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13796: Karioka9: 11/24 Miami Herald article (fwd)



From: karioka9@arczip.com

 Change Is On the Horizon
Jacqueline Charles, Miami Herald, 2002-11-24

While pro-government demonstrators largely shut down Haiti's capital Friday to show
their support for President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a divided Haitian community in
South Florida struggled to figure out what it all meant.

Although Friday's demonstration was led by Aristide supporters, it came two days
after anti-Aristide student protesters forced their way into the courtyard of a police
station in Petit-Goave. Three days before that, tens of thousands of anti-government
protesters in Cap-Haitien, the second largest city, called for an alternative to
Aristide's government.

The reaction in South Florida has been mixed, with opinions varying depending on
how people feel about Aristide.

WRONG METHOD

''This is not the way to bring down a government,'' said Arsene Omega, a Little Haiti
businessman and member of the local pro-Aristide group, Veye Yo. ``Aristide was
elected for five years. He should complete his term.''

Olivier Nadal, former president of the Haiti Chamber of Commerce and Industry
before he was forced into exile in March 2000, said the escalating unrest is a sign
that change is on the horizon.

''The citizens are getting involved and mostly the young,'' said Nadal, who believes
that neither Aristide nor the opposition leadership is fit to run the country. ``The
people are fed up with the economic and political situation. The students are in the
streets because they are more courageous than other people.

Charles Dieudonne, 30, interviewed at a Little Haiti strip mall, expressed
disappointment in the Aristide government, which he said has not made needed
changes.

''If you see the people get on the streets, it says they are tired,'' Dieudonne said.

Even Omega admitted Friday that he's beginning to question accusations by
government supporters in Haiti that the anti-government protests are the result of the
international community plotting against Haiti's sovereignty.

''Even though there is outsider infiltration, it's still Haitians that are doing it,'' he said.

Many South Florida Haitians say they don't believe an overthrow of the government
is imminent or that another mass exodus is on the horizon. Still, immigrant advocates
said the growing unrest is evidence that the United States should grant temporary
protected status to Haitians, allowing them to stay here until the Caribbean nation's
political crisis is over.

IMMIGRATION POLICY

''It's time for the government to step up to the plate and recognize that the political
situation in Haiti is tenuous at best, and Haitians [who] are subjected to deportation in
the immediate future are genuinely in fear for their lives,'' said Miami immigration
attorney Cheryl Little, who is working with several other groups from around the
country to prepare the request.

``Haiti is our neighbor. We have a very large Haitian community in the U.S. which is
able and willing to provide ample support to the Haitians who are here.''

Officials from the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service would not comment on
the proposed request. As for whether Friday's disturbance would affect the fate of
some 200 Haitians who are detained at detention centers in South Florida, that would
be up to immigration judges, said John Shewairy, INS's Miami district office chief of
staff.

''I can't address that because each case is addressed by an adjudication judge
based on its merits,'' he said.

Herald staff writer Charles Rabin contributed to this report