MY WORD OF ADVICE TO PRESIDENT MARTELLY

President Michel J. Martelly

I am going to go straight in this to tell you to stop playing games with these politicians in the legislature. Most of these guys do not have the people’s best interest at heart; they are driven by partisan politics.

As you can see, they are out to control several key ministries –agriculture, education, interior, justice, etc… -representing the pillars of your agenda.

You campaigned on reforming the education system, restoring the authority of the state, strengthening our economy through a total reform of our agriculture, reforming our justice system, etc… If you let them gain control of these key agencies, you are doomed.

This is your first political clash with that body; you’ve got to win to show these vultures in the Senate and the House of Deputies that you can pull some muscles. This is a psychological warfare, which you must win by any means necessary.

If anything, follow Obama’s footsteps. You cannot go wrong if you do. Here is what David Axelrod had President Obama do (By the way, he is President Obama’s top political strategist): To get the health care bill ratified in both chambers of Congress, he, after realizing that the Republicans and the Blue Dog Democrats were playing politics with the bill, had the president traveled across the country on campaign mode to promote the bill and thereby got the people to rally behind him. Had he not done so, the bill would have not passed.

That’s exactly what you ought to be doing. Don’t forget that politics is a weight game. Don’t be too quick to negotiate, for it is very unwise to negotiate in a position of weakness. You don’t have any political base in the legislature. Your strength is in/with the people; therefore, reach out to them to put pressure on the parliament to have the choice of ROUZIER approved. You’ve got to win this.

YON KONSÈY A PREZIDAN MICKY

President Michel J. Martelly

Ekip relasyon piblik gouvènman peyi a sipoze genyen yon paj Youtube ki OFISYÈL menm jan Mezon Blanch nan peyi pa bò isit Ozetazini genyen youn an. Men pa Mezon Blanch la: http://www.youtube.com/user/whitehouse#p/u/14/BvwB0guyuNk

Nan ekip medya gouvènman peyi a, sipoze genyen kameraman pwofesyonèl ak fotograf pwofesyonèl (m pap pale de matchòkwèt non; m ap pale de moun ki ale lekòl e ki konn sa y ap fè a) ki pou toujou ap deplase ak prezidan an, premye minis la ak lòt gwo tèt nan gouvènman an pou y ap filme e pran foto gwo evènman sa yo k ap pase nan gouvènman an.

Videyo sa yo, lè yo fin filme yo, sipoze poste sou paj ofisyèl Youtube sa. Sa fè pati de sèvis relasyon piblik gouvènman an.

Konsa, lè yon gwo evènman tankou seremoni envestiti Prezidan Martelly an  oubyen seremoni drapo a ki te fèt nan Akayè maten an fin pase, si yon moun ta anvi ale gade l sou entènèt, li pa ka ap depann de vye boutlèg videyo ki pa ofisyèl nenpòt moun ap poste nan Youtube. Sa pa fè bèl e li pa fè sans.

Jan w toujou ap di a, Prezidan Micky, e mwen antyèman dakò avèk ou, fòk nou kòmanse ap vann yon lòt imaj de Ayiti. E ide sa m ap ba w la, limenm tou rantre nan kad vann yon lòt imaj de Ayiti a. Nou ka fè ti sa. Li pa anyen; nou reyalize pi gwo bagay pase sa.

WAGING WAR ON DOMESTIC TERRORISM IN HAITI

Kidnapping and planned homicide in any country are acts of specialized terrorism. In Haiti, such acts have become common practice. Almost every single day you wake up, you hear on the news that someone gets executed point-blank or kidnapped, creating a situation of constant fear in the population. Something must be done and must be done NOW to secure the nation so that investments (foreign and national) can start pouring in the country.

These criminals -kidnappers and murderers -in Haiti are domestic terrorists; we need to call them what they are. Therefore, dealing with them requires bold actions which must be part of a national security strategy apparatus.

Let us be clear on one thing: President Martelly campaigned on the urgency to revamp our agonizing economy by encouraging investments and creating jobs, which is awesome. But, sorry to say it, that will not happen if we cannot secure the country. Investments and criminal activities do not mingle or cohabit. Whenever crimes become a matter of normalcy within any territorial space, investments flee. That is just the way it is. So to attract and keep investments within our borders, we have got to win the war on crimes.

President Martelly must develop a comprehensive strategy to fight domestic terrorism and attract and prevent investments from fleeing to other countries competing against us for cheap labor. What must he do to address this national security issue which is poised to be one of the most pressing challenges of his administration?

To address this national security issue, President Martelly must:

1. ask the help of the international community to train a National Security Force (NSF) with the objective to dismantle the criminal cells and capture the criminals dead or alive.

a. Such specialized elite force will be composed of 500 or 1000 well trained and equipped military personnel.

b. The force will have an Intelligence Unit to infiltrate the criminal cells and collect pertinent intel in terms of their locations and their activities so they can be stopped before they hit their high value targets.

c. To lower the cost of training this force, they could proceed with the recruitment of Haitian citizens who had served in foreign militaries.

2. restructure the Interior Ministry and refocus its mission  to respond to all threats with the potency to compromise or endanger our national security -fighting drug trafficking, kidnapping, organized crimes and secure the nation.

a. The National Security Force should fall under this agency, which should be run by people with expertise in intelligence and national security. These people will constitute the team to advice the president on issues pertaining to national security.

In conclusion, candidate Martelly promised during the campaign to revamp our economy by encouraging investments (foreign and national) and creating jobs. There is no way such promise could become a matter of reality if he does not develop and implement a national security strategy to dismantle the terrorist cells, capture these terrorists dead or alive and secure the country. We cannot let these terrorists control the country and terrorize the population. Fighting terrorist activities is not the job of a police force, especially not of one as limited, ill-trained and ill-equipped as the one we have. Stopping or killing these terrorists requires that we place ourselves ahead of them, and such must be the president’s biggest national security priority. You do not play with terrorists; you capture them either dead or alive.

NO GOD IS PUNISHING HAITI

There is no God punishing Haiti. Anybody, and I don’t give a damn if that person is Jesus Christ, feeding you with this nonsense is contributing to the misfortunate situation you are living as a people. And anybody who wants to contribute to your pains and sufferings is your enemy.

We have a bunch of stupid characters (Haitians and non-Haitians) in the religious circles on the ground in Haiti polluting the minds of the people in such a way to pacify and make them accept their fates as a matter of divine punishment. In their blame game, of course, they have got to go after Vodou to make it their most convenient scapegoat for every bad situation we have lived and are experiencing as a people. 

You have been brainwashed to believe that your own culture, beliefs and value system all contribute to the degrading and inhumane situations you are living. Most of these Haitian religious leaders are a bunch of modern slaves who are on the payrolls of these big Western corporate churches run by guys such as Pat Robertson and company. 

They are not telling you how we got to where we are today because they do not care to know; they do not give a damn. As long as they have you to bring them your hard earned income and they have a US visa to vacation with their families every year in the US paid for by their masters, they are living on earth “le paradis terrestre.”  They are not telling you that we are made victims of outrageous policies from the United States and all these major international financial institutions such as the IMF, World Bank, etc…

No God was behind the destruction of the Haitian rice industry, making us today the third largest US rice importer in the world with only a population of roughly 10 million people. You know damn well who was behind that and why.

No God was behind the decision to kill the country’s domestic Creole pigs, the rural economy’s second most important economic component, which has destroyed the entire socioeconomic system of the country. You know damn well who was behind that and why.

Because of the destruction of the rural economy, the economic base of the country, the peasants are/were forced out of their fertile and agricultural lands to migrate to the nearby cities to live in newly erected slums and work as domestic workers (restavèk, jeranlakou and bòn) at people’s houses.

Do not blame God for the political instable environment we have been living in ever since the creation of the Haitian state. You know damn well the people who have been behind all that and why. If this God has to be so against us, why befriending Him/Her/It then?  

Haiti’s tribulations are manmade. Of course, they have to tell you that God has cursed and is chastising us so that you can accept the abject poverty you are living in as a matter of destiny and do not do anything to change its course. And when that happens, it is benefiting them because they control you.

That is what they need to tell you; unfortunately, they are not. There is no excuse for being blind and stupid. Open your eyes and ask questions. That is why you were blessed with the capacity to reason and make sense of events.

So I hope now you have a clear sense as to what the deal is about. Next time these religious slaves come to you trying to convince you to believe that God is punishing Haiti, you need to spit in their faces, and that is if you cannot slap the hell out of them. They are your enemies; therefore, you need to beware of them.

RECONCILIATION: MICKY & TITID SHOULD MEET

President-elect Martelly

I believe there have been sentiments of discord and strife between President-elect Martelly and former President Aristide. This is now the time for a cease fire to be called between the two men to reconcile the nation with itself. I am glad President-elect Martelly is taking the lead on the reconciliation mantra.

In an interview to La Press, published yesterday, Monday, April 18, 2011, President-elect Martelly, talking on the fate of the two former presidents -Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier and Jean Bertrand Aristide –said in French:

I would simply said that we will be able to eventually look at amnesty only if those who had been hurt in the past understand the necessity for the nation to reconcile with itself. Before we could get to that, we need to try to place ourselves in the victims’ shoes to understand them and respect their sentiments.

So we are not rushing into taking any decisions, though public opinion wants that I stand on the side of amnesty and clemency, a way to focus on the future, not the past. But we must always keep the past in our minds so that we do not repeat the mistakes of the past.

I think President-elect Martelly, in his effort to bring the country together, needs to be the bigger person to hand to the former president an olive branch; he needs to make peace with him.

Former President Aristide

Former President Aristide is a resourceful person whom President-elect Martelly could use in many capacities to help rebuild the country. We find strength only in unity, not in division and bickering.

The former priest’s rhetoric may have been too inflammatory during his tenure as president, but he could be a great asset to be put to good use if he is really honest about his ambition to serve the people and help move the country forward.

If his rhetoric and policies were being viewed as too far to the left, it was because he was in a position for whatever he said and did to matter much. He is not in that position anymore, President-elect Martelly is. In other words, Martelly is the coach to call the play now, not Aristide.

President-elect Martelly must not let these vultures, those who have never acted in the best interest of Haiti, dictate him who amongst us he should befriend and who he should ostracize. He is now the president of every single Haitian; therefore, he must act in such manner.

Now that he is elected president, in his post-election consultations, he should ask to meet with all the former presidents currently living in Haiti, including former President Aristide. That should take place prior to his inauguration ceremony, which all of them will be invited to attend.

It would be preposterous to think that a man in the caliber of Aristide could be pushed to the side. He can still be useful to Haiti so long as he is willing to play by the rules.

While I am for reconciliation between the two men, only for the sake of bringing all the sons and daughters of Haiti together to do what needs to get done, I am also urging President-elect Martelly to not be naive and let Aristide loose; he needs to be kept on check. I am sure Mr. Martelly will keep him in a tight and short leash. So I am not going to even worry about him acting up.

A WARNING TO INITE: COHABITATION OR DISINTEGRATION

Senator Lambert of INITE

Per Joseph Jasmin, a member of the leadership of the Party INITE, talking this Friday, April 15 to Le Nouvelliste, the relationship between the Martelly administration and the legislative, which his party is poised to control, will be harmonious, meaning “there will be neither blockade nor barrage to President Martelly. We are looking to working with him […] We will give him our full support so that he could best serve the interest of the people.”  

Plan A is to take what he said at face value. The National Palace cannot just assume that he is only playing politics. No matter what President Martelly chooses to do, he must keep his guard up. In the event that the politics of collaboration, cohabitation and facilitation Jasmin promised his party will develop in Congress is no longer in activity, President Martelly is gonna need to proceed with plan B, which is to implement a strategy of disintegration of INITE inside the two chambers.

With that, all he is going to have to do is to plant his intel inside that bloc of power which Lambert is in charge of to get the job done. He can work with someone in the caliber of Edo Zenny, a close and longtime friend and ally, to get this done in the Senate.

Let’s hope we will not have to go that route since President Preval has clearly ordered his vassals in Congress to work with President Martelly. Jasmin, in an interview in French to Le Nouvelliste this Thursday, outlined and reiterated the recommendations of President Preval. He stated, “President Preval has told us that the majority that we have is one of cohabitation, collaboration and facilitation so that the executive and the legislative can work together to serve the best interest of the people.”

So it will be in everybody’s best interest for President Martelly and Senator Lambert of INITE to work together to get the people’s business taken care of. If they deviate from the clear and unambiguous order given to them by Preval, plan B needs to be activated, and that will be to weaken INITE’s influence in the legislative body before such plan expands itself notionally. In other words, that party should be so pulverized, weakened and crippled nationally that it cannot even get one deputy or senator elected.

MICHEL “SWEET MICKY” MARTELLY DID IT BIG!

President-elect Michel J. Martelly

I am speechless. I hope I can find the words to express my contentment for such a great victory by the Haitian people. Michel J. Martelly has won the presidency in Haiti with an avalanche (Martelly: 67.57% against Manigat 31.71%), which makes him now the newly elected president of Haiti.

I would like to personally take this moment to congratulate him for such a great and unbelievable victory over his rival Mirlande H. Manigat. He is the one to finally harmer the last nail to the coffin of the status quo. Now we can be certain that the old generation, which has never missed the opportunity to fail the country, has been buried. No more of these old faces. A new chapter now has begun for the Haitian people.

Martelly is an inspiration. He inspires me to always believe in yourself even when the multitude doubts you. When he entered the race, many, myself included, could not take him seriously. But he managed to transform himself in a very short period of time to reshape the attitude or sentiment of the electorate and get them to accept him. That is beyond political ingenuity.

He was being called all sorts of condescending names –immoral, uneducated, idiot, brute, moron; he never gave in. He had made his case to prove his opponent wrong. Do not take my word for it. Trust the latest poll. According to the official poll issued by the Provisional Electoral Council, the immorality argument, which he was arguing against, failed badly.

Now, to the Manigat supporters: the campaign is over. We cannot be on campaign mode beyond the campaign. We must switch mode. I am calling on all of you to come join hands with the new president so together we can take the country out of the abyss it has been for decades. We can do it only if we work together as one nation. I am sure you all love Haiti with the same fervor as President Martelly. So you have your seats around the table. We are all Haitians, in spite of our politics. But this is not about politics; we have something greater than that to live for, and that is our beloved Haiti.   

I have one message for President Martelly: DO NOT DECEIVE US. We will accompany you to the promise land. As long as you stand with us, you cannot go wrong. Together we shall make it. The job you just got hired for is not going to be easy; you already know it. But you can only succeed IF you lead with the people. The moment you decide to turn your back on us, you can prepare to live your own demise.  DO NOT BE AFRAID; WE ARE WITH YOU.

MARTELLY WAS NOT AN EASY CHOICE FOR ME

Michel J. Martelly, Haitian presidential candidate

I am not Martelly’s friend, and I am too young to have been his classmate. During his 25-year tenure as an entertainer, I only attended two of his live performances. So I am not going to tell you that I grew up with him or he is a family friend. He is only a Haitian citizen who, undoubtedly, loves his country with all his heart and is willing to die for it.

I had dismissed his candidacy at first because, like most, I could not take his candidacy seriously.

How did I end up becoming a strong supporter of his? Well, it was not an easy decision for me. I studied both of them and became convinced that he is the right person for the job for the moment to put Haiti back on track.

Unlike Manigat, his opponent, he is a man of character. Throughout the campaign, he had always kept it honest. When the tough got tougher, he would stand on his two feet to fight. I had never seen him back down or try to apologize for the things he had done and said on and off stage during his entertainment career. When he used to be wrongly and unfairly accused of the fabricated things, he would fight them with all his strength. You need that level of character and stamina in your leader to inspire trust and confidence.

He is a strong, disciplined and no-nonsense type of guy. He is not someone to be messing with, for if you do, you will regret for having stepped on his big toe.

He is a unifier, not a divider. He can bring our divided country together, under the same roof, for a common purpose –regardless our socioeconomic, religious, political and ethnic differences –to inspire all of us to do for ourselves what we have been waiting on others to for us.

Martelly is a leader, not an intellectual. He is a doer, not a fancy talker. That’s how I ended up buying into his candidacy. I consider myself a smart buyer -one who would weigh the pros and cons of anything before closing a sale. I am not the type to be buying anything for the fun of buying.

So my decision to support Martelly for president of Haiti, someone whose candidacy I did not take seriously at first, was well thought of; it was not a simple and easy decision. That is why I could give it my unconditional support. He will be the next president of Haiti, and he will be an amazement to all those who did not believe in him and a matter of pride to all of us who had stood by him to get him elected.

MANIGAT: PRESIDING JUDGE IN IMMORALITY COURT

Mirlande H. Manigat, Haitian presidential candidate

I wonder what Mirlande Manigat had said to her husband, Leslie F. Manigat, when he shared with her his intention to run for president in Haiti in the election of January 17, 1988, which was rejected by 96% of the electorate.

Your inquiry minds may be asking why is it that only 4% of the electorate participated in that election. Well, I am going to tell you why, and I hope you are taking notes.

There was to be a presidential election on November 29, 1987 -the very first democratic election to be taken place in the country after the collapse of the Duvalier regime in 1986. The population was extremely motivated and enthusiastic to participate in that election; the turnout was to be unprecedentedly huge.

On Ruelle Vaillant, in Port-au-Prince, on the day of the election, there was a voting precinct; early in the morning, there was already a long line of people standing and waiting to cast their votes. As the line was getting increasingly long and thick in numbers, a truck loaded with armed military personnel, under the command of Colonel Jean Claude Paul, drove by and massacred between 30 and 300 unarmed innocent civilians, which has suscitated the annulment of the election.

The entire country fell in a state of consternation and trepidation; we were mourning for months the death of these innocent and honorable human beings.

There was an outcry from the population calling for the perpetrators to be brought to justice. But as it is customary in Haiti, an endless investigation was said to be on the way, and, until today, no one has ever been arrested and tried.

These innocent civilians did not do anything to deserve such horrible fate; they were only standing in line to vote and thereby fulfill a civic duty.

After the carnage, slaughter or bloodbath (however you want to call it), the National Council of Government (French: Conseil National de Gouvernement), presided by General Henri Namphy, decided to call for another election to be taken place on January 17, 1988. This time, the electorate was not in tune.

A call to boycott the election was issued by most of the grassroots organizations and political parties at the time. Only a very few political parties, including the RDNP of Leslie Manigat, participated in that election.

It was a simulacrum, for which only 4% of the electorate turned out. That election was a farce only to hand the presidency to Leslie Manigat, who was going to be toppled in a coup by the military five months later, precisely on June 20, 1988.

Now, throughout this contentious presidential campaign, Mirlande Manigat has put his rival, Michel J. Martelly, to trial. She has managed to make this election a referendum on Martelly’s morality.

In my humble opinion, I think she has been given a free pass as though she is a purist. No one, not even the press, has taken the time to find out things about her; they are too busy digging into Martelly’s personal life. It is a conspiracy against Martelly.

I think it is time to have a serious conversation on morality in this country. What is considered moral and what is not? Are the rules of morality only address the behavior of an artist who, in his stage performance, happens to be pulling his pants down, wearing a mini skirt, and/or bombarding the ears of his fans with profanity? I refuse to believe so.

Leslie Manigat, by his participation in the shameful January 17, 1987 election, has proven to be a man of no character -one who would accede to power at any cost, even if that means putting in jeopardy the sovereignty of the nation. He must have told his wife, Mirlande Manigat, of his intention to run for president in that election, and she must have approved of it.

When it comes to morality, Mirlande Manigat is in no position to put anybody to trial in a morality court. She has no moral authority to preside over such body. She is just as immoral as the person she is accusing of being immoral, because in the eye of the just, being a person of no character is in itself immoral. So she needs to retire her morality argument.

Suggested sites: 

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_presidential_election,_1988

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_presidential_election,_1987

MANNIGET AP FET POU MANIGAT GEN ELEKSYON AN

Listwa pa janm bay manti, sitou lè l ap repwodwi tèt li. Moun ki pòte atansyon ak listwa, kè moun sa yo pa janm sou biskèt paske yo gentan wè sa k ap vini an pou yo ka prepare tèt yo.

An nou fè yon ti listwa pou nou ka byen konprann jwèt sa k ap jwe la a.

29 Novanm 1987, pèp souvren reponn an mas pou l patisipe nan eleksyon demokratik ki ta sipoze fèt kòmsadwa. Eleksyon sa yo te anile aprè lame te debake e masakre moun ki te kanpe sou lin pou yo te al vote. Chif yo mete deyò ta fè konnen te gen ant 30 a 300 moun ki te arrive pèdi lavi yo nan jou eleksyon sa yo, nan Riyèl Vayan.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_presidential_election,_1987

Aprè yo te fin anile eleksyon 29 Novanm yo, Jeneral Henri Namphy, ki li menm te nan tèt Konsèy Nasyonal Gouvènman an, te deside fè yon lòt eleksyon le 17 Janvye 1988. Te gen yon mobilizasyon jeneral ki te lanse pou te bòykote eleksyon sa yo. Pèp la pa t reponn ak apèl a; nan moun ki te nan laj pou vote yo, se sèlman 4% ki te ale nan eleksyon sa yo.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_presidential_election,_1988

Nan eleksyon bidon sa yo, eleksyon pèpè sa yo, eleksyon degrenngoch sa yo ki te fèt 17 Janvye 1988 la, Leslie Manigat, ki se mouche Madan Mirlande Manigat, ki gen pou kontre kòn li ak Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly nan eleksyon 20 Mas 2011 yo, ak 10 lòt kandida san konsyans te deside benyen nan san konpatriyòt sa yo ke lame te asasine jou 29 Novanm 1987 la; yo te deside patisipe nan eleksyon sila yo.

Nan danse kole avek  KNG a, nan anpil zak anba tab ant Leslie Manigat ak gouvènman an plas la, yo te arive chwazi Misye Manigat pou yo fè l prezidan.

20 Jen 1988, kidonk 5 mwa aprè l fin prete sèman kòm prezidan, menm lame sa a ki te bay li mayèt la deside bay misye yon pakala yo retire l nan men l atravè yon koudeta. Kidonk, lame dekapote Misye Manigat epi pimpe do l voye nan kanpe lwen an ekzil.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_Manigat#1988_Haitian_Presidential_elections

Jodi a, nan eleksyon sila yo ki gen pou dewoule andedan peyi a jou 20 Mas 2011 lan,  Madan Manigat jwenn sipò Inite, ki se pati politik Prezidan Preval la, ki se prèske menm jan sa te pase an 1988, kote pouvwa an plas la te kanpe dèyè Leslie Manigat pou yo te fè l prezidan.

Kòm ou kapab wè, moun Manigat sa yo toujou rantre anba vant pouvwa an plas la pou yo kapab pran pouvwa a nan kèlkeswa eleksyon yo patisipe ladann an.

Lè w wè yon sitwayen tankou Jean-Henry Seant, yon ansyen kandida ki t ap kouri pou chèz boure a nan eleksyon 28 Novanm pase yo, di w gen manèv anba tab k ap fèt ant manm sosyete sivil la, KEP a ak Madan Manigat pou yo volè eleksyon an nan men Martelly, misye kapab konnen sa l ap pale a. Alòs, si Martelly pa pran tout dispozisyon pou anpeche sa pase, si se lè l fin pase a ki pou se lè sa misye ap rele bare, li ka pa ka defèt li ankò wi. Peze sou lenk sa a pou w ka li deklarasyon Jean-Henry Seant te fè a.

http://www.hpnhaiti.com/site/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=2453%3Ajean-henry-ceant-craint-des-fraudes-au-detriment-de-martelly&catid=18%3Aelections-2010&Itemid=28

Mwen, m wè bagay la yon lòt jan. M di nou deja ke Preval pa kanpe sou bit pou li bay pouvwa a. Men ki plan m sispèk misye gen anba men l:

Misye konnen trè byen ke se si yo volè eleksyon an sèlman pou Martelly pa prezidan. Epi ankò li konnen trè byen ke Martelly pa p jwe ak eleksyon sa a.

Misye ap deklare Manigat prezidan, mas pèp Martelly a ap kanpe mande krase brize, 2 kan yo ap batay youn ak lòt, epi li menm l ap envite kominote entènasyonal la vin envestige jan kontaj bilten yo te pase, kidonk menm jan li te fè pou eleksyon 28 Novanm yo. Rezilta envestigasyon kominote entènasyonal la ka abwouti ak 2 posiblite: a) Yo arive wè te gen magouy ki te fèt kont Martely, yo deklare se misye ki gen eleksyon yo; b) Preval wè sa ap yon anbarasman pou li, li deside anile eleksyon yo; li mande pou kat la rebat.

Nenpòt sa ki arive sòti a, Madan Manigat pa p aksepte l paske li di ke KEP a te konte tout vwa yo e ke yo jwenn se li ki gen eleksyon an.

Si tout fwa Preval ta kanpe pou l anile eleksyon yo, Manigat ap di pèp la vote deja, kidonk fòk chwa pèp la respekte; se li menm pèp la chwazi. L ap di ke rezilta eleksyon yo bay deja, e ke se li ki prezidan. E si l di sa, l ap gen tout rezon l paske si Martelly te nan menm pozisyon an se konsa l t ap di tou; li pa t ap janm vle pou yo anile yon eleksyon aprè yo fin deklare l ofisyèlman kòm moun ki genyen l. Sa pa t ap janm fèt.

Kounyè a nou vin tonbe nan yon kriz, yon tchouboum elektoral san parèy e san limit ankò k ap fè Preval rete sou pouvwa a ap vale teren jiskaske pa janm gen yon prezidan ki monte pou ranplase l.

Men m ba nou plan m sispèk Preval gen anba men l a. Alò, n a fè sa pou n fè avèk li. M pa konn sa kanpay Martelly a ap fè, men m ta swete yo rete vijilan pou yo pa kite yo pran yo nan yon kou pa konprann, pou yo pa kite Preval woule yo nan farin. Si nou pran pòz egare nou, nou pa louvri je nou, se afè k gade nou. Men nou pa p ka di ke nou pa t konnen.