Articles

La Révolution Suspendue : la crise de l'écoute en Haïti et le plaidoyer pour un pouvoir polycentrique

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  The Arrested Revolution: Haiti's Crisis of Listening and the Case for Polycentric Power By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson (Le Français suit) Port-au-Prince has perfected a peculiar kind of deafness. It is not the deafness of distance — the capital is, after all, only a few hours by road from almost anywhere in the country that still has a passable road. It is the deafness of a state whose ear has been surgically detached from its body. When pine trees fall in the southeast, when barricades rise in Kap Ayisyen, when families in Wannament negotiate passage with men holding rifles older than the children they are trying to feed, the sound travels — but it travels into a chamber built to absorb it. Johnny Celestin, in his recent essay, names this condition with admirable economy: the connections are broken. No credible elections. No accountable taxation. No mechanism by which the cry of a citizen becomes the calculation of a minister. He is right. But I want to push his diagnosis f...

Haïti 2021 : l'assassinat que Washington préfère oublier

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    Haiti 2021: The Assassination Washington Would Rather Forget By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson (Le Français suit)   MIAMI  — On a humid morning in the federal courthouse on North Miami Avenue, a former Colombian soldier took the stand and described, in the flat cadence of a man recounting a job, how a security contract he believed he had signed in Florida mutated, somewhere over the Caribbean, into the assassination of a head of state. Nearly five years after President Jovenel Moïse was shot to death in his bedroom in the hills above Pétion-Ville — his wife, Martine, gravely wounded beside him — the most consequential legal reckoning yet over his killing is unfolding more than 700 miles from the crime scene. The trial, now underway in the Southern District of Florida, is not being held in Haiti. It could not be. Haiti's judicial system, battered by gang rule and the collapse of state authority, has been unable to bring the case to a credible conclusion. And so ...

Le gouvernement haïtien affirme progresser contre les gangs à Port-au-Prince, — mais le retour à la normale reste incertain

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  Haiti’s Government Claims Progress Against Gangs in Port-au-Prince, but the Road Back to Normalcy Remains Long By Patrick Prézeau Stephenson  (Le Français suit)   PORT‑AU‑PRINCE — The announcement came with a tone of cautious triumph. Speaking before the United Nations Security Council, Haiti’s Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils‑Aimé said that, for the first time in years, the capital was beginning to breathe again. Streets once controlled by armed groups were reopening. Markets were filling. Children were returning to school in neighborhoods where gunfire had become a daily soundtrack. “Concrete results are starting to emerge,” he told the Council, crediting the Haitian Armed Forces, the National Police, and the newly arrived gang suppression force backed by the United Nations. For a country battered by years of spiraling violence, the message was meant to signal a turning point. But in Haiti, where optimism has often been followed by disappointment, the declarati...