Gas prices fuel 1-day strike in Haiti
By
G. Dunkel
Published Aug 19, 2005 11:48 PM
On Aug. 8, the Association of Owners and Drivers of
Haiti (APCH) held a countrywide, one-day strike over a sharp, unannounced
increase in fuel prices. Jean Winston Bazile, spokesperson for APCH, said,
“This is a warning strike, asking for the collaboration of the people. Our
next step will be to park all our minivans in front of the offices of the
Ministry of Com merce and the National Palace. Because we cannot continue to
function this way.”
Changeux Méhu, president of APCH, added,
“We are determined and we cannot continue to enrich rulers who take no
consideration of the precarious life of the poorest sectors of Haitian society.
It is necessary that this change; we can’t tolerate such
acts.”
The people who use the APCH minivans, which supply the only
mass transit available throughout Haiti, supported the strike, even though it
forced them to walk to work. “We have had enough. We can’t accept
such a situation, which increases our misery,” was a typical response of
those interviewed. (Haïti-Progrès, Aug. 10)
On July 28, the
National Popular Party (PPN) and Fanmi Lavalas held a major demonstration in
Cap-Haitien, the second-largest city in Haiti. It demanded an end to the
military occupation by UN troops, which are in Haiti under orders of the
imperialist-controlled Security Coun cil, and the return of Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, the popularly elected president who was kidnapped and forced into
exile in February 2004 by U.S. troops. The date was chosen to mark the 90th
anniversary of the first U.S. occupation of Haiti.
The march gathered in
Rond-Point Samori, a poor neighborhood, and proceed ed to Notre-Dame Square
without incident.
Another, similar demonstration was held in
Valières, a small city in northeast Haiti.
While the people’s
struggle continues, however, some politicians who claim to speak for Fanmi
Lavalas, the party created by Aristide, have registered it in the fall elections
and intricate political maneuvering fills the fancy hotels of
Port-au-Prince.
The PPN released a statement on July 28 on the situation
inside Haiti: “Today, despite massacres and genocides perpetrated by
George Bush, in Iraq, Afghan istan, Palestine, Haiti, he believes he can call
progressives ‘terrorists.’ But the world has never known a terrorist
of such a horrible character as George Bush. They call militants who peacefully
resist against the coup-napping of Feb. 29 [2004] bandits, while the biggest
gangster in the country, Andy Apaid [Haiti’s richest businessman], has
given arms and money to the Labanière gang to kill people living in
Cité Soleil. Why don’t they arrest him? ...
“Has
Venezuela sent arms and soldiers to kill us? No. Has Cuba sent arms and soldiers
to kill us? No. We say, Long live Venezuela! Long live Cuba! Long live the
International Tribunal on Haiti.
“The PPN declares that ... it is
not ready to sell its conscience, that it has just one destiny, to fight for the
total liberation of our country.”
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
Verbatim copying and distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without royalty provided this notice is preserved.
Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY, NY 10011
Email:
[email protected]
Subscribe
[email protected]
Support independent news
DONATE