Darguste, Mezile and Racine seek to police behavior in Haiti

Josette Darguste, Minister of Culture

Josette Darguste, Minister of Culture

You have 3 women at the highest level of our Haitian government -Josette Darguste, Yanick Mezile and Magalie Racine -respectively Minister of Culture, Minister of Women’s Rights and Minister of Youth and Sports, who probably are in their 50s, thinking that they can police behavior in the country. They are trying to tell women how to dress and dance “appropriately” in public festivities.

This is a war they are not going to win because wars against time can never be won; time always comes out victorious.

What these ministers need to be reminded of is that morality cannot be regularized, for what is perceived to be immoral for them may be moral for others. Haiti is not a theocratic state; it is, rather, a secular state. Therefore, they cannot be going around telling people what to wear and how to dance in public. This is absurd.

What is going on in the Haitian society today is what we call in sociology “clash of generations,” which we witness in almost every human society. The older folks always believe that their generations were better than the emerging ones. And that in itself is a misconception.

Yanick Mezile, Minister of Women's Rights

Yanick Mezile, Minister of Women’s Rights

The emerging generations are not “bad” or “deviant” as some want to believe; they are simply different than their predecessors.

These folks who now think they can police behavior in our society, at some point in time, their generations too were viewed as “bad” in the eyes of those from the generations that preceded theirs.

So instead of badmouthing these young women for the way they are, thinking that we are or were better than them, we need to understand and embrace them as they are NOT going to change; they are not going to be like Darguste, Mezile, Racine and the rest of you conservative-minded Haitians want them to be.

Magalie Racine, Minister of Youth and Sports

Magalie Racine, Minister of Youth and Sports

These young women will be at the Carnival in their tank tops and boy shorts or “pantalon san fouk” doing their Dutty Wine. Those of you who don’t welcome or like the way they are, go ahead and arrest them to see if that is not going to cause an international outcry, enough to embarrass or shame the entire nation.

We act like we are living on an isolated and remote planet called Haiti all by ourselves. The world is forever connected more than ever before, so cultural protectionism is not the way to go as it will render us outdated and out of realm. Even Cuba is now trying to open up because these folks have finally come to the conclusion that cultural protectionism or isolationism is hurting them tremendously.

Nicolas Duvalier Possibly Running For Office Gets Lavalas Going Ballistic

Nicolas Duvalier posing with kids at a toy distribution event for Christmas.

Nicolas Duvalier posing with kids at a toy distribution event for Christmas.

These Lavalas folks are in a state of panic attack –after they got the news that NICOLAS DUVALIER, the son of former President Jean Claude Duvalier, could be running for some type of elected office in Haiti. They are now making all types of nonsensical statements to prove that him running for office is an insult to the Haitian people.

Now I feel compelled to really talk to these folks. History is there to judge all of us, not just the Duvaliers. Don’t judge Nicolas based on his dad’s political accomplishments or report card, which he has absolutely nothing to do with, when you did not do any better when you had your chance to run the country and make a positive difference.

Lavalas came in power in Haiti after the fall of the Duvalier regime and spent 20 years destroying everything Duvalier had left behind. The 20 years of the Lavalas regime [1991-2011] had moved the country 50 years back. We are now in the past playing catch-up towards the future. And you want to blame all the problems and setbacks of the country solely on the Duvaliers? When will you be bold enough to assume your part of the blame?

Lavalas has the nerve badmouthing the Duvaliers because they ran Haiti with an iron fist -a dictatorship so to speak. Well, at least we knew we were dealing with a pure dictatorship, not one with a mask of democracy -like Aristide had it.

Lavalas came in power in 1991 and did the exact same thing they are now blaming the Duvaliers for. You would be a fool to believe that under the Lavalas regime Haiti had a democracy. Aristide had his armed thugs [chimè, rat pa kaka, etc.] on the streets terrorizing the population; muzzling the press; lynching journalists, professionals, business owners, etc… He had plunged the country in a total state of institutionalized lawlessness and chaos. That’s what had gotten the people to come together on their feet as one to drag him out of power in 2004.

You are accusing the Duvaliers of emptying our treasury, right? Show me that you Lavalas did not do just as worse. Your administrations were corrupted. In fact, Aristide came in power as a poor defrocked priest who did not even have an income, he left multimillionaire. We are still waiting on him to tell us what he had done with the money of these poor Haitians who had placed all their hard-earned earnings in “cooperative” investments. He ransacked all these accounts. He is a crook in disguise.

I could go on and on, but I am going to stop here for now. But don’t assume that only the Duvaliers have a past. You Lavalas have one, too. In fact, yours is recent history, meaning fresh in our memory bank. Yet, in spite of all, your organization [Fanmi Lavalas] is still trying so desperately to make a comeback. And you have the nerve telling us that NICOLAS DUVALIER running for elected office is an insult to the Haitian people? How dare you!

All I am saying to my Lavalas folks is this: you should be the last group of people in our political world to be judging Nicolas Duvalier. If he meets all the requirements set by the electoral organization, only his constituency can determine if he is not good enough for them. Meanwhile, if he decides to run, instead of wasting your time judging him based on his father’s report card, which I think is futile -since he has nothing to do with that, you better get yourself ready to send someone capable and qualified to challenge him. Otherwise, he will be elected, and that will be your worst nightmare.

The Way To Beat Lavalas In The Next Elections

elections-haiti

Lavalas knows very well that “rache manyòk” is not feasible, so their mobilization on the streets is nothing but a part of their campaign strategy to imposingly win the next elections.

They were very dormant for the past two years, so they had got to find a way to wake up their troops and get them on their feet once and for all.

The Tèt Kale camp needs to take this wave of sporadic protests very seriously. They must not play the game of their opponent. Otherwise, they will know an embarrassing defeat.

The Tèt Kale Political Action Committees (PACs) must not let their camp lose the political edge to the Lavalas sector -if they want to outperform them (the Lavalas sector) in the next elections. Be mindful of the fact that the main purpose behind all these protests is to win the political edge.

By definition, a Political Action Committee (PAC) is a type of organization that gathers campaign money from members and donates those funds for the purpose of influencing an election. It may engage in unlimited political spending independently of the campaign to campaign for or against candidates, ballot initiatives, or legislation.

How to prevent Lavalas?

Effective political campaigns cannot be possibly run without money. So you need money to effectively campaign against your opponents. The game has long changed.

If the Tèt Kale PACs want to capitalize on the next elections, among many things they need to do, they need to wage an aggressive and brutal media war against Lavalas.

The Tèt Kale PACs, with small 30- to 60-second political spots (audio and video), need to hit the mainstream radio and TV stations in Haiti and the Diaspora and all the social networking sites. The content of these spots is what will determine their effectiveness. So expert advice is highly warranted to put these spots together.

The purpose of these spots is to highlight the reasons (based on historical data) as to why Lavalas is bad for the country in this era of modernization and social and economic development and why their candidates represent what the country needs to keep moving forward.

Also, the Tèt Kale sector needs to select winnable candidates with a clean record to represent them in these elections. That means a vetting committee needs to be instituted to thoroughly examine the records of these potential candidates before they are selected.

Lavalas can be beaten easily. It will depend on the game plan of the Tèt Kale sector. As I often say, when the playing field is leveled for all the players, the team with the best strategy is the one poised to win the contest.

Civic Education: A Must For A Better Haiti

Students at the Istitution Saint-Louis de Gonzague, on June 29, 2010, thousands of displaced earthquake victims are living on the school grounds while students continue to take classes in tents. Here elementary school students studying their vocabulary. Left to right are Elysee Pasquy Anderson, 10; Antoine Marco, 9; and Josiuf Dave, 9. AL DIAZ / THE MIAMI HERALD STAFF

Here elementary school students [at the Institution Saint-Louis de Gonzague] on June 29, 2010 studying their vocabulary. From left to right: Elysee Pasquy Anderson, 10; Antoine Marco, 9; and Josiuf Dave, 9. AL DIAZ / THE MIAMI HERALD STAFF

When I was at Cyr-Guillo [commonly called Ecole des Freres des Gonaives] for my primary, elementary and junior high school education, because the school knew they were preparing young kids to become responsible citizens of tomorrow, the curriculum was shaped to reflect that vision.

After spending 7 years in that institution, upon graduation to move on to high school,  we could proudly look at ourselves and say that we are prepared for life on every front because the foundation upon which the house of life is to be mounted or erected is strongly engineered.

In the curriculum, there was this course called Civic Education -a required core class we had to take for 2 years or so -conceived to teach us students how to love our country unconditionally, respect and love each other as brothers, be good law-abiding citizens by respecting established authority, the law of the land, etc.

I do strongly believe that Ecole des Freres des Gonaives was not the only institution in the country then to have instituted Civic Education in their curriculum; other schools had followed the same Education Department guidelines.

Unfortunately, at my great astonishment, some genius who took over the Education Ministry had removed Civic Education from the curriculum. I know you may be asking the same question everyone with some sense is asking: “why is that?” Well, that’s beyond my pray grade. I am just as dumbfounded as you are.

What a brilliant decision that was! No wonder we have today all this nonsense going on in our society.

Today, these young Haitian kids are growing up with no foundation in civic education. And we are acting so surprised to see the results of our recklessness and irresponsibility -delinquency, child prostitution, the zokiki phenomenon, disrespect for established authority and the law, the list goes on and on and on.

Why acting so surprised? We should have expected these results to emerge some day. That’s what happens when leaders fail their citizens -you have a chaotic and dysfunctional society because the young citizens have grown to become chaotic and dysfunctional citizens.

I heard a while ago that Mr. Varnneur Pierre, the head of our Education Ministry, was bringing back Civic Education in the classroom, I don’t know if he has ever delivered on his promise.  But I pray the Martelly administration could make a difference in the right. The teaching of civic education to our kids is a must. Making the right investment in the education of our kids of today is the only hope we have for a better, secure and sustainable tomorrow.

Carimi’s Invasion Has Irritated Many

Carimi

After CARIMI, a New York-based Konpa band, has dropped the music video for the song KITA NAGO off THE INVASION, their latest album, the critics on the conservative side of the musical spectrum did not waste any time to gear up and go on the counterattack. Their most vicious and debilitating attack to date is that that CARIMI is not playing Konpa; therefore, they are destroying the music.

I don’t know what these critics’ motives are, but to suggest that the band is destroying the music because they sound different and unique, I think that is taking the criticisms a little bit too far.

Here is the video for the song KITA NAGO that is causing all this traffic, all these chatters and jabbers. They dropped it in prelude to the release of the album, a way to introduce THE INVASION. Whoever produces it did a tremendous job. It is very mainstream -out of the ordinary for a Konpa music video. Check it out for yourself.

I don’t see them destroying our Konpa at all. I only see a music that is mutating the same way it did in the late 80’s and early 90’s with bands such as Papash, Zin, Zèklè, etc.

When these aforementioned bands were making the twist back then, they were being slammed left and right with the same illogical criticisms as the ones CARIMI is facing today. In fact, some prominent Konpa show hosts on the radio would not even play their songs on their shows; they were being penalized simply because they sounded different and wanted to revolutionize the music.

I hope these conservative-minded folks did not expect the Konpa CARIMI is playing to sound like Meridional des Cayes of the 80’s.

Music is like culture in that it cannot be enclosed as it tends to evolve. Otherwise, it will cease to exist.

Our music has to change because our musicians are being exposed to all sorts of influences, which is a very good thing. And that happens with every genre of music -Rap, Jazz, Blues, R&B, Rock & Roll, Reggae, etc…

If you listen to Tropicana, one of the pillars of our Konpa music, you will realize they too have changed for the better. The Tropic of the past decades does not sound the same at all as that of today. Being able to change at the rhythm of time is exactly what has blessed them with such a longevity. And the same goes for Tabou Combo.

The criticisms CARIMI is facing from these conservative-minded folks is just normal. We should have expected them to show such degree of reluctance. But nothing is wrong with the band per se. If anything, they are the ones with the problem. Carimi is playing KONPA DIREK -a different kind, of course.

Some people are afraid of change because they see that as a menace to an established order. They will resist anything that is asking them to move out of their comfort zone. So their issue is purely psychological.

I go by a different philosophy. I see change as a growing process. You have to change in order to grow and exist. Otherwise, you will die. The forces of nature will eat you up.

So CARIMI was forced to change their style of Konpa to stay relevant in the Haitian and international markets. On that, I congratulate them on their latest album. I am proud of them because they represent us in the Northeast with flying stars. They are working tirelessly to make my dream come true -to see New York reclaim or regain its title of “Mecca of Konpa Direk in the Diaspora” like it used to be back then, before Florida snatched it from us. To all you critics, THE INVASION has just begun. If you cannot join in, I suggest you get out of the way so you don’t get crushed. And that is a fair warning, not a threat.

ARLY LARIVIERE Needs To Call The Winning Play

Arly Lariviere: Nu Look's maestro

Arly Lariviere: Nu Look’s maestro

ARLY LARIVIERE must not doubt his plan to restructure NU LOOK and become the sole lead vocalist of his band. I stand strong and firm behind this decision of his.

Some doubt that this decision will work for him. Well, I have something to tell these doubters: anything in life in can work out. It is all about how well you are going to present it with all the changes brought to it [if any] to the interested people.

When you are going to battle, you can only bring with you and count on the weapons you have in your arsenal. He needs to count on himself and no one else. No one musician in this business is worth being counted on; they are nothing but a bunch of mercenaries looking for “kote dlo a ap koule pi fre pou yo a.”

ARLY needs to envision a banging delivery strategy to change the game. Part of that strategy should be for him to change the production mode of the band. What do I mean by that? He needs to count on his forte, which is KONPA LOVE. Forget about the hardcore Konpa. Stay away from that. In fact, if you study the trends carefully in this Konpa music production, you will realize that the Konpa Love tunes carry the weight that could determine the lifespan or life expectancy of any given album -if it is going to make it or if it is going to be a hit album.

He will also need to invest some money in developing a marketing strategy to make the market accept this new facelift done to the band -facelift in terms of structure and production. What will that do? That will play in the psychology of the market to make the consumers accept what they could or would be reluctant to accept and embrace. That is the power of marketing.

So ARLY has what the market is craving for. He has the ingredients to cook the good food, so he only needs to take his time to prepare something that will wake up the gastronomy of the market.

Maestro, this game is yours to lose. Make it happen just like you had done it before. You can do it, man. Do not doubt yourself; it is going to work.

President Martelly: Great Leaders Are Great Listeners

President Martelly needs to exercise his sense of leadership by taking the high road of wisdom to spare the country an unneeded and unnecessary political crisis of no return.

As someone who has been an avid proponent of the institution of the Permanent Electoral Council, as stipulated in the Amended Constitution, and as a political realist, I don’t see how the political conjuncture [the Senate not being able to hold meetings for lack of quorum; the president of the Superior Council of the Judiciary (CSPJ), Anel Alexis Joseph, being accused of not following the right procedure to choose the institution’s 3 representatives to sit in the CEP, creating a tension and situation of revolt inside the institution] is going to allow such institution to be born without generating a crisis that may be too complex to resolve. So stopping it (the crisis) at its gestation stage is highly warranted.

I read Senator Steven Benoit’s letter to President Martelly with great attention (see letter below). For someone whom I barely agree with, this time around, I think he is on the side of logic, realism and wisdom. So I am urging the president to follow the sound advice of the senator. Everything in the letter makes perfect sense. He has said it all.

Where we are right now, what’s important is to organize credible elections, not the type of CEP (provisory or permanent) that is going to organize them. President Martelly should get everybody (the presidents of the Senate, Chamber of Deputies and CSPJ; the leaders of the political parties represented in the parliament; members of the civil society; etc…) together and extract a consensus that could result in the creation of a Provisory Electoral Council to organize the congressional, mayoral and CASEC elections. Once the effective in the Senate is complete, then we can proceed with the formation of the Permanent Electoral Council. If this is something all the vital forces in the country could agree with, the president should go with it. In politics, for the sake of appeasement, when in doubt, avoid taking the controversial or contentious route.
==================================================================================

Senator Steven Irvenson Benoit of the West District

Port-au-Prince, le 9 août 2012.

Son Excellence

Monsieur Michel Joseph MARTELLY

Président de la République

Palais National

 

Excellence,

Une fois de plus, j’ai l’honneur de m’adresser à vous en tant que responsable de la bonne marche des institutions républicaines de ce pays, et du bon déroulement de son processus démocratique. J’espère donc que vous recevrez cette correspondance dans un esprit d’ouverture pouvant faciliter un dialogue pacificateur et stabilisateur qui nous permettra de réussir la traversée de la conjoncture actuelle.

  Quelques antécédents

Permettez que je vous rappelle qu’en avril 1997, lors des élections devant justement permettre le renouvellement du tiers du Sénat, les résultats du 1er tour ont été contestés avec tant de virulence que les deux (2) Sénateurs élus n’ont jamais pu prêter serment. Quant au 2ème tour il n’eut jamais lieu. Résultats décriés, Conseil électoral provisoire décrié tout autant. 

En mai 2000, le pouvoir en place avait tenté de rafler tous les sièges du Parlement avec des résultats affichant 81 Députés en sa faveur, sur les 83 siégeant, et 18 de ses candidats élus Sénateurs sur 18 sièges en ballotage. Une fois de plus ces résultats furent contestés et il s’en suivit trois années de troubles politiques ininterrompus, jusqu’au départ forcé du Président élu.

Aujourd’hui nous voici face au défi de la formation d’un Conseil électoral qui donne lieu à une intense controverse et crée des frictions entre les trois pouvoirs. Si nous ne faisons pas très attention, ce Conseil électoral risque de ne jamais voir le jour et le pays pourrait retomber dans une crise politique.

En effet, au sein du CSPJ règne un conflit d’importance et le comportement du Président de cette institution en qui la nation est censé placer son ultime confiance est peu rassurant; il semble même attiser davantage les dissenssions internes (et externes). Le CEPJ doit se ressaisir et recouvrer sa dignité et la confiance de la nation, même au prix de grands sacrifices.

Au Sénat, il est jusqu’à ce jour Impossible de réunir au complet les 20 membres y siégeant actuellement. Il est encore plus difficile d’obtenir la majorité des deux tiers qui permettrait que soient désignés les trois  représentants de l’Assemblée nationale au Conseil électoral permanent. Rappelons-nous que, comme le Président du CSPJ, le Président du Sénat ne peut voter que pour départager un vote dans l’impasse. Or, douze Sénateurs et trente-six Députés se sont déjà déclarés ouvertement hostiles à la formation d’un Conseil électoral permanent et exigent que ce soit de préférence un Conseil provisoire de consensus qui organise les prochaines élections. 

La voix (ou la voie) de la Sagesse 

Personnellement j’étais en faveur, et je suis encore en faveur de la mise en place d’un Conseil électoral permanent. Étant donné  qu’une majorité de mes collègues avait voté les amendements, considérant que la majorité des Parlementaires avait demandé la publication de la loi mère amendée,  je m’étais plié à la volonté du vote majoritaire comme tout bon démocrate. Par respect pour ce vote et pour les prescrits de la constitution amendée, il n’y avait pour moi d’autre voie que d’aller jusqu’au bout des décisions prises et former un Conseil électoral permanent. 

Cependant, tenant compte de la situation qui prévaut au sein du CSPJ et des réactions qu’elle ne cesse de susciter, considérant la crise qui se profile au Parlement si les diverses positions exprimées ne peuvent être conciliées, je ne peux que souhaiter un dialogue entre l’Exécutif, le Parlement, le CSPJ, les partis politiques et la société civile en vue de trouver un compromis.  

Ceci éviterait des contestations inutiles, néfastes au bon fonctionnement du gouvernement et de l’Etat haïtien en général. De même, Il serait fort sage que vous reveniez sur l’arrêté nommant une Directrice générale au Conseil électoral, avant même que celui-ci soit constitué. Il reviendra aux Conseillers eux-mêmes de se choisir un Directeur général, tout comme cela se fait dans les autres institutions indépendantes que sont la Cour supérieure des comptes et du contentieux administratif, l’Université d’Etat Haiti, l’Office du protecteur du citoyen.

Ce sont là la voix et la voie de la Sagesse …

Gouvernance

Une fois ce Conseil électoral formé, ses membres soumettront dans les plus brefs délais au Parlement, pour ratification, la loi électorale devant régir les joutes qui permettront le choix du tiers du Sénat, l’élection des Maires et des Casec.  Dans l’intervalle il y aura beaucoup à faire.

Le Parlement devra voter : la loi sur les Collectivités territoriales – la loi Organique du CEP permanent  – la loi contre la Corruption – la loi sur les Partis politiques – la loi contre l’Evasion fiscale – la loi contre le Vol de l’électricité. De son côté, l’Exécutif devrait aussi publier les lois votées par le Parlement mais non encore imprimées au Journal officiel tel la loi sur les Frais scolaires (pour bien montrer qu’il appuie l’éducation) – la loi sur l’Habeas corpus – la loi sur la Détention préventive – sur le Kidnapping, et toutes les autres lois votées au Parlement et non encore publiées au Moniteur.

Un tel tableau ne fera que renforcer le bilan du Président Martelly et de son gouvernement. Durant le processus électoral, vous aurez le choix de vous maintenir au dessus de la mêlée ou de travailler en vue de la victoire des candidats de votre parti aux élections. L’expérience de 1997 et celle de 2000 mentionnées plus haut indiquent clairement que l’Exécutif a tout intérêt à laisser parler librement les urnes et à se contenter du nombre de sièges qu’il aura démocratiquement obtenus.

Renforcement institutionnel

Après la publication des résultats des élections le cap devra immédiatement être mis sur la formation du Conseil électoral permanent, du Conseil constitutionnel, et la tenue des élections indirectes qui permettront au pays d’avoir les Assemblées municipales, départementales et le Conseil interdépartemental, dont les membres pourront finalement siéger au Conseil des Ministres  en lieu et place des Parlementaires que nous y observons actuellement, ce qui constitue une grande anomalie. 

Avant de terminer, je tiens à rappeler à votre Excellence et à l’opinion publique nationale que le document qui devrait s’intituler Constitution haïtienne de 1987 amendée n’existe nulle part. La reproduction des amendements pour erreur matérielle a bien eu lieu, mais il reste à publier la Constitution de 1987 avec tous les amendements incorporés! A ce sujet, je voudrais attirer votre attention sur le fait que le retard mis dans la ‘’reproduction pour erreur matérielle’’ est à l’origine de cette grave crise actuellement en gestation. Elle aurait pu avoir eu lieu bien avant la fin du mandat des dix Sénateurs qui avaient si farouchement rallié la cause de l’Exécutif.

Ces conseils vous sont adressés, Excellence, dans un élan patriotique en vue de trouver dans votre conscience d’homme d’Etat, un écho favorable qui ne fera que garantir davantage la réussite de votre mandat, tout en assurant le bien-être de ce peuple qui attend beaucoup de vous, de nous.

Patriotiquement,

Steven Irvenson BENOIT

Sénateur de la République

 

cc :         Le Président du Sénat

              Le Premier Ministre

             La presse

Carnival of Flowers: An Economic, Not Political Factor

I have zero problem with the Carnival of Flowers currently going on in Port-au-Prince. In fact, I support it 100%. I’m not a politician, so I leave the politics surrounding the necessity of holding it to those who want to make it a political matter.

In my opinion, we need to push this event even harder. So I propose that we hold next year a week long of festivities, rather. That means, in a Summer Break spirit, along with the Carnival of Flowers, let’s hold a series of events to be ended with a big time international music festival (possibly on one of our beautiful beaches). And the promotion for this package of events for next year needs to start right away, right after this one.

These represent opportunities for the private sector to make money. The government should not have to spend a dime to organize them -other than providing security/logistical support to the private sector. That should be the extent of the government’s involvement.

These types of festivities could be organized on a larger scale and promoted on the global stage as our traditional cultural landmarks to encourage people all over the world to come and experience them.

Of course, this first time around is not going to be as successful as expected. But for the subsequent times to be, there has got to be this first time, which many are very critical and hostile to.

If many tend to look at this Carnival of Flowers as a waste, I see it as a business investment with great economic potentials. The product seems to look good to my standard; like any business investment, its success will depend on how hard and smart we are willing to work in order to market it around the world to attract potential buyers (the national and foreign tourists).

Yes, the country is facing one of the worst economic moments in its history, but nothing is wrong with holding the Carnival of Flowers to try to attract potential tourists; we only need to change our approach to organizing and marketing it. So let’s put politics aside and stop wasting our time criticizing the administration for something our shortsightedness has not allowed us to grasp.

World Wide Village: NGO To Be Investigated In Haiti

This article “Confession of a Haitian working for an American non-profit organization in Haiti” by Myrlande Charelus is the type of story these politicians in Haiti need to read so they could wake up from their coma. She has made some serious revelations in her blog, which the authorities in Port-au-Prince can use to start an investigation on the operation of World Wide Village (WWV) in the country.

I am not one to unjustly bash these non-government organizations (NGOs) in Haiti because I think they are instruments that must be put to good use by the people they are there to serve. However, when they are taking advantage of the misery of the people for their own selfish gains, then we have a problem.

Where is the Haitian government on this? When will we start seeing some structure put in place to coordinate and oversee the activities of these NGOs currently operating in the country? What is the sense of having hundreds of NGOs in the country, yet the dire reality they are there to tackle is getting worse? One does not need to be a rocket scientist to realize that something is not going right.

The majority of these NGOs are not doing anything concrete to render the situation in Haiti better. Most of these workers, in my opinion, are over there vacationing and enjoying the nice weather while getting paid mad money for not doing a damn thing. Who would not love such a job?

If, following a thorough investigation by the Haitian authorities, the charges can be proven factual and accurate, that non-government organization known by the name of World Wide Village, the NGO being exposed in this aforementioned blog, needs to be asked to leave the country.

President Martelly needs to remember that he had made a campaign promise to regularize and structure the operations of these NGOs in the country; we are IMPATIENTLY waiting for that day to come. We will not forget.

URGENT: Call For A Popular Uprising In Haiti

It has been 70 days since the Senate in Port-au-Prince has managed to hold their last legislative meeting, and that was for the ratification of Prime Minister Lamothe. Some of the senators have been AWOL (Absent Without Leave), infirming the quorum inside the chamber. Meanwhile, the people’s pressing and urgent problems are not breaking -one only has to walk our streets to see them raging.

What are we paying the members of this institution for -for not doing anything? Imagine what would have been these guys’ reaction had Prime Minister Lamothe been nowhere to be found for a week, just for a week. Hell would have broken loose.

It is obvious that the Senate has become right about now the people’s number one problem. There is a solution to any problem, and the solution to the problem the Senate represents is in the hands of the people. They can turn things around for the better in a blink of an eye if they really want to.

We are living a legislative dictatorship in Haiti, and we should fight it with everything we have at our disposal -just like we did in 1986 to force the dictatorship Duvalier regime out of power, after it has lived its political life expectancy.

The intent of the drafters of our Constitution was to put in place a structure that could prevent the erection or emergence of another dictatorship of any kind from either one of the three branches of government -executive, legislative and judiciary.

The current structure or system, as stipulated in the actual Constitution, is not working in the best interest of us all; it is only beneficial to a small circle of crooks and corrupted politicians. It constantly fails the state. And when the state keeps failing to deliver, the people must act swiftly and boldly to take the destiny of the nation into their own hands.

We must not rely on one man or woman to do what needs to be done. The president, whether it be President Martelly or someone else, regardless his or her impeccable political will, will not be able to do anything as he or she will have both his or her hands tied up; the Constitution creates a powerless executive. It takes all the power and places it in the hands of the legislative branch, creating a legislative dictatorship.

Power is not given; it is taken by any necessary means. So let us not expect the legislature to amend the Constitution to return to the executive some of its power to level things out. That will not happen without a fight, which only the people can give.

Needless to say, we need a popular uprising in the country similar to the one that took place in France on July 14 of 1789, known by the historic name of Storming of the Bastille, to rectify the mess that is going on right now in the country.

The people need to take matters into their own hands. They need to take the streets, storm and DESTROY the Senate and demand that a new Constitution be voted on and adopted immediately. We do not need a Senate anyway. What for? We only need a House of Deputies -just like the British have it -to bring to the political forefront the people’s problems. We created a bureaucratic layer we do not really need, slowing the pace of things for the people. It is simply a waste of time and resources, which we do not even have.

One does not need to be a rocket scientist to realize that this Constitution is the stem of ALL of our political setbacks. We need to break ties with the staleness if we must move forward. This Parliamentarian structure as we have it and this Constitution must go so we could start anew. Again, the brave people of Haiti have in their hands the solution to the problem the Senate represents. They just need to activate it, and they do know how.