holed up in the diplomatic lounge at the airport as the crowd grew and authorities huddled over what to do. About two hours later, a frail-looking Duvaliar, surrounded by crush of supporters and security, left the airport in the back seat of an SUV. The crowd cheered.

In the chaos at the airport, national police used pepper spray and pointed their weapons at journalists to keep them away from the terminal. The United Nations, which has a peacekeeping force in Haiti, sent tanks to help keep order.

The foreign diplomatic community, which was also caught by surprise, had no immediate response. The U.S. ambassador and other diplomats were attending a meeting in preparation for Monday's visit of Jose Miguel Insulza, the secretary general of the Organization of American States. The OAS has been working with the government to end a crisis stemming from last year's presidential and legislative elections.

The OAS report on the election suggests that the government candidate should be knocked out of the runoff. The U.S. and other major donors have said that they back the report. President René Préval has not spoken publicly on the report but aides have said that he questions some of the findings.

Duvalier, who was handed the presidency at 19 by his father, Francois "Papa Doc'' Duvalier, ruled Haiti from 1971 to 1986. In a U.S.-brokered deal, he fled the country for France amid massive unrest after anti-government demonstrators clashed with security forces and his private militia, the dreaded Tonton Macouts.​

For months, graffiti on walls have read, "Welcome home Jean-Claude Duvalier," indicating that his return may have been in the works for some time. He has said for years that he would like to return to Haiti.

Gesnol Pierre-Louis, who was 2 years old when Duvalier left, said he's always been a fan of the former president.

"My parents always said when he was here, life wasn't expensive, Haitians were not dying of hunger," said Pierre-Louis, 25. "He was not a bad person."

But others remain confused about what the return means and its political impact.

"This whole affair is mystifying," Fatton said.

Gervais Charles, a former Duvalier attorney who now represents presidential candidate Michel "Sweet Micky''Martelly, said Préval could have been involved in orchestrating Sunday's events.

"I'm asking myself if it's Préval, the French and the Americans. What's more important for me is if Préval has something to do with it. It would be very frightful if he's had something to do with it," Charles said. "It would mean he's doing his best to see if he can stay by defying the international community so he could not go into exile."

Charles, who was among the anti-Aristide opposition that led to his eventual ouster, said he's as surprised as everyone that Duvalier was back.

"Right now I really don't know what's going on. The one thing I know is the French knew about it," he said. "I'm at a loss and don't know what to think."

At Karibe hotel, Duvalier was greeted by Martelly supporters. The crowd screamed and nearly tore down the gate trying to get to him. He later waved from the hotel's third floor to throngs of fans and journalists waiting to snap his photograph.

Duvalier, who appeared to have a stiff neck, later enjoyed a late night meal of grilled conch with a side of lima beans. The table was set for 15, but only about 10 people joined him. He took calls and greeted old friends between bites. The dinner crowd gawked.

Haitians say that Duvalier's return could lead to the return of other exile presidents, especially Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was forced out in 2004 and now lives in South Africa. Some of Aristide's supporters have already started calling for his return, many chanting his name at the airport as Duvalier sped away.




http://www.miamiherald.com/2011/01/16/v-fullstory/2019209/newspaper-ousted-president-jean.html


Just what they need....some much needed "help" from a thug who 'help' them previously, before being EXHILED to make way for another 'helper' ...i.e., Aristide. Yes, over the past two centuries Haiti has han many 'helpers' ( the most famous-or infamous) being Baby Doc's ole man---Papa Doc. My unsolicited advice: BEWARE OF SO-CALLED "HELPERS"! Especially if they are justing returning from an exhiled enforced vacation. I thought this guy was exhiled for life? Oh, how quickly we forget and forgive.:smh::smh:
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator

What??? Did he forget something to loot? :hmm:


Well due to the inability to figure out where exactly the millions being given to Haiti where going I personally found people in need over there that I help and try to give opportunity to fare for themselves.
We are trying to invest in their potential for self sustenance. The whole political aspect of Canadian involvement on Haiti seems a lot like empty talk.


Just what they need....some much needed "help" from a thug who 'help' them previously, before being EXHILED to make way for another 'helper' ...i.e., Aristide. Yes, over the past two centuries Haiti has han many 'helpers' ( the most famous-or infamous) being Baby Doc's ole man---Papa Doc. My unsolicited advice: BEWARE OF SO-CALLED "HELPERS"! Especially if they are justing returning from an exhiled enforced vacation. I thought this guy was exhiled for life? Oh, how quickly we forget and forgive.:smh::smh:

<font size="5">
<center>
'Baby Doc' Duvalier charged with corruption
</font size><font size="4">

Former dictator faces charges relating to his 15-year
rule after being hauled before a judge in Port-au Prince</font size></center>


Former-Haitian-dictator-B-005.jpg

Former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude 'Baby Doc' Duvalier arrives at the prose
cutors office in Port-au-Prince. Photograph: Hector Retamal/AFP/Getty Images


The Guardian
Rory Carroll,
Latin America correspondent
Wednesday 19 January 2011


Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier was charged with corruption and the theft of his country's meagre funds last night after the former Haitian dictator was hauled before a judge in Port-au-Prince

Two days after his return to the country he left following a brutal 15-year rule, a noisy crowd of his supporters protested outside the state prosecutor's office while he was questioned over accusations that he stole public funds and committed human rights abuses after taking over as president from his father in 1971.

"His fate is now in the hands of the investigating judge. We have brought charges against him," said Port-au-Prince's chief prosecutor, Aristidas Auguste.

He said his office had filed charges against Duvalier, 59, of corruption, theft, misappropriation of funds and other alleged crimes committed during his period in power.

The charges must now be investigated by the judge who will decide whether a criminal case should go ahead. After several hours of questioning, Duvalier left the prosecutor's office but was ordered to remain in the country at the disposition of judicial authorities. "He doesn't have the right to go anywhere," investigating judge Carves Jean said.

Dozens of officers, including some in riot gear, had whisked him earlier from his hotel past a jeering and cheering crowd and into a 4x4 with tinted windows – a scene which his regime's victims had long dreamed of. He, who was not handcuffed, appeared calm and did not say anything. He had been due to give a press conference to explain his return from 25 years in exile.

Crowds immediately thronged the courthouse in expectation of a historic hearing.

Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, among others, have urged the authorities to prosecute the former dictator for jailing, torturing and murdering thousands of people during his time in power. His longtime companion, Veronique Roy, when asked whether Duvalier was being arrested, simply laughed and said nothing.

The scene evoked memories of 7 February 1986 when crowds danced in the streets after widespread revolts and international pressure led to his departure.

His Swiss-banked fortune long used up in divorce and tax disputes, Duvalier returned to Haiti without warning on Sunday on a flight from Paris, saying he wanted to help. "I'm not here for politics. I'm here for the reconstruction of Haiti."

A spokesman for the UN high commissioner for human rights said it should be easier to prosecute Duvalier in Haiti because it was where atrocities took place but that the judicial system was fragile.

It remained unclear why he returned and what impact it would have on the year-long post-quake crisis which has left a leadership vacuum and a country in ferment, with near daily street demonstrations by rival factions.


http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/jan/18/haiti-baby-doc-duvalier-court
 

Chitownheadbusa

♏|God|♏
BGOL Investor
The US and France had a relationship with both Doc's.
Both helped keep Haiti in the condition that its stil in.

I feel for the folks over in Haiti.

First they send Bill "3 strikes & your out" Clinton over there, i.e. the guy that showed he doesnt give a fuck about Blacks in 3rd world countries.....read up on Rwandan....now this mofo reemerges.

Strange aint it?
 

tecumseh7

Potential Star
Registered
The US and France had a relationship with both Doc's.
Both helped keep Haiti in the condition that its stil in.

I feel for the folks over in Haiti.

First they send Bill "3 strikes & your out" Clinton over there, i.e. the guy that showed he doesnt give a fuck about Blacks in 3rd world countries.....read up on Rwandan....now this mofo reemerges.

Strange aint it?

I agree 100% with your observation regarding former President Bill "anyway I can make a buck" Clinton. He is determined to project him as the "most interesting man in the world", and regrets that he is currently NOT President. He probably wishes that(like Baby Doc's self-declaration)President for life, and secretly utters to himself..."the people of the world love me and will forever need me", I wonder just how much of the millions raised by Clinton-Bush will actually benefit the PEOPLE of Haiti. Questions have been raised--and rightly so--about the amount of money raised by others, but no questions were raised about the amount of money and its hold-up credited to the former U.S. President. A double standard, perhaps? Transparency should apply to all.
 

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator

Jean-Claude 'Baby Doc' Duvalier Hospitalized


The Root
By: Nsenga Burton
March 25, 2011


AOL News is reporting that former Haitian dictator Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier
has been hospitalized after having chest pains, his longtime companion and associates
said Thursday without giving details about his condition. Duvalier, who made a
surprise return to the Caribbean nation in January, was admitted Wednesday night,
companion Veronique Roy said as she took a break from visiting him at the Canape
Vert hospital in Port-au-Prince.

Roy declined to discuss his condition in detail. Asked if it was serious, she replied
only, "I hope not."

The 59-year-old former dictator made an abrupt return to Haiti in January after
25 years in exile and appeared at times to move with difficulty, sparking speculation
that he was ill. He has been living in a villa in the hills above Port-au-Prince under
police guard as a judge investigates whether he can be charged with a long list of
crimes, including corruption and torture, committed while he was "president for
life" in the impoverished Caribbean nation.

Perhaps the stress of returning home, living under a police presence and awaiting
the fate of possible charges against him is taking its toll on Baby Doc. His mystery
illness reflects the mystery of his return to Haiti. There's something there -- it will
take some time to figure out just what it is.




http://www.theroot.com/buzz/jean-claude-baby-doc-duvalier-hospitalized
 
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