Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Obama's Wars: Is the U.S. a Failed State?

General Petraeus Speaks at Fundraiser
Bob Woodward has a new book out called "Obama's Wars." It's a fitting title that the Commander-in-Chief has earned. Obama did a Bush immitation recently, when he declared "mission accomplished" in Iraq. The announcement eclipsed the fact that there are 50,000 military personnel in Iraq as well as countless mercenaries. To underscore Obama's war credentials in his speech he praised his predeccessor Bush, the "War President."

During his presidential campaign Obama talked about the fact that Iraq was a "stupid" war, inferring that the war in Afghanistan was warranted. Really? What war isn't stupid? Who profits from war? Not the people expected to fight these wars, nor the people who are attacked – in Iraq's case, without legitimate provocation. The only beneficiaries are the corporations – war profiteers and mercenaries .

The American public is bombarded by a mainstream media which supports and glorifies war. The young are brainwashed to believe that war is necessary and as exciting as a video game. It was the American war hero, General George S. Patton who claimed, "Americans love to fight."

The reality is that Obama is conducting a "war" against the poor, against the people of Afghanistan who have been the victims of decades of war and depravation. The American ruling class has a beef with the Taliban, Al-Qaeda and the mythical Osama Bin Laden (who the U.S. says masterminded the Sept. 11 terror attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, but has offered no concrete evidence to substantiate the claim), but engages in collective punishment of Afghan civilians (a Geneva Conventions war crime). Meanwhile, these "terrorist" and boogymen are of their own making.

Additionally, the U.S. is overtly and covertly carrying on wars against Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Honduras, the Democratic Republic of the Congo... the entire developing world really.

Obama is tacitly supporting an ongoing war against the poor devastated people of Haiti. In Haiti the U.S. supported and financed back-to-back coups in 1991 and 2004 against the first freely and fairly elected democratic government of Haiti -- that of Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

Indicative of the continuing assault on Haiti is the fact that Bush the younger was one of Obama's picks as an agent of "relief" efforts in Haiti. Bush Jr. and Bush Sr. both were head of the U.S. administrations which supported the coups.

The other pick for Haiti "relief" is Bill Clinton, who waged a covert war on Haiti when he was in office. His administration gave huge subsidies to his Arkansas farmers and destroyed Haiti's food security and the livelihood of thousands of local rice farmers.

It was a crippling strike that was probably just as deadly as the bombing of the Sudan (aspirin factory), the former Yugoslavia, Iraq, Afghanistan (Bill Clinton is a war criminal)... during his administration, since 2 out of 3 Haitians were farmers.

Clinton recently "apologized." However, in his new position as co-head of reconstruction efforts, he has not made a visible difference in alleviating the suffering of the victims of the quake. Some say that Clinton's position is akin to a Viceroy in this neo-colonial feudal system fostered in Haiti by the U.S.

Recently Congressman John Conyers (D-Michigan) announced that Bill Clinton will be stepping down from his position as co-chair of the Interim Haiti Reconstruction Commission (IHRC). Conyers shared the news at the recent 40th Annual Congressional Black Caucus Legislative Conference held in DC.

There is a rumor circulating that the Congressional Black Caucus will replace President Clinton. It's from the frying pan into the fire, given the scandals plaguing the CBC – with no less than four of its members under investigation or scrutiny for corruption. Last year ex-Congressman William Jefferson got 13 years for accepting "cold cash" for his influence. In March of this year even Congressman Conyer's wife was sentenced to three years in prison on bribery charges. Evidently, many CBC members are in office to help themselves, not their constituents.

The U.S. has been exploiting and oppressing poor nations – violating its own "democratic principles" and the human rights of the people of other countries for so long... it's fair to ask: will there be any accountability or justice for those who are suffering so much under the weight of the U.S.' inhumane "neoliberal" policies? Maybe there will be a comeuppance. MLK said, "The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice."

If Obama is being "boxed into war" and "thwarted" in his efforts to scale back or end the wars by General Petraeus and key Pentagon officials, it surely is a sign that the military industrial complex is out of control.

The American people are sick of war, but the military is defying the will of the people by prolonging/conducting these illegal "wars." The thing is that the American public turns a blind eye to the other fascist anti-democratic operations the U.S. carries out all over the world.

The fear that accompanies the drumbeat of war is accompanied by a nutty, and often satirically cynical attack on people of the Muslim faith. The atmosphere of frenzied hate and hysteria is very disturbing. It was sad to see the bewilderment of a Muslim cab driver who was beaten by a racist rider. The escalation of violence, arson and discrimination and religious intolerance against Muslims is unprecedented.

The U.S. is degenerating into a "banana republic" when the demagoguery, hate, rage and racism of some in the Tea Party towards the President of the United States and the government pushes the envelop to the point of inciting sedition and armed insurrection.

Hopefully, the Tea Party remains a fringe. The majority of the U.S. population believes in the rule-of-law and respectful discourse. However, there is a fight for the soul of America being waged.

Is an age of repression inevitable? Some are fighting the climate of fear and hate, but the vast majority are not conscious of the fix they're in, with so many of their rights being taken away by the Patriot Act, illegal wiretapping, covert surveillance and illegal searches...etc.

Just this week the New York Times reported that the Obama administration is seeking to expand the government's ability to conduct invasive surveillance online.

A wake up call is due to come soon – when the American people will get a taste of the bitter feeling of helplessness felt by a vast majority of the developing world who have been the victims of U.S. imperialism. Of course, anti-war activist who came out in huge numbers in the lead up to the war in Iraq already have a taste of what empire looks like, given the way the Bush administration went to war in Iraq in spite of the polls which showed most people in America and the world opposed the war.

After the two successive coups in Haiti, thousands died. Some poor souls had their corpses desecrated and left on the streets to be eaten by dogs. Political activist went into hiding and even now the ones who escaped indefinite detention, no longer feel free to claim their political voice back or demonstrate for their human rights. The wave of repression brought on by the actions of the U.S. France and Canada has had a lasting effect on the Haitian psyche and body politic that will take generations to overcome.

In the U.S. the military industrial complex are flexing their muscles and feeling their oaths. They see themselves to be as powerful, if not more powerful than the elected "Commander-in-Chief."


Eisenhower warned about the "unwarranted influence" of the military; that it would threaten the "very structure of our society."

Wouldn't it be ironic and perhaps inevitable, if the so-called "banana republic" meme that the U.S. press and public has branded developing countries with in the past were to come to pass in the U.S.? These oppressive regimes were more often then not encouraged and supported by the U.S. government (because military dictatorships are so much more amenable to Western influence (corruption, assassination threats) then "socialist" democracies).

In his book "Confessions of an Economic Hit Man" John Perkins details how the U.S. "convinces" countries that are strategically important to the U.S. to accept enormous loans for infrastructure development and how they make sure that the lucrative projects are contracted to U.S. corporations.

Militarism is one of the main reasons for the pain and suffering around the world. The
governments of the poorest of the poor in developing countries buy up arms from the U.S. and others at the expense of feeding their desperately poor populations or building infrastructure.

The U.S.' military adventures are largely to blame for the failed economy. One could correctly say that the U.S. is a "failed state."

The Pentagon and military brass such as General
Petraeus do not respond to public opinion or Executive pressure. Evidently they don't believe in the very democratic principles they portray as the goal for the destruction of Afghanistan and Iraq.

The recent revelations about the "killing for sport" of innocent Afghan civilians by five U.S. military-men are horrific and shocking in nature. The hypocrites at the Pentagon have proven that they are fascists, particularly in light of the destruction of thousands of copies of the memoirs of an Army officer. The Pentagon destroyed the books in order to "safeguard state secrets." On September 20 they destroyed about 9,500 copies of Army Reserve Lt. Col. Anthony Shaffer's memoir "Operation Dark Heart."

"DoD decided to purchase copies of the first printing because they contained information which could cause damage to national security,"
-- Pentagon spokeswoman Lt. Col. April Cunningham said.

Monday, September 27, 2010

Sandra Felicien Quake Survivor: It's Like Screaming Into the Wind

Nine months after the devastating earthquake, many are criticizing the slow pace of relief for Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) in Haiti. UN & NGOs' standards for response for hurricanes and disasters are pitifully inadequate for the scope of the humanitarian crisis. The bureaucrats appear to be oblivious to the suffering.

The Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti released a highly critical report which shows the immensity of the humanitarian crisis on the ground last week titled, "We've Been Forgotten": Conditions in Haiti's Displacement Camps Eight Months After the Earthquake.

According to the report: 75% of families had someone go an entire day without eating in the past week; 44% of families primarily drank untreated water; 78% of families lived without enclosed shelter; and 48% had been threatened with forced eviction. There have been increased protests demanding a solution to the lack of adequate housing.

U.S. and France bureaucrats Hillary Clinton and Bernard Kouchner point to the growing misery and dissatisfaction of Haitian earthquake victims as "impatience." In their estimation, the cries of distress are a sign of "unrealistic" expectations and ignorance of the "immensity of the disaster." At the meeting, "US and France scolded displaced Haitians and other whiners."

Evidently, the slow pace of recovery doesn't trouble Secretary Clinton as much as the lack of appreciation being shown by homeless Haitians for the "people who are working so hard" to help them.

The remarks were made at a meeting with Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, where the three signed two memoranda of understanding: one to set up an industrial zone to create 10,000 jobs and the other to finance the rebuilding of the main hospital in Port-au-Prince.

Bellerive aired "his concerns about the pace and size of what we are doing today." He added that "impatience is increasing," with the need to show results right away in Haiti.

The Haitian premier called for a solution to be offered within three months for at least half of Haitians who have lost their homes, and who are doing their best to survive in temporary shelters.

Some 125,000 Haitian families were put up in the emergency camps following the January 12 earthquake. The 7.0 magnitude earthquake killed 250,000 people.

Over this summer and the past weekend there was mass suffering as fierce storms buffeted the island. There were 5 killed, 55 hurt, 2000 tents destroyed during Friday's storm in Port-au-Prince. Some photos from the storm damage are here and here.

Camp dwellers are fighting the elements and exposed to further disaster from storms and hurricanes and the attending mud slides and risk from diseases. They are also endangered from the high risk of further earthquake activity at any time and the attending aftershocks.

Those killed by the storm on Friday included two young girls and a 93-year-old woman who lived in close quarters with the tens of thousands of people left homeless by the powerful January 12 quake. According to this story, in July, a baby and mother were struck by lightning in Camp Corail and the baby died.

These are death camps where only the strong are expected to survive. Survival of the fittest.

While the rebuilding of the Port-au-Prince main hospital is an important priority, the other main concern should not be building sweatshops, rather it should be tackling the critical humanitarian need for shelter for the over 1.3 million homeless people in 1,300 camps.

In spite of the dangers the people face, the United States and France warned Monday against the growing impatience with the slow pace of recovery.
Hillary Clinton said, "Those who expect progress immediately are unrealistic and doing a disservice to the many people who are working so hard."

[Bernard] Kouchner said that "It's because they have no idea of the immensity of the disaster."

[...] Yet, it may be the foreign ministers who are unaware of the immensity of the disaster on the ground for the millions of Haitians still homeless nearly 9 months after the earthquake.
Although "Two recent protest marches have sought to make the homeless a central issue in the upcoming presidential campaign," a New York Times article reports: the tent camp residents are too "miserable, weary and in many cases fighting eviction [...] to have the energy to become a vocal force."

What has gained traction, the article reports, are the posting of poignant letters from camp dwellers who are suffering in the aftermath of the earthquake. The letters have poured in to complaint boxes installed by the International Organization for Migration, which said they "did not expect to tap directly into a well of pent-up emotions." The organization got 700 letters in three days from their first boxes.

Ms. Saint Hilaire, 33: "To all the members of concerned organizations, I thank you first for feeling our pain, I note that you have taken on almost all our problems and some of our greatest needs."

She then "explained that she had lost her husband and her livelihood to the Jan. 12 earthquake and now found herself hungry, stressed and stranded in a camp annex without a school, a health clinic, a marketplace or any activity at all."

“Please — do something!” she wrote from Tent J2, Block 7, Sector 3, her new address.

"“We don’t want to die of hunger and also we want to send our children to school. I give glory to God that I am still alive — but I would like to stay that way!”

Marie Jean Jean: “I feel discouraged, I don’t sleep comfortably, I gave birth six months ago, the baby died, I have six other children, they don’t have a father, I don’t have work, my tarp is torn, the rain panics me, my house was crushed, I don’t have money to feed my family, I would really love it if you would help me.”

Other Haitians write: “Living under a tent is not favorable neither to me nor to my children” and “We would appreciate your assistance in obtaining a future as one does not appear to be on our horizon.”

Paul Wilbert - Camp: Boulos: Need: House. Demand: $1,250. Project: Build house. Thank you.”

Sandra Felicien - Camp Corail 3: We are so powerless, It is like we are bobbing along on the waves of the ocean, waiting to be saved. Sept. 14. Today we feel fed up with the bad treatment in Block 7. Have you forgotten about us out here in the desert? You don’t understand us. You don’t know that an empty bag can’t stand. A hungry dog can’t play. Other tent camps have health clinics or schools or at least something to do, Why don’t we have such things? Aren’t we people, too?”

“I don’t know why I keep writing,” she said. “To this point they have not responded. It’s like screaming into the wind.”

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

JAMA Survey of Disease Trends Shows No Reported AIDs Cases

The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) reports on the Haiti launch of a National Surveillance system for illnesses after the Jan. earthquake.
"The objectives were to monitor disease trends, detect outbreaks, and characterize the affected population to target relief efforts. Fifty-one hospital and clinic surveillance sites affiliated with the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) were selected to report daily counts by e-mail or telephone for 25 specified reportable conditions."
According to the report, after the earthquake the predominantly reported illnesses (in descending order) were Acute Respiratory Infection (ARI), Malaria, Acute Watery Diarrhea, Fever of unknown cause and injuries.

Given that the U.S. participants were affiliated with the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), it is significant that AIDs did not make the survey and was not one of the predominantly reported illnesses.

The aids rate in Haiti is not the highest in this hemisphere. The AIDs rate in Haiti is 2.2%, less than Washington, DC's rate, which stands at 3.0%.

Support a Tea Party, Vote Republican

"If I had a world of my own, everything would be nonsense. Nothing would be what it is because everything would be what it isn't. And contrary-wise; what it is it wouldn't be, and what it wouldn't be, it would. You see?"
    --Alice in Wonderland

Tea Party Sign Want ChangeThe Republican party is sending out robo calls urging people to vote Republican this November. The Republicans are in a bit of a tussle with the Tea Party for "conservative" hearts and minds. The Republican Party is a very divided party right now.

Tea Party endorsed candidate Sharron Angle of Nevada, who won the Republican primary, will face Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid in November. This is the race that the Democratic leader claims he wanted. Democrats are reportedly ecstatic that the right-wing of the Republican party has won so many primaries. Analyst think the Tea Party wins could mean GOP losses in November. The Tea Party hasn't shown yet that it can broaden its appeal to a larger constituency.

In an effort to do just that, the Angle campaign has made robo calls to states as far away as Seattle, Washington. How many billionaires live in Seattle? The so-called "real conservatives" of the Tea Party "movement" are reportedly bankrolled by billionaires.

If these calls don't have the desired effect, next a letter from Sharon Angle's campaign will arrive to ask the Republican household to find their checkbook right now.
"Not only is this the #1 race in America this year, it is nothing less than a referendum on the far left policies of Barack Obama and Harry Reid. Defeating Reid would be a knockdown blow to Obama. It is a blow I can --- and will -- deliver!. Defeating Reid will spell doom for Obama's agenda!"
Sharron Angle has some extreme views. She thinks that citizens should "use arms against Congress"... does that sound illegal to anyone? The Tea Party is noted for this kind of inflammatory language. Would a black candidate running for the Senate get away with inciting violence against the U.S. government? Would that same black still be in a Senate race. No way!

Angle's interpretation of the Second Amendments (the right of the people to carry and bear arms) is characteristic of the rhetoric of anti-government groups, whose ranks have "caught fire" since the election of Barack Obama according to the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). Angle herself is associated with two such groups: the Independent American Party and Oath Keepers.

christine_odonnell_s_palinThe Tea Party is berserk. Some real screwballs... Christine O'Donnell is the new darling of the Tea Party. She just won a primary in Delaware against Republican moderate Mike Castle. O'Donnell has some major issues. Watch out Sarah Palin, she'll steal the limelight!

Remember that old Betty Davis movie "All About Eve?" O'Donnell is the ingenue, Eve. Eve is out to replace the movie star, Margo (Sarah Palin). Eve is Margo's understudy, so she knows how to play the role to perfection. Christine O'Donnell has every Sarah Palin move figured out, right down to paying her personal expenses with campaign money.

An advocacy group, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) has called on the Delaware U.S. Attorney's Office and the Federal Election Commission (FEC) to investigate O'Donnell for conversion, tax evasion and false statements.

The 2 Live CrewThis is slightly off topic, but speaking of creeps and bigots... Luther Campbell, a controversial figure in the music industry, when his group 2 Live Crew performed offensive and sexually explicit material (by mid-90s Campbell declared bankruptcy), has taken "crayon to paper " to protest the building of a community center and mosque in New York near the site of the 9/11 attacks. Luther is popping a blood vessel over the plan:

"What they really want to do is celebrate the martyrdom of terrorists who blew up the World Trade Center. Screw that. Anybody who is involved with putting that mosque next to Ground Zero should be investigated…"

It's a point-of-view that resonates with some mosque opponents. In retrospect, they've gained an appreciation for the rap group's song, "pop that couchie" and are "down with Luke."

Back to Christine O'Donnell... her hair style, glasses, her facial expressions are a dead ringer for Palin. Republican strategist and Fox News contributor Carl Rove wavers between harsh criticism and support of O'Donnell. His attacks have forced her to address the "unfactual" nature of the charges. O'Donnell will also be spending considerable time "refudiating" her past... "that's right, it's a regular epidumbic."

For the Tea Party, stimulating the economy is a sin and for Christine O'Donnell that means saying no to self-gratification. Comedian Jimmy Kimmel feels that his "basic human rights" are being threatened.


One positive is that O'Donnell has given up witchcraft. Witchcraft was just a phase she dabbled in while in high school. Again, strange synergy with Sarah Palin and her Kenyan witch doctor. Palin credits Pastor Muthee with helping her win the Alaska governorship.

Newt Gingrich should look into this. How is Sarah Palin's Kenyan association affecting her commitment to colonial domination?

The election of Barack Obama is bringing all the worse racist elements out of the closet. Newt Gingrich feels quite comfortable in this free-for-all pseudo "patriotic" racist atmosphere advancing intellectually bankrupt theories about how Obama's "Kenyan, anti-colonial worldview" makes him unfit to be president. Mr. Gingrich conveniently forgets that the American founding fathers waged an anti-colonial war called the American Revolution.

If there's blood in your urine, it's election season in America again folks. And this time it's a real circus, with clowns and all!

Will the strategy adopted by the Republican party of pandering to and appealing to the lowest reptilian brain impulses of the American people pay off for them in November?

The Real Newt GingrichNewt Gingrich is betting on it. In his opinion, Barack Obama is a Nazi-Commie and "a threat to our way of life."

Michael Steele, what do you think about this GOP party leader's blatant race-baiting and isn't he pandering to the birthers?

"No, I don't. I don't see that stretch. I know some folks out there want to, but I don't see that. I know Newt. I know that's not his mindset on that. He's talking about a worldview that comes from a different part, whether it's Europe, the African continent," says the man who single-handily took the "hip" out of hip-hop.

If it wasn't for America, where would the rest of the world get their entertainment?

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Haitians Want an End to Violent UN/MINUSTAH Occupation

Updated 09.16.2010 - Suicide ruled out because none of the teens cervical vertebrae were damaged.
abaun2Photo: Mediahacker.org

Another incidence of violence involving UN troops occupying Haiti is being reported (Fr.). This latest involves the death (Sp.) of 16-year-old Gérald Jean Gilles. His body was found in the base of Nepalese soldiers of MINUSTAH's Formed Police Units (FPU) in Cap-Haitien on August 17.

The death is being called a "suicide" by MINUSTAH. A UN spokesperson claims the youth hanged himself. Gilles, who did odd jobs at the base for food and money had been heard by people at the nearby Roi Henri Christophe hotel shouting, "They're strangling me."

This year alone there have been a number of incidents of violence involving UN troops leading up to this latest alleged torture and killing of young Gérard Jean Gilles.

March 30, 2010:
Women Tear Gassed by UN Troops as Security Concerns Shape Relief Effort + audio
According to witnesses, during the distribution of food to a group of women, the U.N. peacekeepers sprayed tear gas on the crowd.

May 24, 2010:
Outside Haiti’s National Palace, U.N. Troops’ Clash with Frustrated Students Spills into Camps
Students at the Faculty of Ethnology at the State University of Haiti (UEH) in downtown Port-au-Prince plan to file complaints with international agencies about a May 24 incident involving Brazilian soldiers from the 9,000-member United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH). The soldiers invaded the campus and arrested a student, Frantz Mathieu Junior, for allegedly throwing rocks. MINUSTAH released the student the same day, and the force’s acting head, Edmond Mulet, apologized on May 25, but the students question why more than three months later no UN soldiers have been disciplined.

Following the March 25 incident, organizers of a protest march released a press statement titled, "Let's mobilize to get the country out of the rubble of foreign aid and the rubble of the occupation" on May 26 signed by ten organizations [Gwoup 77 et al.] which stated, "After the January 12 catastrophe, the occupation has been strengthened with other foreign soldiers and MINUSTAH, on the pretext that they are helping us… [T]hey did nothing to help prevent more than 300,000 people from dying under rubble… Now on the sixth anniversary of the occupation, we are taking to the streets of Port-au-Prince to get the country out from under the rubble of MINUSTAH.”

May 28, 2010:
Violence in Cap-Haitien (Fr.)
On May 28 at least four people were reportedly wounded when MINUSTAH forces fired on a demonstration protesting lack of power in the Cité Lescot neighborhood of the northern city of Cap-Haïtien. The incident was also reported here.


September 9, 2010:
(A rough Spanish translation follows below from Adital.com)
Every day, there is growing dissatisfaction with the operations and the military presence of the United Nations Mission for the Stabilization of Haiti - MINUSTAH. The most recent event that sparked outrage in the Haitian population was the death of Jean Gérald Gilles, barely 16 years. Security forces said the case was suicide, however, strong evidence indicates asphyxiation or drowning.

Gerald's body was found on Aug. 17, hanged inside the base Formed Police Units (FPU) of MINUSTAH, located in the center of Cap Haitien. According to information provided by some youths at Haitian media Réseau Citadelle, Gérald was tortured to death because the military suspected that he stole $200.

More incidents of violence and abuses by MINUSTAH and protests

A fuller accounting of accusations "of killings, arbitrary arrests, and human rights violations throughout the duration of the [UN] mission can be read here.

manif-againstUN-MuletPhoto: Radio Metropole Haiti

Most protests have been of the Preval government’s handling of the quake disaster and the Interim Electoral Council (CEP), but many protests have also targeted the military occupation of Haiti by MINUSTAH.

Radio Kiskeya reported the largest protest to date was held in Port-au-Prince on August 26 "to demand that authorities take immediate measures to provide decent housing. The protesters threatened not to take part in presidential and legislative elections scheduled for Nov. 28. 'There can be no elections with 1.5 million people living in tents,' demonstration organizers said."

According to AlterPresse, MINUSTAH puts the number of camps at 1,354 in the Port-au-Prince area alone.

Although troop levels are down seven months after the earthquake, when 12,600 U.N. troops, 20,000 U.S. troops, 2,000 Canadians, 600 French, and more from other countries were amassed in Haiti, there is a very heavy presence of foreign military in Haiti.

This is why the announcement in late August (25) that Israel was sending more1 police to Haiti, came as a surprise to some.

Reportedly, Israeli police forces have deployed to Haiti to serve "under the command of UN" military forces. Question: If these "special patrol officers" that make up this task force are only in Haiti "to fulfill policing roles, assist in quelling public disturbances and maintain public order, as well as securing the personal safety of Haitian residents," then why will they reportedly be living "in field conditions, spend the night in sleeping bags and tents, and will be equipped with army rations, special uniforms and wide-ranging personal equipment that will allow them to remain there for an extended period." Won't this camping out arrangement make it rather difficult for MINUSTAH to "command" these fourteen "specialist?"

As for the continuing oppressive UN military presence, many "manifestations" or demonstrations have been organized to protest MINUSTAH this year alone: here (Feb. 5), here (Feb. 11), here and here (July 28), and here (Aug. 21).

Various groups are planning a large demonstration against the UN occupying force on Oct. 15, the date on which the UN Security Council is expected to renew MINUSTAH's mandate for another year.

It is because of the continuous abuses by MINUSTAH and violent incidents like the one in Cap-Haitien on August 17 that Haitians are demanding an end to the UN occupation of Haiti.

At least one Haitian official has demanded accountability. Senate president Kélly Bastien has demanded a thorough investigation of the case. The Haitian government must stand in solidarity with the Haitian people and demand that an independent international authority carry out the investigation, since the UN authorities lead by Edmond Mulet have not in the past charged a single MINUSTAH unit with any serious crimes for continued violations of the human rights of Haitians. Any member of MINUSTAH found guilty of this latest deadly incident, which took place on their own military base, should be punished to the full extent of the law.

UPDATE 09.16.2010:

"In fact, the real reason for the death of Gerald Jean Gilles is still undetermined. That is because MINUSTAH only released the young man’s body for autopsy more than 72 hours after his death, which could have changed the results of the forensic investigation. Death by suicide, meanwhile, has been ruled out since none of the victim’s cervical vertebrae were damaged."

Source: Death of Haitian youth sparks new protests against MINUSTAH | by Thalles Gomes

Notes and further reading:

1. According to the Jerusalem Post, 10 Israeli officers traveled to haiti "to help with policing challenges" in the aftermath of the January 12 earthquake.

Further reading:

Reports on MINUSTAH's human rights violations