Pacific Free Press was launched in March 2007 by Dutch-Canadian Richard
Kastelein of V.O.F. Expathos, in the Netherlands along with Chris Cook- CFUV radio journalist and Editor in Chief of Pacific Free Press. Cook is based in , Victoria, British Columbia.
The site is a sister to Atlantic Free Press and Brick Ogden an American Expatriate in Amsterdam has been a key supporter of this project.
The mission of Pacific Free Press is simple: to dig out nuggets of truth from
the slag-heap of lies, ignorance and witless diversion that has buried
public discourse today. Pacific Free Press provides a new venue for
disseminating hard news and insightful, fact-based analysis of the
harsh realities too often ignored or distorted by the mainstream press.
Half-Hour for Haiti: Saving Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine!
by Half-Hour for Haiti Last Friday was the two-month anniversary of the abduction of Haitian human rights activist Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine.
Lovinsky has been one of Haitis most persistent and effective human rights activists in Haiti for almost 20 years. He founded several organizations, including the September 30th Foundation, which has maintained weekly vigils for justice in Haiti for over a decade, through hurricanes, coup détats and economic privation.
For more information about Lovinsky, his disappearance, and taking action to save Lovinsky's life, see our website, www.HaitiJustice.org.
When Lovinsky was kidnapped on August 12, many U.S.-based
activists (including us) worked quietly rather than publicly, in order
to avoid interfering with negotiations with the kidnappers. But there
have been no negotiations for eight weeks, and the quiet advocacy is
not working, so theres a general consensus that we need to go public
to save Lovinskys life.
The public momentum for Lovinsky has
been building. The September 30th Foundation keeps taking to the
streets in Haiti; theyve been joined by demonstrations in London, San
Francisco and New York, a petition drive from Los Angeles, and calls to
Haiti and foreign governments from Canada, the U.S. and Europe. Several
members of the U.S. Congress have urged the U.S. and Haitian
governments to make saving Lovinskys life a priority.
There are
lots of reasons for all of us to take action to help save Lovinsky. He
is a husband, father, brother, son, colleague, inspiration and a friend
to many. He is irreplaceable as an activist: no one has organized more
demonstrations in Haiti over the last decade; no one has so effectively
kept justice issues on the national radar screen. His disappearance has
a ripple effect: as long as Lovinsky is missing, other activists will
have good reason to fear for their safety if they speak out.
But
perhaps the best reason for taking action to save Lovinsky is the fact
that if another activist had been kidnapped- another of our friends,
colleagues or relatives- Lovinsky would organize tirelessly until they
were released. He would plan demonstrations, call press conferences and
apply pressure wherever he could, as long as necessary to save the
activists life.
We are recommending two activities, one easy,
the other very easy, to help save Lovinskys life. Please do both if
you can, but at least do one:
First, sign the Petition to Save
Lovinsky issued by Global Women's Strike. The petition has 1017
signatures already, but it needs hundreds more to maximize its impact.
Signing takes less than three minutes.
Second, send a letter to
Haitis President René Rene Préval, urging him to ensure that his
government does everything it can to investigate Lovinskys
disappearance and ensure his safe return. A sample letter is below,
please customize and personalize it if you can. You may send your
letter directly to President Préval by regular mail ($ .69 postage in
US, $1.55 in Canada), or to us by fax: (206) 350-7986 (a U.S. number)
or email: avokahaiti@aol.com, and we will ensure that they are
delivered.
October __, 2007
His Excellency René Préval
President of the Republic of Haiti
Palais National
Port-au-Prince, Haïti
Re: Lovinsky Pierre-Antoines Disappearance
Your Excellency:
I
am writing because I am extremely concerned about Lovinsky
Pierre-Antoine, the human rights activist kidnapped over two months
ago. I sincerely request that you do everything in your power to ensure
that your government takes every possible step to ensure Mr.
Pierre-Antoines safe return to his family.
Mr.
Pierre-Antoine is important to people all over the world who care about
Haiti [Please personalize here: mention how Lovinsky has touched,
inspired or educated you ]. His safe return is essential to show that
Haitians can participate effectively and lawfully in Haitis democratic
process, without fear.
I am concerned about reports
from Mr. Pierre-Antoines organization, Fondasyon 30 Septanm, that the
Haitian police are not zealously investigating this case. Please demand
that everyone working for your government- from the Ministry of Justice
to police leadership to investigators- immediately take every possible
lawful step to investigate Mr. Pierre-Antoines disappearance, pursue
the perpetrators and return Mr. Pierre-Antoine safely.
Sincerely,
For
more information about the Half-Hour for Haiti Program, the Institute
for Justice & Democracy in Haiti, or human rights in Haiti, see
www.HaitiJustice.org. To receive Half-Hour for Haiti Action Alerts once
per week, send an email to HalfHour4Haiti@IJDH.org
Update: Thanks to everyone who called over the last two weeks to
support Debt Relief for Haiti. If you have not yet called, theres
still time (see our last alert). The mandate for MINUSTAH, the UN
Peacekeeping mission in Haiti, was renewed Monday by the UN Security
Council, for a year (see Reuters Article on the renewal, see our the UN
in Haiti website section for more background on the mission). Rev.
Gerard Jean-Juste may be getting closer to having his day in court: he
had an appeals court hearing scheduled for November 6, but that was
rescheduled to November 26. If you are interested in joining the
international legal observer delegation for this hearing, contact us.
Coming
Attractions: On October 25 and 26, Project Censored at Californias
Sonoma State University will hold its annual Media Accountability
Conference. Among the people to be honored at the event are Kevin Pina
of the Haiti Information Project, Jeb Sprague of HaitiAnalysis.com, and
grassroots Haitian Journalist Wadner Pierre. All three made important
contributions to covering attacks by UN troops on civilians in Haiti,
which made the list of top censored stories of the past year.
More
debt relief events: In Portland, Oregon, on October 18, IJDH will
participate in a panel Responding to Haiti's Unjust Debt With Jubilee
Justice, as part of the Ecumenical Ministries of Oregons Interfaith
Conference on Poverty. At the other end of the country, Miami Florida
will host Overcoming a History of Debt Injustice in Haiti and Africa on
October 29.