DATE:             September 15, 2007

 

TO:                  President Preval
The
Brazilian Embassy
The US Embassy
The Canadian Embassy

 

RE:  Urgent help needed in ensuring the safe return of Haitian human rights activist

Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine   
 

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Bring Lovinsky Home! Vigil calling for his immediate, safe return 

Sign the petition! 1600 people have already signed online!
 

As women and men in the Caribbean Region, in the wider diaspora, and in many parts of the world, we are writing to urge you to make resources available without delay for the search for Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine, and to do everything in your power to secure his safe return to his family and community.

 

As you may know, Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine, the internationally respected Haitian human rights activist who is well loved by his family and community, has been missing in Haiti since the evening of August 12.  We are acutely aware of the suffering, hardship and heartbreak Lovinsky’s disappearance has meant for his family and other loved ones, as well as of the anger and suffering of the community from whose arms this gentle man and leading advocate for the poor has been snatched.

Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine is a father, a husband, an uncle, a member of an extended family; a soft-spoken man of great compassion with a big heart and a sense of humor.  He is also an extraordinary grassroots leader.   Lovinsky, as he is generally known, is a co-founder of Fondayson Trant Septanm, an organization founded by family members and others concerned about the victims of the 1991 coup, the first against President Aristide; the organization’s name is the date of that coup.   Similar to the work of internationally renowned Mothers of the Disappeared in Central and South America, the September 30th Foundation for over a decade held weekly vigils demanding justice for victims of human rights violations and the release of political prisoners.

Additionally, Lovinsky was the co-founder of Fondsayon Kore Timoun Yo (Foundation for the Support of Children) for young street children in Port au Prince, FAM (Foyer pour Adolescentes Mères), a center for teenage mothers, and Map Viv ("I Live"), a program designed to give medical and psychological aid to the victims of the 1991coup. His present community-based human rights organization Fondayson Trant Septnm grew out of the work of those earlier efforts.  He is part of the Lavalas movement and a member of the Lavalas Party, and was a potential candidate for the Haitian Senate.     

 

Lovinsky lived in Washington DC during the turmoil and violence that followed the removal of President Aristide in 2004.  During that time he continued his work as an advocate for Haiti’s poverty-stricken majority, including gathering support of a wide network of organizations and individuals in the US, meeting with members of Congress, speaking at human rights forums in Boston, Los Angeles and elsewhere in the US as well as in Brazil, Canada and Venezuela.  A month after he returned to Haiti, Lovinsky was instrumental in bringing together a delegation that included journalists and others who hail from Guyana, Barbados and the United States to attend the May 2006 Inauguration of President Rene Preval.

 

Those of us who were part of that delegation were struck by the welcome Lovinsky received from grassroots Haitians as they greeted him publicly for the first time since his return. At a community-based event to mark the inauguration of President Preval, he was mobbed as a returning hero, a man who was clearly respected, loved and had been missed by the thousands who had gathered hopeful for a new day in Haiti.  The mutual respect and love between him and other grassroots women and men was also evident in a later meeting with women from Cite Soleil most of whom were either former political prisoners or the mothers, wives and other relatives of political prisoners, many carrying photographs of their tortured children and husbands.  

As the first Black republic, Haiti has always held a special place in the heart of those of us in the Caribbean region and to oppressed peoples throughout the world.  Haiti led the way for the emancipation of those of us enslaved; provided refuge for Simon Bolivar, the liberator of Latin America, and sent troops to fight alongside Bolivar.  The Haitian Revolution also opened the way for the Louisiana Purchase in the United States through its defeat of Napoleon’s forces. 

But instead of being celebrated for these important achievements, the Haitian people have paid a heavy price for winning emancipation, a price which helps explain their present suffering and their having still to struggle for human and economic rights while doing the wrenching work of day-to-day survival in what has been named the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere.  

We all owe a great debt to the Haitian people.  Their spirited and principled determination, their refusal to bend to the powerful forces which have tried to keep them down, has been and continues to be an inspiration throughout the world but especially to those of us who defend human rights and dignity in the Caribbean region. Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine personifies the Haitian determination which has refused to submit despite all the odds.  He has refused careerism and opportunism and continues to stand with the popular movement.  He has earned the solidarity of the whole of the wider Caribbean Community and around the world who struggle for justice and freedom in our region. A man of Haiti, he is a part of us wherever we are and wherever there is injustice around the world.

We urge the Embassies of the United States and Brazil, as well as President of Haiti Rene Preval, to do all in your power, including making resources available to secure the safe return of a true freedom fighter: Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine.  We ask that he be returned unharmed to his family, and to the community that loves and needs him.

Andaiye, Guyana: Red Thread, Guyana and Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike

Margaret Prescod, Barbados/ Los Angeles, California: journalist and Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike   

cc: CARICOM

For further info:
Caribbean region:  
red_thread@gol.net.gy     tel: 011 592 227 7010 
US:  la@crossroadswomen.net    tel: 323-276-9833
Europe:   womenstrike8m@server101.com    tel: 011 44 207 482 2496

So far over 1600 organizations, public figures and other individuals have signed from 16 Caribbean countries and many other countries including: Actor and activist Danny Glover; author George Lamming; former UK cabinet minister and anti-war veteran Tony Benn; ex-Senator of Trinidad and Tobago Diana Mahabir-Wyatt (Caribbean Center for Human Rights); UK Member of Parliament John McDonnell; Member of European Parliament Jean Lambert; Madaraka Nyerere, son of President Nyerere; Vietnam veteran Ron Kovic; Rev Pinkney from Benton Harbour MI; Michael Berg (whose son was killed in Iraq); playwright John Arden; Pacifica Radio National Board; actors Martin Sheen and Mike Farrell.

Initial Signatories: Andaiye, Guyana: Red Thread, Guyana and Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike; Margaret Prescod, Barbados/ Los Angeles, California: journalist and Women of Color in the Global Women’s Strike; Walter Rodney Commemorative Committee, Caribbean, USA, UK, Canada, Africa; Danny Glover, Actor/ Activist; Phoebe Jones, Quaker/Peace activist;Therese Lynn, Retired Professor; Sam Weinstein, Utility Workers Union; Every Mother is a WorkingMother Network; Dr. Tiffany Patterson, Vanderbilt University; Edwin Nathalie, I’ntl Brotherhood of Electrical Workers*; Haiti Action Committee; Veye Yo Micere M Githae MugoZimbabwe, President, Pan African Community, Central NY (USA); KPFK local station board, Pacifica Radio Network/Southern California;Selma James, Author/Activist; Niki Adams, Legal Action for Women; Firoze Manji, Editor, Pambazuka News (UK); Nina Lopez Global Women’s Strike (Argentina/UK); Payday men’s network; WinVisible – women with visible and invisible disabilities (both USA/UK); Crossroads Women’s Centers in Guyana, London, Spain and in the US: Los Angeles, Philadelphia, San Francisco; Rickey Singh, Regional Journalist (Guyana/Barbados); Grassroots Women across Race; Committee to Commemorate the 20th Anniversary of the Abolition of the British Slave Trade; Ameena Gafoor, Literary critic; Dr. Rupert Roopnaraine, Film-maker, Writer;African Cultural Development Association;Simone Mangal, Civil society activist; Guyana Book Foundation; Samuel London, Engineer; Jocelyn Dow, Guyana Citizens Initiative; Michael McCormack, Human Rights Association; Dr. CY Thomas, Distinguished Professor, University of Guyana; Moses Bhagwan, Lawyer, Dr. Janice Imhoff, Physician; Evette Burke, Women’s Studies, University of Guyana; Bonita Harris; Educator; Raphael Trotman, Member of Parliament; David Denny, Pres, July 26 Movement; Desmond Trotman, Coordinator, Working People’s Alliance (Guyana); Eusi Kwayana; Activist, Author; Dr. Arnold Gibbons, Hunter College; Dr. Linden Lewis,Bucknell University, Abbyssinian Carto, Artist; Dr David Hinds, Arizona State University; Dr Nigel Westmaas, Hamilton College; Wazir Mohamed, Graduate student (Guyana/US); Dr. Patricia Sheerattan-Bisnauth, Religious Leader (Guyana/Switzerland); Dr. Kamala Kempadoo, York University; Dr. Alissa Trotz, University of Toronto (Guyana/Canada); George Lamming, Author (Barbados); Carol Lawes, Cultural activist; Richard Small, Human rights activist; Dr. Michael West, Binghamton University (Jamaica); Oscar Alleyne, Earlene Horne Foundation (St Vincent and the Grenadines); Anne Braithwaite, Educator, Keith Waithe, Musician (Guyana/UK); Sara Abraham, University of Toronto (India/Canada); Wayne Motayne, IT specialist (Guyana/Canada); Dr. Richard Drayton, Cambridge University (Guyana/Barbados); Glen Ramjag, National Foodcrop Farmers Association; Cecil Paul, Activist (Trinidad & Tobago); Vikki Jackson, Caterer (Guyana/Holland); Dr. Horace Campbell, Syracuse University (Jamaica/USA); Dr. Linda Peake, York University (UK/Canada); Sherwyn Blyden, Videographer; Jai Parsram, Activist (both Guyana/Canada); Caribbean Pan-African Network – 16 Caribbean territories; Dr. Anthony Martin, Professor EmeritusWellesley College (Trinidad & Tobago/USA); Emancipation Support Committee; Ile Eko Sango/Osun Milosa Shrine; Trinmar African Awareness Comm; Network of NGO’s for Women; Clement Payne Movement; Clement Payne Labour Union; Israel Lovell Foundation; Ikael Tafari, Pan-Africanist; Dr. Eudine Barriteau, UWI Cave Hill campus; Margaret Gill , poet (Barbados); Global African Congress/St Vincent; Rastafari Working Committee (St Vincent & the Grenadines); Dr. Melanie Newton, University of Toronto (Guyana/Barbados); Dr. M Jacqui Alexander, University of Toronto (Trinidad & Tobago/ Canada); Dr. Cynthia Wright, York University (Canada)

Haiti

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