In Gonaives and other cities, Haiti, violent protests,
'criminal Aristide must go,' murders, persecutions, and burning since uncommonly chief
bandit Jean-Bertrand Aristide brutally murdered his notorious criminal Amiot Metayer -
November 25-27, 2003 |
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Members of organizations who are part of the 'Group of 184' coalition
shout 'Liberate Apaid! Arrest Aristide! OAS go home!' and hold a banner that says 'OAS
tell the truth!' during a protest outside the Organization of American States (OAS)
headquarters in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Tuesday, November 25, 2003. The protest was held
to demand the organization help them liberate businessmen Charles Baker and David Apaid
and other 184 members arrested on Nov. 14 on their way to attend a protest against
Jean-Bertrand Aristide's government. Police arrested about 30 184 members prior to the
meeting and Aristide supporters prevented the assembly from being held by occupyingthe
meeting place harassing those present for the event. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel) |
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Members of organizations who are part of the 'Group of 184' coalition
shout 'Liberate Apaid! Arrest Aristide! OAS go home!' during a protest outside the
Organization of American States (OAS) headquarters in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Tuesday,
Nov. 25, 2003. The protest was held to demand the organization help them liberate
businessmen Charles Baker and David Apaid and other 184 members arrested on Nov. 14 on
their way to attend a protest against Jean-Bertrand Aristide's government. Police arrested
about 30 184 members prior to the meeting and Aristide supporters prevented the assembly
from being held by occupyingthe meeting place harassing those present for the event. The
poster reads 'Dicatorship'. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel) |
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Security guards at the Organization of American States (OAS) headquarters
in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2003, stand in front of a banner that says
'OAS tell the truth!' and other graffiti, after members of organizations who are part of
the 'Group of 184' held a protest to demand the organization help them liberate
businessmen Charles Baker and David Apaid and other 184 members arrested on Nov. 14 on
their way to attend a protest against Jean-Bertrand Aristide's government. Police arrested
about 30 184 members prior to the meeting and Aristide supporters prevented the assembly
from being held by occupyingthe meeting place harrassing those present for the event. (AP
Photo/Daniel Morel) |
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Jean-Robert Lalane, owner of Cap-Haitien's Radio Maxima and leader of the
Northern Opposition Front, center, in purple shirt, is seen with other members of Haiti's
opposition, Turneb Delpe, left, and others as they marched in a demonstration with their
groups and other organizations called to demand the resignation of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide in Cap-Haitien, Haiti, in this Sunday, Sept. 14, 2003 file photo. Lalane, who was
shot and wounded on Tuesday, Nov. 25, 2003, has repeatedly beenattacked and is reportedly
in stable condition. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel, file) |
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David Lee, Organization of the American States (OAS) Special
Representative to Haiti, sits in front of the OAS flag while telling Haitian journalists
that the organization deplores recent illegal detentions of government critics and
businessmen David Apaid and Charles Henrie Baker and the fact that the Haitian government
does not ensure people's right to assembly during a press conference in Port-au-Prince,
Haiti, on Monday, November 24, 2003. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel) |
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Early morning pedestrians and cars brave occasional hails of rocks and
cross a burning tire barricade set up by supporters of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
who were demanding jobs from the government in La Saline, a seaside slum neighborhood of
Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Thursday, November 27, 2003. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel) |
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Andre 'Andy' Apaid, center, the coordinator of the Group of 184
Organizations' Coalition, at a Nov. 14, 2003 rally for democracy. |
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Andre 'Andy' Apaid, lower right in the yellow shirt, a US citizen,
listens to a Haitian policeman telling him the judge is ready to see him in the waiting
room of a court house in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Thursday, November 27, 2003, after he
responded to a summons accusing him of being responsible for the deaths of three people
whom government prosecutors say died in Cite Soleil on July 12, 2003, during a meeting
Apaid and several hundred other members of the 'Group of 184 Organizations' coalition held
and which was disrupted and held under seige by hundreds of rock-throwing supporters of
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.(AP Photo/Daniel) |
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Andre 'Andy' Apaid, center in the yellow shirt, a US citizen, passes two Haitian
police officers as he climbs the stairs inside a court house in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on
Thursday, November 27, 2003, in response to a summons accusing him of being responsible
for the deaths of three people whom government prosecutors say died in Cite Soleil on July
12, 2003, during a meeting Apaid and several hundred other members of the 'Group of 184
Organizations' coalition held and which was disrupted and held under seige by hundreds of
rock-throwing supporters of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. (AP Photo/Daniel) |
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Andre 'Andy' Apaid, center in the yellow shirt, a US citizen, climbs the steps of a
court house in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Thursday, Nov. 27, 2003, in response to a summons
accusing him of being responsible for the deaths of three people whom government
prosecutors say died in Cite Soleil on July 12, 2003, during a meeting Apaid and several
hundred other members of the 'Group of 184 Organizations' coalition held and which was
disrupted and held under seige by hundreds of rock-throwing supporters of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide. A number of journalists and supporters of the '184' were injured,
but none of the journalists nor diplomatic representatives present saw anybody killed. (AP
Photo/Daniel) |
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Andre 'Andy' Apaid in primitive tyrant Jean-Bertrand Aristide's kangaroo's court in
trash-filled capital city of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on November 27, 2003. |
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