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4.9 magnitude quake strikes southern Haiti; 3 dead, several injured
yahooooo ^ | 6-6-23 | EVENS SANON and DÁNICA COTO

Posted on 06/06/2023 7:50:35 AM PDT by dynachrome

An earthquake with a preliminary magnitude of 4.9 struck southern Haiti early Tuesday, killing at least three people and injuring several others, authorities said.

The quake struck before dawn near the southwestern coastal city of Jeremie at a depth of six miles (10 kilometers), according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

“I thought the whole house was going to fall on top of me,” Eric Mpitabakana, a World Food Program official in Jeremie, told The Associated Press by phone.

The three people who died were found under a collapsed house where rescuers were searching for more people, Frankel Maginaire with Haiti’s Civil Protection Agency in Jeremie told the AP.

(Excerpt) Read more at yahoo.com ...


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: earthquake; earthquakes; ericmpitabakana; haiti; jeremie; quake; quakes
And haiti is such a garden spot.
1 posted on 06/06/2023 7:50:35 AM PDT by dynachrome
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To: All

That nation is just plan ‘ol snakebitten.

Earthquakes, hurricanes, extreme poverty, endemic governmental corruption, etc...


2 posted on 06/06/2023 7:54:24 AM PDT by MplsSteve
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To: dynachrome

Will Bill and Hill be getting the band back together?


3 posted on 06/06/2023 7:55:42 AM PDT by pingman (It's a Clown World, and we're paying for it.)
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To: dynachrome

Putin did it.


4 posted on 06/06/2023 7:57:25 AM PDT by Jeff Chandler (THE ISSUE IS NEVER THE ISSUE. THE REVOLUTION IS THE ISSUE.)
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To: dynachrome

A collapsed house in Haiti is a 4-sided corrugated sheet metal shack. A real life house of cards built to collapse. That’s why a level 4 temblor can kill people there, same as a stiff wind.


5 posted on 06/06/2023 8:03:37 AM PDT by KobraKai
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To: dynachrome

Those poor people can’t catch a break.


6 posted on 06/06/2023 8:09:54 AM PDT by moovova ("The NEXT election is the most important election of our lifetimes!“ LOL...)
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To: dynachrome

Chelsea needs a big fancy anniversary party ?


7 posted on 06/06/2023 8:11:07 AM PDT by al baby (Sarcasm )
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To: dynachrome

So then, I guess that means Sean Penn is still there. He said he wasn’t going to leave until it was all fixed I think.


8 posted on 06/06/2023 8:12:12 AM PDT by Beowulf9
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To: dynachrome

On the bright side, there were no buildings to knock down. That’s why only three people died. What a retarded nation.


9 posted on 06/06/2023 8:36:09 AM PDT by DesertRhino (Dogs are called man's best friend. Moslems hate dogs. Add it up..)
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To: dynachrome

What has Haiti contributed to the world?


10 posted on 06/06/2023 8:38:47 AM PDT by CletusVanDamme (The breaking point will be reached soon. )
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To: CletusVanDamme

RE: What has Haiti contributed to the world?

Here’s one: Voodoo.

Nat.Geographic: In Haiti voodoo believers pray and perform animal sacrifices to feed and beckon the spirits. Then they dance until a spirit takes over their bodies and, it is said, heals them or offers advice.


Animal Sacrifice in the Name of Religious Freedom - WPP
Wounded Paw Project
https://woundedpawproject.org › animal-sacrifice-and-...
Voodoo is a religion that originated in Haiti and animal sacrifice is also a central part of this faith. Chickens, goats, pigs, dogs, and even turtles are ...
VALLEY VOODOO: Ritualistic killings of animals at a ....


KSNV
https://news3lv.com › news › local › tonight-at-11-val...
Apr 28, 2016 — But dead animals are showing up all over at that cemetery and it turns out that the animals are getting sacrificed for witchcraft rituals ....


Of Voodoo And Animal Sacrifice
The New York Times
Jan 26, 1992 — It is disturbing to learn that an individual “enthralled” by voodoo animal sacrifice ceremonies is using Drew University as a bully pulpit ....


11 posted on 06/06/2023 9:16:03 AM PDT by frank ballenger (You have summoned up a thundercloud. You're gonna hear from me. Anthem by Leonard Cohen)
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Divided island: How Haiti and the DR became two worlds | 15:51
Vox | 11.3M subscribers | 8,141,378 views | October 17, 2017
Divided island: How Haiti and the DR became two worlds | 15:51 | Vox | 11.3M subscribers | 8,141,378 views | October 17, 2017
Transcript
0:01·Let's pause here.
0:03·I'm driving on the road that separates Haiti from the Dominican Republic.
0:07·Right here.
0:08·It's the border that divides two very different countries.
0:17·If you're born in Haiti, you're 2.5 times more likely to die
0:19·as a baby than if you're born in the DR.
0:22·You'll be almost ten times poorer and
0:24·you can expect to have a much shorter life.
0:30·I came here to find out how the two
0:32·countries that share this one island can be so different, with a politically
0:36·volatile and impoverished Haiti on one side and the stable and relatively rich
0:41·Dominican Republic on the other.
0:49·How did this line produce two totally different worlds?
1:04·My journey starts here, at this beach village in southern Haiti, where Haitian
1:09·merchants, most of them women, are preparing for a nighttime boat ride.
1:17·The women boarding this boat have one goal: to make it to the border where they will
1:21·be let into a Dominican market, to buy and sell goods before returning to their villages.
1:26·It's international trade at its most informal. We're taking these boats
1:30·because the next door mountain range makes the land journey almost impossible.
1:35·These worn-out wooden boats have been making this exact journey twice per week
1:39·for decades and yet the process remains chaotic and unorganized as if it's
1:44·happening for the first time.
1:52·All of this energy, time, and effort all to transport
1:55·a handful of goods that, in most countries, would be shipped in bulk
1:58·inside one of these.
2:09·We make this seven-hour journey to the border town arriving around, 4 am.
2:17·The sun rises and we walk to the border market. This market was established right on the border
2:22·as a partnership between the two nations, to give vendors from both sides
2:26·a place to buy and sell on equal footing.
2:28·As we approach the border I quickly realize that's not what's happening here.
2:33·So I'm looking across the border right now,
2:35·into the market and you can see that Dominicans are already setting up.
2:38·This is one of the big complaints of the Haitians: they're stuck on this side
2:42·waiting to cross the border and the border guards are just delaying it and
2:47·meanwhile the Dominicans are able to set up and get the best spots.
2:56·These Haitians come from miles away on this grueling boat journey, that I know now firsthand
3:01·is very grueling, and they get to the border and the guards stop them for no reason.
3:07·They're supposed to open it up for everyone at the same time.
3:13·The guards keep the Haitian women from crossing, not letting anyone know how
3:17·long it will be. The tension grows and then finally, hours after the Dominicans
3:22·were allowed to enter, the guards open up the bridge.
3:40·They buy and sell for the day, before returning to the boats to make the journey home.
3:46·The grueling boat journey, the senseless discrimination, it embodies
3:50·the asymmetry that exists on this island. Watching it happen, it's impossible not
3:55·to ask how it got like this.
3:58·There are a few key things that explain how this
4:00·island produced two very different countries, but if you want to get at the
4:03·very root of it you have to go back to when this island was owned by two
4:08·European powers: France and Spain. This island is actually the first place that
4:13·Christopher Columbus set up a colony in the new world on his first voyage back
4:17·in like 1490. France wanted a piece of this island because it was rich in
4:22·resources like sugar and coffee, so they fought a war with the Spanish and they
4:25·ended up splitting the island in two: one side would be the Spanish colony of
4:29·Santo Domingo and the other side would be the French colony, with the same name,
4:33·Saint-Domingue, just in French. And that is the most important part of understanding
4:37·this whole thing, is how these imperial powers treated their colonial posessions.
4:42·The French exploited the land. They brought in tons of slaves and
4:46·they were interested in making Saint-Domingue solely an economic producer.
4:51·They destroyed the soil from aggressively harvesting the same crop year after
4:55·year, and they created a group of very resentful, overworked, and abused slaves
5:01·that eventually rebelled.
5:05·The Spanish had a different approach. After establishing
5:07·domination on this island by massacring the indigenous population, they didn't
5:12·exploit it like the French did.
5:13·Instead they went to places like Mexico and Peru, to look for gold.
5:17·So they didn't bring nearly as many slaves onto this island,
5:20·and as a result they weren't nearly as profitable a colony.
5:22·Instead, the Spanish integrated with the remaining indigenous population,
5:26·by recognizing the native leader's authority and intermarrying with the locals.
5:31·The result was a smaller and more racially mixed population,
5:34·with a sustainable economy and a political system,
5:37·something totally absent from France's colony.
5:41·This becomes really important in the early 1800s, when independence comes around.
5:46·Haiti declares independence, fights off the French, and basically
5:49·declares itself the first black, former slave republic in the world.
5:54·They do so with very little framework for a society and for a government and they also do so
6:00·with land that has been exploited, year after year, with the same crop which
6:05·basically destroys the fertility of the land.
6:08·And to add to all of that, because
6:10·they were this first black Republic, the world essentially isolated them.
6:14·The United States didn't want to recognize the independence of a black nation.
6:19·They thought it might become a slave empire and seek revenge.
6:22·The French showed up on Haitian shores soon after independence, and said you owe
6:26·us a debt for all of the assets that you stole from us when you became independent,
6:31·all these economic assets, you owe us that debt and you have to pay
6:34·it over the next thirty years. This crippling debt Haiti did pay back over
6:38·years, but it really hampered their development.
6:40·This history doesn't exonerate the dictators and corrupt politicians that have plagued Haiti's
6:45·development since its independence, but it helps explain them.
6:49·Suffocating embargoes and the independence debt, as well as the lack of any tradition or
6:54·investment in governmental institutions, guaranteed Haiti's failure from the
6:58·moment it was born, and a racist world made sure of it.
7:02·That racism isn't just
7:03·embedded into Haiti's history, it is in fact very alive today.
7:12·As I drive up the border, by coincidence my driver is also a Dominican border patrol official.
7:17·We have hours in the car, where he slowly and cautiously tells me about how
7:21·immigration policy has changed in the Dominican Republic in recent years.
7:54·"Regularization Program".
7:56·That's a euphemism. He's talking about a
7:58·policy of targeting anyone of Haitian descent, even citizens, rounding them up
8:03·and deporting them. There's always been anti-Haitian
8:05·sentiment in the Dominican Republic, usually resulting in racist violence,
8:16·but since 2010, that sentiment has been seeping into legislation. The Dominican
8:20·Constitution that was drafted in 1929, says that anyone born in the country is
8:24·automatically a citizen, even if your parents were undocumented immigrants.
8:28·This is the same in places like the United States, but the DR rewrote its
8:32·constitution in 2010, to only give citizenship to those born on DR soil, to legal residents.
8:38·Then, in 2013 the high court in the DR ruled that this new
8:42·definition would be applied retroactively. All the way back to
8:46·1929, meaning any citizen who had been born in the DR to undocumented parents
8:50·would have their citizenship revoked.
8:53·More than 200,000 Dominican citizens,
8:57·were suddenly stateless.
9:03·It is clearly an illegal act, it is an immoral act, it is a racist act by the
9:09·Dominican government. And it's happening because these people are black.
9:25·Dominican law said that if these stateless people wanted to stay in the
9:28·DR, they would have to go to a government office and put their name on this
9:32·foreigner registry. The government gave these people one year to either get
9:37·their name on the registry or face deportation.
9:40·Over 55,000 have been officially deported since the June 2015 deadline.
9:45·The UN estimates that 128,000 people have voluntarily fled to Haiti,
9:49·a country many of them have never lived in. Some came here to this camp on the
9:54·border, where they've been living in limbo for years.
10:48·The moment I cross into the DR, I start to see what this crackdown looks like.
10:53·On a 75km bus ride, we pass eight security checkpoints in which security
10:57·personnel board the bus, to eye who was on it, and in some cases check papers.
11:02·But each time we stop, they seem to only check the papers of the same few passengers.
11:18·That's my translator, Pascale.
11:20·He's an American citizen, but everywhere we go in the DR,
11:23·security forces keep asking him for his passport.
11:27·Halfway through the journey, we pull off the road
11:29·into a facility where a few young military guys
11:32·are sitting around. And our driver brings this woman and her two children over to
11:36·the military guys. She's speaking in perfect Dominican Spanish to them,
11:39·claiming that her children are Dominican and that the driver brought us to this
11:43·checkpoint to turn her in because she's black.
11:46·None of this seems to matter,
11:48·she doesn't have her papers and her skin color seems to be all the guards need to see.
11:57·Haiti's land and people were abused when it was a colony of slaves.
12:01·The world then shunned it, with embargoes and independence debts when it was a new
12:05·nation, and today Haitians in the DR experience racism that is overt enough
12:10·to be enshrined in law.
12:17·As we drive up this very curvy road, I have the DR to my right and Haiti to my left.
12:23·Back when the French were here, this was the richest colony on earth,
12:26·but that came at a price.
12:28·Not only to abused slaves, but also to the
12:30·land that they worked. Clear cutting and single crop planting continued after the
12:35·French left, but instead of being used to make fancy French furniture, the trees
12:40·were burned to cook food.
12:42·This explains what I'm seeing when
12:44·on my right there's lush jungle.
12:46·and on my left there's bare and eroding hillsides.
12:53·Zoom out a little bit and it's very clear.
13:00·I follow the border road all the way north, until I hit another market town. I wanted
13:04·to see if the same discriminatory dynamics played out up here as they did down south.
13:10·This market was built with money from the European Union,
13:13·and the UN development program,
13:14·with the specific intention of creating a space where communities
13:17·from both sides could come and buy and sell on equal footing.
13:23·Rolling through the market, and once again like we saw in the southern market,
13:28·the Dominicans are first setting up.
13:31·I walk to the border and find this
13:32·huge group of people at this gap in the fence, paying a border guard to get in early.
13:37·The dynamic is the same as down south, only with a few more overt bribes
13:41·and border guards who seem to have no problem hitting Haitians with a stick.
13:49·After hours of waiting for guards to open the gate for everyone,
13:52·the Haitians are finally let in.
14:33·This is a story about a border that separates two vastly different countries,
14:38·but it's moreso a story about policy:
14:41·how centuries of racist policies, from
14:43·the French, from the U.S., from the world, from the DR, can hold a nation back from progressing.
14:49·Haiti, this first black republic, has experienced some of the most
14:52·predatory and racist policy from outside forces.
14:56·For Haitians this story isn't just their history.
14:59·It's their present.
15:00·It's the stage on which they live their lives.
15:16·So, I want to say a big thank you to lululemon,
15:18·who is a sponsor for Borders.
15:19·They sent me these ABC pants,
15:21·which are these really versatile, flexible pants.
15:24·They're super sturdy,
15:26·and they're meant to be basically used for hiking and for activewear,
15:29·but also around the house when I'm kind of just hanging out,
15:32·I've been using them for both as I've been making Borders.
15:35·I love them.
15:35·Thank you lululemon for sending me these pants,
15:37·but more importantly thank you for sponsoring Borders
15:40·and making this happen.
15:41·If you want to try out some lululemon ABC pants,
15:44·You could get a pair of your own.
15:45·You should definitely check that out.

12 posted on 06/06/2023 9:16:50 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (NeverTrumpin' -- it's not just for DNC shills anymore -- oh, wait, yeah it is.)
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To: SunkenCiv

The Dominicans claim the whole island. Let them have it.

Problem: Dominicans are fence-hoppers and boat people too.


13 posted on 06/06/2023 9:20:45 AM PDT by DIRTYSECRET
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Relations between Haiti and its wealthier neighbour, the Dominican Republic, have been historically difficult on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola. Now the Dominican government has announced plans to build a wall between the two to end illegal migration. Al Jazeera's Andrew Chappelle reports.
Dominican Republic to build wall in bid to keep out Haitians | 2:20
Al Jazeera English | 10.4M subscribers | 250,122 views | March 7, 2021
Dominican Republic to build wall in bid to keep out Haitians | 2:20 | Al Jazeera English | 10.4M subscribers | 250,122 views | March 7, 2021
Transcript
0:01·this neighborhood is known as little
0:03·haiti
0:04·it lies in santo domingo the capital of
0:06·the dominican republic
0:07·on the eastern half of the island of
0:09·hispaniola about half a million people
0:11·from haiti on the western side live here
0:14·but since the pandemic they have fewer
0:16·jobs especially in construction and
0:18·farming
0:19·many lack residency permits or access to
0:21·employment services and health care
0:23·and now the dominican government says it
0:25·will build a border wall to keep
0:26·migrants from haiti out
0:30·in just two years we want to put an end
0:31·to the serious problems of illegal
0:33·immigration
0:34·drug trafficking and the movement of
0:36·stolen vehicles and achieve the
0:37·protection of our territorial integrity
0:40·while some people from haiti who've lost
0:42·their jobs now sell whatever they can
0:44·on the street tens of thousands have
0:46·returned home
0:47·the dominican republic is one of the
0:49·fastest growing economies in latin
0:50·america
0:51·while its neighbor is the poorest nation
0:53·in the western hemisphere
0:54·much of the dominican public supports
0:56·the move to increase security along the
0:58·border
1:01·i think it would be important because it
1:03·would control migration from one country
1:05·to another
1:06·there wouldn't be as many problems as
1:08·there could be if the wall is built
1:10·and if it's correctly demarcated it's
1:12·beneficial for both countries
1:15·when border gates opened in dahabon this
1:16·past friday hundreds of people from
1:18·haiti were able to cross
1:20·and sell and exchange goods at a border
1:21·market it's one of four
1:23·official crossings where many people's
1:25·livelihoods depend on informal market
1:27·trade
1:28·but there are dozens of unofficial
1:29·crossings along the 380 kilometer border
1:32·critics say the wall won't solve
1:34·underlying problems
1:38·measures such as increased border
1:39·control should ideally be complemented
1:41·by measures to promote regular and
1:43·orderly migration
1:45·the international organization for
1:46·migration or iom and other rights groups
1:49·are calling for a humanitarian corridor
1:51·for those from haiti who are in need
1:53·during economic and political crises
1:58·there is permanent persecution we really
2:00·regret that a government that claims to
2:02·be a government of change
2:03·is not respecting the dignity and rights
2:05·of immigrants in the dominican republic
2:08·many in haiti say that despite the
2:10·shared ancestry and history on the
2:12·island
2:13·they've long suffered persecution and
2:15·they are concerned the wall will only
2:16·create
2:17·further division andrew chappelle al
2:19·jazeera

14 posted on 06/06/2023 9:23:44 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (NeverTrumpin' -- it's not just for DNC shills anymore -- oh, wait, yeah it is.)
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To: CletusVanDamme

Momentum for the Clintons to fleece their Foundation even further


15 posted on 06/06/2023 11:05:20 AM PDT by ridesthemiles
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To: dynachrome

It must be time to send more $$$ to Hatti.


16 posted on 06/06/2023 11:08:51 AM PDT by Zathras
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To: dynachrome

Another money-making opportunity for the Clinton and Bush organized crime families!


17 posted on 06/06/2023 11:58:35 AM PDT by MIchaelTArchangel
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To: frank ballenger

You hear the drums and chanting all night long there.


18 posted on 06/06/2023 12:04:11 PM PDT by moonhawk (Unleash the MAGAhideen!)
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To: moonhawk

Love every second of this great film. Instructive on urban life in the US now. And how Haitians practice religion.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KTQnnwDN3eU

Personal note: When I saw Jane Seymour in this, her first movie, at the theater I vaguely thought “Wouldn’t it be great to have a girlfriend like her?” Just dreaming.

I met my late wife the next week and we both fell in love at first sight. Together from 1973 to 2022 when she died.

She had very long dark hair and some facial resemblance. Same body type and exact height. Actress was born on the same day of the year (if astrology counts) and her real name is Joyce (Frankenberg) (she and my wife’s relatives from Russia/Poland—boundaries changed back and forth) and my wife’s name was Joy.

Creative visualization worked that time.


19 posted on 06/06/2023 1:57:00 PM PDT by frank ballenger (You have summoned up a thundercloud. You're gonna hear from me. Anthem by Leonard Cohen)
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