Articles

L'Ombre de la Citadelle : La Crise de Confiance d'Haïti et le Long Chemin vers la Réconciliation

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  The Citadelle's Shadow: Haiti's Crisis of Trust and the Long Road to Reconciliation By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson *  (Le Français suit)   CAP-HAÏTIEN, Haiti — The Citadelle Laferrière has always been more than stone. Perched above the clouds of northern Haiti, it is the physical manifestation of a people's refusal to kneel — built by Henri Christophe after 1804 as a fortress against the return of enslavers, a monument to the audacity of formerly enslaved people who defeated the most powerful army on earth. For Haitians, especially those of the northern departments, it is sacred ground, the place where pride crystallizes into something you can touch. So when more than sixty people died there recently in circumstances still being parsed and mourned, something deeper than grief rippled through the Haitian psyche. It was as if the one place that was supposed to be inviolable — the granite proof that Haitians could protect themselves — had failed to protect them. The...

282 partis, zéro crédibilité : pourquoi le chaos électoral haïtien exige un recadrage radical

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  282 Parties, Zero Credibility: Why Haiti's Electoral Free-for-All Demands a Radical Reckoning By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson *  (Le Français suit) A fractured political landscape doesn't signal democracy — it signals its absence. Haiti needs a strong electoral law that forces consolidation, not a carnival of acronyms.   PORT-AU-PRINCE — There is a number that should haunt anyone who genuinely cares about Haitian democracy:  282 . That is how many political parties and coalitions Haiti's Provisional Electoral Council, the CEP, has approved to contest the country's upcoming elections — the first in over a decade. Another 38 are still waiting in the wings. Three hundred and twenty groups registered in a ten-day sprint. Let that breathe for a moment. In a nation of roughly 11.5 million people — where over 1.4 million are internally displaced, where armed groups control arterial highways and entire neighborhoods of the capital, where most citizens have lost the...