Haiti Liberte: Hebdomadaire Haitien / Haitian weekly news
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Edition Electronique |
Vol.
8, No. 28 Du Jan 21 au Jan 27. 2015 |
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Kòrdinasyon Desalin:
Conférence de presse |
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Vol. 8 • No. 24 • du 24 au 30 décembre 2014 |
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WikiLeaked Diplomatic Cables Reveal:
Rudy Hériveaux is a “Close Contact” of the U.S. Embassy in Haiti
(Second of three articles)
by Kim Ives
Last week, we saw how the U.S. Embassy
hailed current Communications Minister Rudy Hériveaux’s
evolution from a Lavalas Family deputy from Trou du Nord to
a leader of a breakaway “moderate faction” of the Lavalas
Family in 2005 which sought to move away from the party’s
exiled leader Aristide and take part in U.S.-sponsored
Haitian elections.
The first test of the
“moderate Lavalas” politicians was the Feb. 7, 2006
election, the first polling after the Feb. 29, 2004 coup
d’état against President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Hériveaux
ran for Senator in the West department against a crowded
field of 54 candidates from 28 parties.
Despite running under the “Lavalas”
banner, Hériveaux did very poorly in the first round,
placing a dismal seventh place with only 68,781 votes. That
was only 22% of the 310,188 votes tallied by first place
winner, Jean Hector Anacacis of Préval’s Lespwa platform,
and 25% of the 269,562 votes won by second place Mirlande
Manigat of the Assembly of Progressive National Democrats (RNDP).
He even finished behind fellow Lavalas candidate Evelyne
Cheron, former Duvalierist and Aristide minister Stanley
Théard, Marie-Denise Claude of FUSION, and even Luckner
Désir of the obscure Mobilization for Haitian Progress
(MPH).
Luckily for Hériveaux, Manigat dropped
out of the race in solidarity with her husband, RNDP’s
presidential candidate Leslie Manigat, who lost in the first
round (under conditions that the Manigats protested) to
Lespwa’s René Préval. This allowed Hériveaux to advance to
sixth place and therefore just squeak into the run-off.
Somehow, in the run-off on Apr. 21, 2006, Hériveaux managed
to place second with 45.81% of the vote behind Anacasis’s
75.13%. Fellow “Lavalas” candidate Cheron took third place
with 41.28% of the vote. Hériveaux’s four-year Senate seat
made him the highest ranking “Lavalas” official in
Parliament.In a May 11, 2006
cable, U.S. Ambassador Janet Sanderson reported that
Hériveaux, along with newly elected “Lavalas” deputies Jonas
Coffy and Sorel François “complain that Préval has excluded Lavalas in his
outreach to other political parties and the development of
his 25-year plan” even while they “recognize the negative
impact Aristide's return [from exile in South Africa] would
have for the country.”
“Hériveaux stated that Lavalas wanted
to promote a democratic Haiti alongside Préval,” Sanderson
wrote, “but admitted that Préval has shown no sign that he
is willing to work with Lavalas, despite the obvious Lavalas
and L'Espwa [sic] connection. According to Hériveaux,
Lavalas and L’Espwa are the same, characterizing L'Espwa as
‘simply the branch of the Lavalas root.’”
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In her comment to
Washington, Sanderson commended
Hériveaux and his confederates for
showing “personal courage in breaking
with militant Aristide supporters in
committing to the electoral process”
although she noted that “none of them
were model democrats in the past.” She
also devined that “they surely assume
that they are out of Aristide's favor
and that their political futures depend
on his absence.”
Her guess was
right, and on Jun. 2, 2006, “Hériveaux
and the parliamentary group within FL [Fanmi
Lavalas] appear to have undertaken an
ambitious political maneuver in
attempting [to] reunify Lavalas and
establish their leadership,” Sanderson
wrote in a
Jun. 12, 2006
cable.
She explained to
Washington that Hériveaux led “an
opportunistic grouplooking to reconnect
with the FL base” but was blocked by
more radical currents championing
struggle against the coup and for
Aristide’s return from exile.
“Hériveaux, as the senior elected
Lavalas official, convened the meeting
in order to pick a new FL chairman ad
interim,” Sanderson explained, but the
more radical Lavalas members disrupted
the meeting and denounced Hériveaux and
the “moderate Lavalas” parliamentarians,
including deputy Jonas Coffy, former
Aristide chief of staff Jean-Claude
Desgranges, and former Senators Gérard
Gilles and Yvon Feuillé, “as CIA spies
and lackeys of foreign masters (MINUSTAH),”
the then 9,000-soldier military
occupation force known as the UN Mission
to Stabilize Haiti. |
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WikiLeaked Diplomatic Cables Reveal:
Rudy Hériveaux is a “Close Contact” of the U.S. Embassy in Haiti (First of three parts) |
Vol. 8, No. 23 | Du Dec 17
au Dec 23. 2014 |
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As Lamothe Resigns:
Police and UN Fire on Swelling Demonstrations Demanding Martelly Step Down |
Vol. 8, No. 23 | Du Dec 17
au Dec 23. 2014 |
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But Hériveaux did his best to disguise
his treachery. When popular organization leader René Civil,
one of the radical current’s leaders, was arrested on Aug.
25, 2006 and accused of carrying an unlicensed firearm,
driving a stolen car, and "association with troublemakers,"
Hériveaux protested the arrest, “much to [the U.S.
Embassy’s] dismay,” wrote Deputy Chief of Mission Thomas
Tighe in
an Aug. 29, 2006 dispatch.
“Hériveaux is a close embassy contact
who has stressed in conversations with emboffs [embassy
officials] that he and other FL moderates in parliament are
opposed to Civil and the FL's militant faction,” Tighe
wrote, pledging to “raise Hériveaux's defense of Civil with
him at the first opportunity.”
Hériveaux never made much headway in
his bid to take over the party, Sen. Simon Dieuseul Desras,
currently the Senate’s president, explained to the U.S.
Embassy’s political counselor in a Dec. 6, 2006 meeting.
Desras told the embassy that there was a “leadership battle”
taking place between Hériveaux and the FL’s Executive
Committee, which at that time was composed of
singer/activist Annette Auguste (So An), former Aristide
advisor Dr. Maryse Narcisse, former delegate Jacques
Mathelier, former deputy Lionel Etienne, and Dr. Serge
Louis.
Desras told the embassy that “the
Executive Committee and a good majority of the party are
miffed at Senator Hériveaux for his arbitrary claim to party
leadership following Aristide's departure,” according to
Tighe’s
Dec. 20, 2007 cable to
Washington.
Desras explained to the embassy that
the Fanmi “Lavalas endorsed Senator Hériveaux after the
Senator approached them in 2000 following his second-place
finish in the first round” of elections for deputy, and
“correctly believing Hériveaux's chances were better than
the Lavalas candidate, and also believing that Hériveaux
would do Lavalas' bidding, Lavalas threw their support
behind him and withdrew their own candidate. Hériveaux won
the second round, and Lavalas subsequently endorsed him for
President of the Chamber of Deputies,” Tighe wrote.
This back story was what allowed Sen.
Desras to tell the Embassy that “Senator Hériveaux's history
shows he is not a true Lavalassian and has never been
recognized as
such.”
(To be continued) |
Vol. 8 • No. 24 • du 24 au 30 décembre 2014 |
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