New Straits Times

HAITI WOMEN SLAM VIOLENCE

Hundreds rally against gang violence, political instabilit­y that they say can lead to a new dictatorsh­ip

- PORT-AU-PRINCE

HUNDREDS of women protested here on Saturday, denouncing gang violence and political instabilit­y that they say could lead to a new dictatorsh­ip.

At the demonstrat­ion marking the national day for the Haitian women’s movement, protesters deplored the rising power of gangs in recent months which has led to a spike in kidnapping­s for ransom here and in other provinces.

“The women who have been kidnapped are raped and sexually assaulted, so today we must put at the centre of the debate, beyond the kidnapping­s, the impact of the (security) situation specifical­ly on women,” activist Pascale Solages said.

April 3 is the national day of the Haitian women’s movement, marking the date in 1986 when 30,000 women marched to demand better inclusion in politics, two months after the fall of the Duvalier dictatorsh­ip.

The crowd on Saturday comprised

activists of all ages, when political protests in Haiti usually attract young men.

“What we were saying in 1986 is that democracy cannot be built without women or to their detriment. It is important to remember these slogans,” said Daniele Magloire, a feminist activist.

Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, has been in a monthslong political crisis.

President Jovenel Moise maintains that his term of office runs until Feb 7 next year, but others

claim it ended on Feb 7 this year.

The disagreeme­nt stems from the fact that Moise was elected in a vote that was cancelled for fraud, and then re-elected a year later.

Without a Parliament, the country fell further into crisis in 2020 and Moise is governing by decree, fuelling growing mistrust of him.

Amid the instabilit­y, Moise has said he plans to hold a constituti­onal referendum in June.

“They are talking about a referendum, but we do not need a new constituti­on where they

sprinkle in two, three cosmetic measures, while all the power will be concentrat­ed in the hands of the executive, with a president who will have total immunity during and after his mandate,” protested Gaelle Bien Aime, 30.

“We are in the street to fight impunity — so many men, including in the spheres of power, who beat their wives, who rape.

“I was not yet born in 1986 and I am very annoyed to have to be here 35 years later in the street fighting the same fight.”

 ?? AFP PIC ?? People marching to commemorat­e the national day of the Haitian women’s movement in Port-au-Prince on Saturday.
AFP PIC People marching to commemorat­e the national day of the Haitian women’s movement in Port-au-Prince on Saturday.

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