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Page "History of Haiti" ¶ 98
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Aristide and wife
Vastly different from its predecessor and prequel La Fortune des Rougon, La Curée, the portion of the game thrown to the dogs after a hunt, usually translated as The Kill-is a character study of three personalities: Aristide Rougon ( renamed " Saccard ")-- the youngest son of the ruthless and calculating peasant Pierre Rougon and the bourgeois Félicité ( by whom he is much spoiled ), both of them Bonapartistes and consumed by a desire for wealth, Aristide's young second wife Renée ( his first dying not long after their move from provincial Plassans to Paris ) and Maxime, Aristide's foppish son from his first marriage.
* Renée Saccard, wife of Aristide Saccard
A photo of Randall Robinson and his wife at the 1994 inauguration ceremony of Haiti an President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

Aristide and left
Sabotage, poor maintenance and the overthrown of Aristide in 2004 had severely undermine the effort, in 2006 at the return of Preval in power another effort was made to recover the majority of the bus left, and a Gift of 300 new bus from Taiwan an effort to bring back Service Plus in association of the drivers.
It is reported that, on the occasion of one visit with Briand, Zaharoff quietly left an envelope on Aristide Briand ’ s desk ; the envelope contained a million francs for war widows.
My role is to preach and organize ...." In 1994, Aristide left priesthood, ending years of tension with the church over his criticism of its hierarchy and his espousal of liberation theology.
Most barricades were lifted the day after Aristide left as the shooting had stopped ; order was maintained by Haitian police, along with armed rebels and local vigilante groups.
Following Eugene Rougon's rise to political power in Paris in La Fortune, his younger brother Aristide, featured in the first novel as a talentless journalist, a comic character unable to commit himself unequivocally to the imperial cause and thus left out in the cold when the rewards were being handed out, decides to follow Eugene to Paris to help himself to the wealth and power he now believes to be his birthright.
Stresemann's sudden and premature death, as well as the death of his " pragmatic moderate " French counterpart Aristide Briand in 1932, and the assassination of Briand's successor Louis Barthou in 1934, left a vacuum in European statesmanship that further tilted the slippery slope towards World War II.
From left to right, Gustav Stresemann, Austen Chamberlain and Aristide Briand during the Locarno negotiations
It resulted in the removal from office of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide preventing him from finishing his second term, and he left Haiti on a United States ( U. S .) plane accompanied by U. S. military / security personnel.
Aristide left the country under protest on February 29, and the rebels announced that they would welcome foreign peacekeepers in Haiti.
Born Louis Armand Aristide Bruand in the village of Courtenay, Loiret in France, Bruant left his home in 1866 at age fifteen, following his father's death, to find employment.
In the twentieth century a sculptor and a painter have left their imprint: Aristide Maillol and Etienne Terrus, to whom a local museum is dedicated.
He was the first former member of the Aristide government to be imprisoned since he left the nation.

Aristide and Haiti
* 2004 – Jean-Bertrand Aristide is removed as President of Haiti following a coup.
In the early 1990s, it held refugees who fled Haiti after military forces overthrew President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
On February 29, 2004, with rebel contingents marching towards Port-au-Prince, Aristide departed from Haiti.
The Security Council passed a resolution the same day " aking note of the resignation of Jean-Bertrand Aristide as President of Haiti and the swearing-in of President Boniface Alexandre as the acting President of Haiti
On February 29, 2004, a coup d ' état ousted the popularly elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, allegedly with the assistance of the French and United States governments ; U. S. and French soldiers were on the ground in Haiti at the time, recently arrived ( See controversy ).
When President Aristide returned to Haiti, some improvements did occur in the manufacturing sector.
* 1953 – Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haitian priest and politician and 49th and 53rd President of Haiti
* Jean-Bertrand Aristide becomes the first democratically elected President of Haiti in 1990.
* December 16 – Jean-Bertrand Aristide is elected president of Haiti, ending 3 decades of military rule.
* February 7 – René Préval succeeds Jean-Bertrand Aristide as president of Haiti, in the first peaceful handover of power since the nation achieved independence.
* February 29 – 2004 Haiti rebellion: Jean-Bertrand Aristide resigns as president of Haiti.
* Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti ( b. 1953 )
By 1985, as popular opposition to Duvalier's regime grew, Aristide was back preaching in Haiti.
Subsequently, Salesian officials ordered Aristide to leave Haiti, but tens of thousands of Haitians protested, blocking his access to the airport.
On 15 October 1994, the Clinton administration permitted Aristide to return to Haiti to complete his term in office on the condition that he adopt the economic program of the defeated US backed candidate in the 1990 elections, a former World Bank official who had received 14 % of the vote.
Moreover, immediately after the Clinton administration allowed Aristide to return to office, in a series of private meetings, Administration officials admonished Aristide to put aside the rhetoric of class warfare and seek instead to reconcile Haiti ’ s tiny elite sector and poor majority.
Aristide called for France, the former colonizer of the country, to pay $ 21 billion in restitution to Haiti for the 90 million gold francs supplied to France by Haiti in restitution for French property that was misappropriated in the Haitian rebellion, over the period from 1825 to 1947.
US policy toward Haiti appeared to be a war of attrition, driven by animosity towards Aristide, a former priest who rankled Washington with his anti-capitalist sermons and his adherence to liberation theology, a Catholic doctrine that advocates spiritual and economic help for the poor and oppressed.
On Feb. 8, 2001, the federally funded International Republican Institute's ( IRI ) senior program officer for Haiti, Stanley Lucas, appeared on the Haitian station Radio Tropicale to suggest three strategies for vanquishing Haiti's president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Amiot's brother, Buteur Metayer, blamed Aristide for the assassination, and used this as an argument given in order to form the National Revolutionary Front for the Liberation of Haiti.

Aristide and on
By 24: 00 only Tonnant remained engaged, as Commodore Aristide Aubert Du Petit Thouars continued his fight with Majestic and fired on Swiftsure when the British ship moved within range.
At the November 2000 elections, boycotted by the opposition, Aristide was again elected president, with more than 90 % of the vote, on a turnout of around 50 % according to international observers.
Aristide spent years negotiating with the Convergence Démocratique on new elections, but the Convergence's inability to develop a sufficient electoral base made elections unattractive, and it rejected every deal offered, preferring to call for a US invasion to topple Aristide.
The Haitian government suspended the suit against Aristide on Jun.
This plot, launched with the full knowledge of Nivelle and the French Prime Minister Aristide Briand, was announced in guarded terms at a War Cabinet meeting on 24 February, to which neither Robertson nor Lord Derby ( Secretary of State for War ) had been invited, then landed on Robertson and Haig without warning at an Anglo-French conference at Calais ( 26-7 Feb ).
The misery endured by Haiti's poor made a deep impression on Aristide, and he became an outspoken critic of Duvalierism.
The most widely publicized attempt, the St Jean Bosco massacre, occurred on 11 September 1988, when over one hundred armed Tonton Macoute wearing red armbands forced their way into St. Jean Bosco as Aristide began Sunday mass.
A coup attempt against Aristide had taken place on January 6, even before his inauguration, when Roger Lafontant, a Tonton Macoute leader under Duvalier, seized the provisional President Ertha Pascal-Trouillot and declared himself President.
Aristide was deposed on 29 September 1991, and after several days sent into exile, his life only saved by the intervention of US, French and Venezuelan diplomats.
In 1993, Constant, who had been on the CIA's payroll as an informant since 1992, organized the Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haïti ( FRAPH ), which targeted and killed Aristide supporters.
The Administration also urged Aristide to stick closely to neoliberal economics and to abide by the Caribbean nation ’ s constitution — which gives substantial political power to the Parliament while imposing tight limits on the Executive.
Despite enjoying widespread support by the majority of Haitians, the Washington Post informed their readers that regime change was looming on November 21, 2003: " Aristide has pushed with mixed success a populist agenda of higher minimum wages, school construction, literacy programs, higher taxes on the rich and other policies that have angered an opposition movement run largely by a mulatto elite that has traditionally controlled Haiti's economy.
Under disputed circumstances, Aristide was flown out of the country by the U. S. on 28 February 2004.
" In a 2006 interview, Aristide said the US went back on their word regarding compromises he made with them over privatization of enterprises to ensure that part of the profits would go to the Haitian people and then " relied on a disinformation campaign " to discredit him.
In South Africa, Aristide became an honorary research fellow at the University of South Africa, learned Zulu, and on 25 April 2007, received a doctorate in African Languages.

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