More photos

In Gonaives and other cities, Haiti, violent protests, peaceful protests, fast growing armed revolts, 'criminal Aristide must go,' murders and burning since uncommonly chief bandit Jean-Bertrand Aristide brutally murdered his notorious criminal Amiot Metayer - February 17-19, 2004

                     

feb 17 pro 11.jpg (74976 bytes)

                                           

feb w 18 pro 3.jpg (18761 bytes)

Rebel leader Louis Jodel Chamblin waves his hand while a rebel force he commends patrols a street in the central town of Hinche, Haiti, Tuesday, February, 17, 2004. (Reuters/Daniel Aguilar)
                                         

feb 17 pro 16.jpg (20021 bytes)

Louis Jodel Chamblain, right, is seen during a meeting on Nov. 23,1993 in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Witnesses said about 50 rebels led by Chamblain descended Monday Feb. 16, 2004 on a police station in Hinche and killed three officers before police fled the city of 50,000, about 70 miles northeast of Port-au-Prince. Chamblain is a former soldier who once headed the feared paramilitary group FRAPH _ the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti _ which killed and maimed hundreds of Aristide supporters under military dictatorship between 1991 and 1994. (AP Photo/Daniel Morel)
                                       

feb 18 pro 1.jpg (17802 bytes)

A goup of policemen work at Cap-Hatien's police headquarters, Wednesday, Feb 18, 2004. Frightened police barricaded themselves inside their station Wednesday, saying they could not repel a threatened rebel attack on Haiti's second-largest city, the last major government bastion in the north. (AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd)
                                                

feb 18 pro 2.jpg (49796 bytes)

Residents of Maissade, Haiti, dance in the streets after rebels reportedly killed two policemen and burned out the police station after setting all of the inmates free(AFP/File/Roberto Schmidt)
                                                               

feb 18 pro 3.jpg (22617 bytes)

A rebel of the Gonaives Resistance Front patrols the slum neighborhood of Raboteau in the city of Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Feb.18, 2004. . (AP Photo/Walter Astrada)
                                  

feb 18 pro 4.jpg (26393 bytes)

Rebels of the Gonaives Resistance Front patrols in the slum neighborhood of Raboteau in the city of Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2004. (AP Photo/Walter Astrada)
                                        

feb 18 pro 5.jpg (25625 bytes)

A rebel of the Gonaives Resistance Front, center, walks between bystanders while patrolling in the slum neighborhood of Raboteau in the city of Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2004. Frightened police barricaded inside their station in the northern city of Cap-Haitien said Wednesday they could not repel a threatened rebel attack on their city, the last major government bastion in the north, as officers in other towns deserted their posts with no guerrillas in sight. (AP Photo/Walter Astrada)
                              

feb 18 pro 6.jpg (90835 bytes)

An anti-Jean-Bertrand Aristide protest in the town of Maissade, Haiti, as an rebel keeps a close wacth, Tuesday, February 17, 2004 looks at proteste
                            
feb 18 w pro 7.jpg (26897 bytes)
                                          
feb 18 pro 8.jpg (22871 bytes)
Viergeine, 8, cries during the funeral of her father, Fritzson Archelus, 24, in Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2004. Archelus died on Feb. 7 in the cross fire when the police unsuccessfully tried to retake the city from rebels of the Gonaives Resistance Front that started an uprising in the city on Feb. 5. (AP Photo/Walter Astrada)
                                          
feb 18 pro 9.jpg (26921 bytes)
People walk as a rebel of the Gonaives Resistance Front patrols Gonaives, Haiti, Wednesday, Feb.18, 2004. (AP Photo/Walter Astrada)
                                   
feb 18 pro 10.jpg (23212 bytes)
A Haitian man pushes a cart loaded with ice blocks on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2004, in Dajabon, 186 miles of the northwest of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The Dominican army cancelled an outdoor market Monday, Feb. 16, 2004, that usually unites merchants from both sides of the Haiti-Dominican Republic border. (AP Photo/Miguel Gomez)
                                                     
feb 18 pro 11.jpg (21724 bytes)
An unidentified Haitian man and his son look at a Dominican soldier on Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2004, in Dajabon, 186 miles of the northwest of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Suspicion and tension are rife in the desolate hills along the sparsely guarded border of the Dominican Republic and Haiti, where bribes often buy free passage and armed Haitian rebels have crossed to join a growing revolt. (AP Photo/Miguel Gomez)
                                           
feb 18 pro 13.jpg (31850 bytes)
A Dominican soldier snatches a bag of food from a Haitian citizen while another soldiers look on, at the border of Haiti and the Dominican Republic, in Dajabon, 186 miles northwest of Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, on Tuesday, Feb. 17, 2004. Suspicion and tension are rife in the desolate hills along the sparsely guarded border of the Dominican Republic and Haiti, where bribes often buy free passage and armed Haitian rebels have crossed to join a growing revolt. (AP Photo/Miguel Gomez)
                                                

feb 19 pro 14.jpg (21237 bytes)

Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Arisitide chants the National athen during a ceremony conmemorating police victims in the latest confrontation with rebels in the National Palace of Gouvernment , Port- au-Prince,Haiti. Thursday Feb 19, 2004. (AP Photo/Pablo Aneli).
                                 
feb 19 pro 16.jpg (22168 bytes)
Parents and relatives of police mourn their dead relatives during a ceremony to honor slain police in the National Palace of Government, Port- au-Prince, Haiti, Thursday, Feb. 19, 2004. (AP Photo/Pablo Aneli).
                                     
feb 19 pro 17.jpg (25849 bytes)
Photos of recently killed Haitian policemen are on displayed at the presidential palace in a ceremony to honor them, the victims of the uprising in some towns of the north, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, February 19, 2004. (Reuters/Carlos Villalon)
                                                    
feb 19 pro 18.jpg (21740 bytes)
President Jean-Bertrand Arisitide and his wife Mildred Aristide attend a ceremony to honor slain police at the National Palace in Port- au-Prince, Haiti Thursday Feb. 19, 2004. Aristide declared Thursday he was ready to die to defend his country, indicating he would not resign as demanded by political rivals and a bloody rebellion in the north. (AP Photo/Pablo Aneli).
                        
Wehaitians.com, the scholarly journal of democracy and human rights
More from wehaitians.com
Main / Columns / Books And Arts / Miscellaneous