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23143: Saint-Vil RE: 23140 Security Council's fake condemnation (fwd)




From: Jean Saint-Vil <jafrikayiti@hotmail.com>

Meanwhile, the legal Prime Minister is in jail, all the elected officials
(local as well as national) are replaced by de facto thieves put in power with
the complicity of this very U.N."Security" Council which now pretends to be
external to the mess they are decrying. How Typical !?

As usual, a deceptive message to camouflage the role the puppet masters are
playing in the theatre.

This latest note is the marching order the troops in Haiti were waiting for to
clean the rest of the impoverished neighbohoods were people refused to join the
foolish "Grenn Nan Bounda" call which uprooted elected officials to put in
their place the goons playing front roles in the theatre today. One of the
latest preparatory theatrics included a French Minister going to Cité Soleil to
stage a "Tarzan-like" near lynching by the vicious natives. Followed within
hours by mass arrests in Cité Soleil, conducted by the illegal puppet
regime....meanwhile Jean Pierre Baptiste (Tatoune) roams free and wild...just
as he did all the while when the OAS and other agencies of white supremacy
international were demanding Amyot Métayer's arrest in 2002 and 2003 - as the
latter walked side  by side with Tatoune (A CONVICTED MURDERER) for whom no
call to arrest was EVER issued. Not then, not now.  And yes, why is it no one
is interested anymore in finding the truth about Amyot Métayer's murder?

Yeah kaka je pa linèt !

Let us remember that this coup-occupation did not merely undo the
constitutional  presidency, but it cancelled ALL ELECTED offices accross the
nation. Thus, they effectively ERASED the 2000 elections which had cost Haiti
so much in $, human effort and sacrifice. The very first election to implement
the "decentralization" dream we all grew up hearing about. Even  Jean Dominique
a key promoter of decentralisation (whose murder btw no one seems to be
interested in understanding anymore) who was speaking about "electoral coup d'
etat just before he was gunned down could hardly imagine the outcome we are all
forced to watch unfold in front of our eyes today.

Kofi Annan and all the other servants at the U.N can make whatever speeches
they are asked to make. This keeps them busy and help cover the stubborn voice
of the Honourable Maxine Waters which calls on them all to come CLEAN UP THE
MESS THEY MADE in Haiti.


Jafrikayiti

«Depi nan Ginen bon nèg ap ede nèg!»
http://www.jafrikayiti.com
----Original Message Follows----
From: Bob Corbett <corbetre@webster.edu>
To: Haiti mailing list <haiti@lists.webster.edu>
Subject: 23140  (Chamberlain)  Security Council condemns armed groups in  Haiti
(fwd)
Date: Fri, 10 Sep 2004 20:01:38 -0500 (CDT)
From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>
      By Larry Fine
      UNITED NATIONS, Sept 10 (Reuters) - The U.N. Security Council
condemned illegal armed groups in Haiti it said were performing
unauthorized law enforcement and called on the transitional government on
Friday to extend its control throughout the Caribbean nation.
      The council said, in a statement read at a public meeting, the armed
groups posed a challenge to the authority of Haiti's transitional
government and are "undermining stability and security" in parts of the
country.
      "The Security Council stresses the urgency of disbanding and disarming
all illegal armed groups," Council President Juan Antonio Yanez-Barnuevo of
Spain said, underlining the importance of an effective national police
force in Haiti.
      Armed groups include both rebel forces and militias loyal to former
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
      The council echoed an earlier report by Secretary-General Kofi Annan
on the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti, which said "restoration of the
rule of law will be crucial to restoring the confidence of citizens in the
institutions of the State."
      Haiti also needs a fully functioning judiciary, the council said.
      "The Council stresses that justice should apply equally to all
citizens in that country and be carried out by an independent judicial
system with the support of a reformed correctional system," it said.
      The transitional government was set up in March after Aristide was
forced out of the country in February in the face of an armed rebellion.
      The U.N. mission in Haiti formally assumed authority from a
multinational force on June 1. Eventually, the mission is to include 6,700
soldiers, 1,622 civilian police and 900 civilians.
      By early September, less than half that number had arrived, according
to Brazil, which commands the troops, and U.N. officials.