Admin Note: This interview is written by Samuel Maxime and first appeared on DefendHaiti, July 17, 2011. The Personality of Goddess Èzili Dantò by Samuel Maxime Èzili Dantò of HLLN Born in Port-au-Prince, Èzili Dantò, formerly referred to by her colonial name, Marguerite Laurent, is a dynamic leader in the 21st century Haytian culture. Èzili […]
Posts in category HLLN/Law
Haiti rape victim to Mac McClelland: I said “NO,” I did not give you authorization
Haiti rape victim tell McClelland: I said “NO,” you had no right to speak of my story, I did not give you authorization (One of Haiti’s most famous writers relay message for the twice victimized victim) Edwidge Danticat Speaks on Mac McClelland Essay by Edwidge Dandicat, July 8, 2010, Essence Magazine (See also [ezilidanto] Ezili […]
Haiti defines resistance: Stop the fake do-gooders and replace the Global White Supremacist Syste...
By Ezili Dantò, Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network (“HLLN”) and Free Haiti Movement, written for Haitian Perspectives, July 6, 2011 (See also, HLLN Links to honor of Drèd Wilmè and all the UN victims in Site Solèy and Photo Essay: Quiet Genocide in Haiti from FDR to Obama – How It’s Wielded). Haiti defines resistance – […]
Haiti: Displaced Women Demand Justice
Displaced Women Demand Justice in Port au Prince by Bill Quigley and Jocelyn Brooks, June 30, 2011, HLLN’s News, Essays and Reflections “We women demand!”¦” sang out a hundred plus voices “”¦Justice for Marie!” Marie, a 25 year old pregnant mother, was injured by government agents when they slammed a wooden door into her stomach […]
Stop the assault on the Haiti Diaspora
Stop the assault on the Haiti Diaspora: Do not eliminate the Ministry for Haitians Living Abroad “Neocolonial government to dissolve Diaspora Ministry but will tax Diaspora to mostly help the Central Bank modernize its banking system.” Haiti’s new president is imposing fees to raise money for his goal of free education. Without any public or […]
Haiti: The Structural Difficulties of “Building Back Better”
“Even assuming that Haiti had a government that was willing to act in the interests of the majority of its people, it is hard to imagine how it could be expected to bring about significant change because of the inherent difficulty in transforming Haiti’s peripheral position and relative powerlessness vis-a-vis other States and international institutions […]
Occupied Haiti: A Prefab President, Parliament and Constitution
“Under cover of giving more rights to the Haitian Diaspora, the coup d’etat and Duvalierist overseers unconstitutionally amended the Haiti Constitution to extend the power of the Prime Minister of Haiti, normally chosen by foreign powers. Their amended Constitution effectively eradicates the power of local Haiti governments & municipalities, including taking out the position of […]