Thursday, December 9, 2010

articles and a re-count.


So, there's a re-count in the works, though I'm not sure yet when we can expect the re-results to go public. 

Also, since being in PAP for the last several days, we've had the pleasure of meeting some folk at the Mennonite Central Committee's Haiti office. They have been most fun and sweet. Here's a blog entry from one such gal we've met. She and her husband live near the epicenter of the protests, up the hill in Petionville. She's said it better than I could.
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Not only do UN troops continue to rain teargas and rubber bullets on protesters in Petionville, but it's also literally raining. An off-season morning rain is unusual on both counts. I can't help but wonder if the rain is intentional - Creator and Creation trying to keep things calm. The sound of the rain mostly masks the noise of a protest taking place in the Petionville market, about 500 feet from where I sit, also protesting.

I may not be out in the streets, but as a foreigner that cares about this country and whose job it is to advocate for structural justice, I protest too. From my couch and on my laptop, I protest election results that maintain the status quo in direct opposition of the will of the Haitian people. I protest the morning's headlines that read, "Haiti protests blocking relief efforts" and "Demonstrations in Haiti Crimp Northwest Aid Efforts," as if this story is about us, unable to fix Haiti because the Haitians that we're here to save won't stop burning tires. I protest the headline that reads "Supporters of losing Haiti candidate take to the streets," as if Michel Martelly is a sore loser; whereas from my perspective, this isn't about Martelly at all. It's about the right to vote. I protest the narrative that insinuates that it's somehow Haitians' fault that they have no voice. To be fair, I also protest the narrative that insinuates that the situation in Haiti is entirely the fault of NGOs and donor countries and multilateral institutions (not that we don't have a lot to do with it). I protest the perception that all of the demonstrations taking place are violent. I also protest that many of themare - and not just when provoked by UN soldiers - and this makes me sad.

In the midst of all of this protesting, I feel pretty powerless. And yet, as a foreigner with a laptop that works for an NGO and has access to advocacy offices in DC, Ottawa and at the UN, I sadly have a hell of a lot more power than the thousands of people in the streets who are being disparaged by the international media while they face tear gas, rubber bullets and flash grenades in the rain to fight for their right to make their voices heard. And so do you.

We need to try hear beyond the news headlines and join in these protests by demanding that our governments (who funded 3/4 of these elections) assist in efforts to review election fraud and pressure the Haitian government to release legitimate final election results.
from here.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

status update.

thanks so much for checking up on stephen and me; i'm assuming that's why you are reading this. be assured that stephen and i are doing just fine here in Port-au-Prince, despite having had our return flight home this morning cancelled.  you can chill, mom, we've got one for saturday :) (thank you Mr. J!)

last night, as you may have read, the preliminary results of the presidential elections were released here in Haiti. contrary to international observance, the results favored the outgoing president's hand-picked successor rather than the candidates for whom the Haitian people hand-voted. there is a long and deep backstory to what is happening today, and it reaches back far before this election. 

if you and your people had again been held under the hand of a ruling political class of 5% of the population for the better part of 200 years, what sort of reaction would you have? 

today, we feel removed from the actual events, holeing ourselves up in the home of one of stephen's classmates here (she is the most sweet and most gracious), making it impossible to feel any sense of solidarity with the protesters.  even if we weren't holed up, our nationalities and appearances would still make participation impossible.

instead we pray for justice and wonder where it is. for electoral integrity and find it hard to see. for responsible reporting that would side with the WHOLE story and not merely photos of inappropriate mobs and the UN peacekeeping heros (only furthering the justification of their unwanted presence here). 

for that is not the story!

if you're interested, check out this piece. i know i'm constantly citing HP articles, (sorry, dad), but they most align with what we're hearing, observing, and experiencing in-country. *can't link it now, as our internet connection is crawling.

and, yet we pray for our own well-being. God, help us to seek love for every human life. for those we find it easy to love and those we find it nearly impossible. 

in hopeful anticipation,