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The sad tale of Haiti

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SultanOrder
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The sad tale of Haiti

Postby SultanOrder » Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:11 am


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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Warsan_Star_Muslimah » Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:55 am

Salaam alikum, Good Video P.O :up:

But very sad too. The extent they go to keep a country poor and down, is shocking, all for their interests. :down: The midget french man is annoying as heck. :x

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Somalian_Boqor » Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:58 am

Haiti paid 21Billion to France? :shock: :shock: :shock:

Wallahi the White men is evil!!!!

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby dawwa9 » Tue Jan 26, 2010 12:59 am

Haiti paid 21Billion to France? :shock: :shock: :shock:

Wallahi the White men is evil!!!!
In historical money!

You shouldnt take these numbers too seriously as the global economy was totally different back then

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Firewall » Tue Jan 26, 2010 1:07 am

Haiti paid 21Billion to France? :shock: :shock: :shock:

Wallahi the White men is evil!!!!
In historical money!

You shouldnt take these numbers too seriously as the global economy was totally different back then

historical money (21 billion) + inflation= a shit load of money

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Enemy_Of_Mad_Mullah » Tue Jan 26, 2010 1:18 am

*off topic*

loook @ how haiti deforested their land

haiti left, dominican rep right

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:o like somalia

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby SultanOrder » Tue Jan 26, 2010 1:44 am

Haiti paid 21Billion to France? :shock: :shock: :shock:

Wallahi the White men is evil!!!!
And this is for loss property of the french i.e. THEIR SLAVES :shock:


Yes that is evil!!!

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Mr. Yungnfresh » Tue Jan 26, 2010 2:00 am

I heard someone say the earthquake in Haiti might have been man-made (since the technology to cause a earthquake of that severity on the Richter scale does exist)...a little far-fetched, i know, but does Haiti have oil by any chance?

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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Dusty » Tue Jan 26, 2010 2:37 am

Drill, and then pump the oil of Haiti!

(Unofficially and briefly translated in English by E.Danto , June 25, 2006 - Please refer to original Nouvelliste article in French by Roberson Alphonse for exact language at "Forez, puis pompez le pétrole d'Haïti !" Nouvelliste, June 18, 2008
Le Nouvelliste en Haiti - Forez, puis pompez le pétrole d'Haïti ! )

Drill, and then pump the oil of Haiti! by Roberson Alphonse, Nouvelliste, June 18, 2008

The signs, (indicators), justifying the explorations of oil (black gold) in Haiti are encouraging. In the middle of the oil shock, some 4 companies want official licenses from the Haitian State to drill for oil.

Oil prices rose to a record high $140 US dollars per barrel. In the middle of the oil shock, Haiti which imports hundreds of millions of dollars of Diesel each year, all to produce electricity, seems to have a card to play. Its small, formerly despised deposits, now seems to be generating much interest. "We've received four requests for oil exploration permits", confided the engineer Dieuseul Anglade, general director of the Office of Mining and Energy. The Haitian State wants to be sure these companies have the requisite expertise in the matter", he added. "We have had encouraging indicators to justify the pursuit of the exploration of black gold (oil), which had stopped in 1979", he estimated.

Some 11 wells, with a certain depth of 2944 meters were drilled at the Plaine du Cul-de-sac on the Plateau Central and at L'ile de La Gonâve. Surface (tentative) indicators for oil were found at the Southern peninsula and on the North coast, explained the engineer Anglade, who strongly believes in the immediate commercial viability of these explorations.

According to a memo dated back to August 16, 1979, written by attorney François Lamothe to Mr. Emmanuel Broth, five big wells were drilled at Porto Suel (Maissade) of a depth of 9000 feet, at Bebernal, 9000 feet, at Bois- Carradeux (Ouest), at Dumornay, on the road Route Frère and close to the Chemin de Fer of Saint-Marc. A sample, a "carrot" (oil reservoir) drilled up from the well of Saint-Marc in the Artibonite underwent a physical-chemical analysis in Munich, Germany, at the request of Mr. Broth. "The result of the analysis was returned on October 11, 1979 and revealed tracks of oil", confided the engineer, Willy Clémens, who had gone to Germany.

"It is necessary to drill then to pump the oil of Haiti, if we actually have it, declared a skeptical geologist, a bit annoyed by the declarations without scientific proof. If we have black gold (oil), our dear friends in the international community and Hugo Chavez must help us in order to realize exploration studies. Only his proof will provide peace of mind," he insisted.

Oil prices rose a record high $140 dollars per barrel last Monday. In spite of the promises of OPEP to increase the production of black gold to help calm fears in the marketplace, the oil consumers are frenzily speculating, making strategic stock purchases in anticipation of a winter windfall. Even if the rises in prices, flattens out under the bar of $135 per barrel, Analysts agree the rising trend in oil prices risk reaching $150, if not $200 per barrel before the end of the year.

In Haiti where the true oil potential remains fuzzy, some say: Drill, then pump the oil of Haiti! If there's oil...
*******

For French original, please go to: "Forez, puis pompez le pétrole d'Haïti !" by Roberson Alphonse, Nouvelliste, June 18, 2008
Le Nouvelliste en Haiti - Forez, puis pompez le pétrole d'Haïti !

************************************************** **************************


See, excerpt from, Is the UN military proxy occupation of Haiti masking US securing oil/gas reserves from Haiti :

" It seems no one but Ezili's HLLN seems to think it EXTREMELY strange that the US and Canada have just built new, MASSIVE embassy in Haiti. The US Embassy in Haiti is so huge, it looks like a college campus, a close to a $100million dollar building (some say it will be a billion dollar building when done), with over 1,000 employees, in a country that's facing FAMINE, klorox hunger... Why do they need such a huge new investment in Haiti? To serve the needs of poor, hopeless Haitians? Those "failed" and always "fighting-each-other-Haitians," who've single-handedly rendered Haiti, as the corporate media never misses an opportunity to say, directly or indirectly, in a myriad of ways: "the hemisphere's eternal basket case - a dismal repository of poverty where there is no future?"

The new US Embassy in Haiti is massive, the largest in the world except for Iraq, Afghanistan, China and Germany and we know U.S. strategic and economic interests in those countries. What does Haiti own that even Republican Presidential candidate John McCain is campaigning concern for "the fight for justice in Haiti?"

If there's substantial oil and gas reserves in Haiti, the US/Euro genocide has not yet begun. Ayisyen leve zye nou anwo, kenbe red. Nou fèk komanse goumen. (Read again, John Maxwell's "Is there oil in Haiti.")
Marguerite Laurent.com |Haiti News, Gas, Oil reserves

*************************************************

Excerpted from, Is the UN military proxy occupation of Haiti masking US securing oil/gas reserves from Haiti :

"...Some of the false Haiti stereotypes are that Haiti has no resources, is one of the tiniest island nations in the Caribbean, overcrowded, violent and simply "the hemisphere's eternal basket case - a dismal repository of poverty where there is no future." In reality Haiti has formidable advantages - plentiful and still inexhaustible resources, the oldest formed and thus purest natural resources in the world, enviable strategic location, a hard working population. It is centered in the Caribbean Basin and it has 38% more coastline than the Dominican Republic. Haiti is a big Island compared to the other island nationsin the Caribbean. It is, in fact the third largest nation in the Caribbean, owns 60% of the CARICOM population, with the largest diaspora and most millionaires in the Caribbean.
But behind the veil of media and US propagated lies - the manufactured fear, racist myths and false stereotypes about Haitian brutality and violence - denying Haiti's riches and reality, the wealthy, powerful and well-armed are robbing Haiti blind. The world's media recently focused on the food riots in Haiti and how the charitable NGOs, USAID and others are making generous new commitments and sending rice and food to haiti. Yet, according to a Nouvelliste article, dated, June 13, 2008, 40% to 50% of US subsidized rice, dumped in Haiti, by the American rice companies and charitable NGOs, are consumed, not in Haiti, but sold (through Haiti's big mafia families and US-supported economic elites) to and consumed in the Dominican Republic. Also, subsidized Haitian gas/petroleum products is being pilfered by wealthy ships docking to gas up in Haiti.

(Go to: Genocide by vaccination in Haiti - Is this a way to sterilize Haitian women, as was done to Puerto Rican women?) "

************************************************** *******

Kiskeyan Connection™ - Oil in Haiti.
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Re: The sad tale of Haiti

Postby Voltage » Tue Jan 26, 2010 3:06 am

Haiti paid 21Billion to France? :shock: :shock: :shock:

Wallahi the White men is evil!!!!
In historical money!

You shouldnt take these numbers too seriously as the global economy was totally different back then
The impact of Haiti giving that money at that time is equivalent to Haiti giving 21 Billion to France today. France haiti waxay ka qabtaa 21 Billion.


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