The Morning Star Shop - Online now

 

Job vacancy at IER: IT Development and Communications Assistant

1 job vacancy at Unite

 

Donate to the Morning Star Fighting Fund

Subscribe to the Morning Star Mailing List

Buy the Morning Star in print

Progressive Web Listings

Read about EDM 1334

 

 

The Morning Star on Twitter Friends of the Morning Star on Facebook

 

Ken Gill Memorial Fund

 

 

The London Progressive Journal is seeking regular contributors - contact us now

P.D. Crofts - Moments Before The Crash



World

Grieving Haitians demand Aristide return

Tuesday 02 February 2010

Hundreds of mourners have called for the return of ousted president Jean-Bertrand Aristide - at a gravel pit in Haiti where countless earthquake victims have been dumped.

On a hilltop overlooking the Caribbean, a digger cleared a plot of land as 350 mourners said their final goodbyes to friends and family killed in the January 12 quake.

An official from the Aristide Foundation for Democracy Rene Civil said: "Because of the wickedness of the authorities, Aristide cannot attend this ceremony in memory of the thousands of victims of the catastrophe of January 12.

"But with the help of the Lavalas (Party) activists, Titid will return to Haiti before long," he added, using a nickname for the former Haitian leader, who is currently exiled in South Africa.

"Long live Aristide," he shouted to the crowd, some of whom repeated the cry.

Mourner Jean Delcius said: "Preval has done nothing for this country, nothing for the victims."

Critics were already blaming President Rene Preval for rising unemployment, corruption and greed before the devastating earthquake and Mr Preval has rarely been seen in public since.

Before legislative elections scheduled for February 28 were postponed, Haiti's presidentially appointed electoral council had excluded more than a dozen political parties from the next round of elections in 2011.

Opposition groups accused the council of trying to help Mr Preval's Unity party win majorities in parliament so he could push through constitutional reforms and expand executive power.

The most prominent excluded party is Mr Aristide's Lavalas Party, which now plans more demonstrations.

Meanwhile, US Red Cross officials in Washington said on Monday that there was a waiting list of 1,000 flights to land at Haiti's airport, hindering the delivery of relief supplies.

If you have enjoyed this article then please consider donating to the Morning Star's Fighting Fund to ensure we can keep publishing your paper.

Donate to the Fighting Fund here

Editorial

Give peace a chance

Argentinian President Cristina Fernandez has given David Cameron a lesson in diplomacy in her speech to mark the 30th anniversary of the Falklands/Malvinas military conflict.

Features

A generation betrayed

by Jeremy Corbyn

The blame for rising youth unemployment lies in Tory economic policy, says Jeremy Corbyn

Washington: The enemy of free speech

by John Pilger

John Pilger on how the Establishment has hounded WikiLeaks whistleblowers