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Remember, you are marching today for those who couldn't be here,
To say to them, "We haven't forgotten. We'll never forget."
And to say to those that are still here,
We will take a stand for the rebuilding of Haiti.
- Right to Housing Collective, January 12, 2012
Remember, you are marching today for those who couldn't be here,
To say to them, "We haven't forgotten. We'll never forget."
And to say to those that are still here,
We will take a stand for the rebuilding of Haiti.
- Right to Housing Collective, January 12, 2012
On the morning of January 12, 2012, a group of women, children and men wound their way through the city wearing white, the Haitian color for mourning. Part memorial, they deposited wreaths of flowers on sites that had become mass graves during the 2010 earthquake, and part protest, they carried a banner that read "Two years later: Enough is enough." They alternated between singing a funeral dirge and chanting, "We need houses to live in!"

We raise our voices to denounce with all of our might, before the national and international community, the threat of forced eviction, and arbitrary and illegal acts of violence being carried out against us by the major. We can't take the pressure anymore. We ask all the institutions involved (the president, the government, the mayor, NGOs assisting displaced people, human rights organizations, etc.) to press, press our case, to take this issue into consideration so that the government and mayor sign a moratorium to block the aggression against people living in this camp, to plan what should be done with regards to displaced people, to respect the rights that we have as people. As Article 22 of this country's constitution and Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights declare, "All people have the right to housing."
From a speech given by Marie Frantz Joachim of Haitian Women's Solidarity (SOFA), on behalf of the National Coordination of Women's Organizations (KONAP), composed of a wide variety of feminist organizations, during the January 12, 2012 memorial march:
Out of respect for the battle our ancestors carried out, we too undertake the struggle to force our leaders to take responsibility for... the people living under tents. The housing problem is a structural problem and demands a structural response. Displaced Haitians cannot continue to live in the chicken cages that are being constructed for them. Haitians should be living in dignity... And so we say, "This is our battle: the right for people to live in adequate housing." And we ask that everyone in the social movement, all organizations, come together so that we can clearly, collectively, respond.
From the Eye-to-Eye Platform (Platfom Je nan Je), a 12-member grouping that includes four of Haiti's largest peasant associations, in a declaration to the Haitian Parliament following a march attended by thousands of protestors:
The Eye-to-Eye Platform supports people from all four corners of the country by submitting the following demands and recommendations to the government:
Remove people from under tents as quickly as possible; but that doesn't mean to send them back to pre-existing slums or to the shantytowns created after the earthquake;
The government must implement a disaster risk management plan to identify safe construction sites, with land for farming set apart from land for housing;
The government must create and implement a housing policy, with urban planning and zoning; In this plan we must clearly see what needs to be done in both urban and rural areas; This plan needs to designate responsibility for land and housing to state institutions;
Guarantee the security of displaced people, especially in the places to which they are being relocated...
From the report by the National Human Rights Defense Network (RNDDH), one of Haiti's most prominent human rights organizations: Advocacy for the Situation of January 10, 2010 Earthquake Victims:
Recommendations of RNDDH to the relevant institutions:
From a speech by Colette Lespinasse and Reyneld Sanon of the Right-to-Housing Collective, made up of 30-some Haitian organizations, grassroots groups and displacement camp associations.
We, organizations of survivors living in internally displaced persons' [IDP] camps, as well as social and grassroots organizations, state:
We resolve to remain mobilized in the struggle to change our society and our government. We resolve to regain the sovereignty of our country to construct a society in which we can enjoy guaranteed access to housing and all our fundamental rights.
From a presentation on housing in Camp Carradeux on January 12, 2012 by Olrich Jean Pierre of Noise Travels, News Spreads (Bri Kouri Nouvel Gaye), an alternative media group doing advocacy and public education:
When we struggle for housing, we're not just asking for houses. There are other services that should accompany housing. A house in an area where potable water isn't available does not respect the right to housing. People need access to healthcare. The battle for housing is not simply a battle for 4 square meters to live in. It's a battle for public schools to educate our children so that they don't have to go work in factories. It's a battle to have access to healthcare when we're sick.
We're not just mobilizing to denounce the situation. No, the struggle before us is the struggle to pressure the government, to ask them, "Where are the houses that you've prepared for us?" And then to ask if there are toilets inside of them. Because we are a people with dignity. And with rights that need to be respected.
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
Remember, you are marching today for those who couldn't be here,
To say to them, "We haven't forgotten. We'll never forget."
And to say to those that are still here,
We will take a stand for the rebuilding of Haiti.
- Right to Housing Collective, January 12, 2012
On the morning of January 12, 2012, a group of women, children and men wound their way through the city wearing white, the Haitian color for mourning. Part memorial, they deposited wreaths of flowers on sites that had become mass graves during the 2010 earthquake, and part protest, they carried a banner that read "Two years later: Enough is enough." They alternated between singing a funeral dirge and chanting, "We need houses to live in!"

We raise our voices to denounce with all of our might, before the national and international community, the threat of forced eviction, and arbitrary and illegal acts of violence being carried out against us by the major. We can't take the pressure anymore. We ask all the institutions involved (the president, the government, the mayor, NGOs assisting displaced people, human rights organizations, etc.) to press, press our case, to take this issue into consideration so that the government and mayor sign a moratorium to block the aggression against people living in this camp, to plan what should be done with regards to displaced people, to respect the rights that we have as people. As Article 22 of this country's constitution and Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights declare, "All people have the right to housing."
From a speech given by Marie Frantz Joachim of Haitian Women's Solidarity (SOFA), on behalf of the National Coordination of Women's Organizations (KONAP), composed of a wide variety of feminist organizations, during the January 12, 2012 memorial march:
Out of respect for the battle our ancestors carried out, we too undertake the struggle to force our leaders to take responsibility for... the people living under tents. The housing problem is a structural problem and demands a structural response. Displaced Haitians cannot continue to live in the chicken cages that are being constructed for them. Haitians should be living in dignity... And so we say, "This is our battle: the right for people to live in adequate housing." And we ask that everyone in the social movement, all organizations, come together so that we can clearly, collectively, respond.
From the Eye-to-Eye Platform (Platfom Je nan Je), a 12-member grouping that includes four of Haiti's largest peasant associations, in a declaration to the Haitian Parliament following a march attended by thousands of protestors:
The Eye-to-Eye Platform supports people from all four corners of the country by submitting the following demands and recommendations to the government:
Remove people from under tents as quickly as possible; but that doesn't mean to send them back to pre-existing slums or to the shantytowns created after the earthquake;
The government must implement a disaster risk management plan to identify safe construction sites, with land for farming set apart from land for housing;
The government must create and implement a housing policy, with urban planning and zoning; In this plan we must clearly see what needs to be done in both urban and rural areas; This plan needs to designate responsibility for land and housing to state institutions;
Guarantee the security of displaced people, especially in the places to which they are being relocated...
From the report by the National Human Rights Defense Network (RNDDH), one of Haiti's most prominent human rights organizations: Advocacy for the Situation of January 10, 2010 Earthquake Victims:
Recommendations of RNDDH to the relevant institutions:
From a speech by Colette Lespinasse and Reyneld Sanon of the Right-to-Housing Collective, made up of 30-some Haitian organizations, grassroots groups and displacement camp associations.
We, organizations of survivors living in internally displaced persons' [IDP] camps, as well as social and grassroots organizations, state:
We resolve to remain mobilized in the struggle to change our society and our government. We resolve to regain the sovereignty of our country to construct a society in which we can enjoy guaranteed access to housing and all our fundamental rights.
From a presentation on housing in Camp Carradeux on January 12, 2012 by Olrich Jean Pierre of Noise Travels, News Spreads (Bri Kouri Nouvel Gaye), an alternative media group doing advocacy and public education:
When we struggle for housing, we're not just asking for houses. There are other services that should accompany housing. A house in an area where potable water isn't available does not respect the right to housing. People need access to healthcare. The battle for housing is not simply a battle for 4 square meters to live in. It's a battle for public schools to educate our children so that they don't have to go work in factories. It's a battle to have access to healthcare when we're sick.
We're not just mobilizing to denounce the situation. No, the struggle before us is the struggle to pressure the government, to ask them, "Where are the houses that you've prepared for us?" And then to ask if there are toilets inside of them. Because we are a people with dignity. And with rights that need to be respected.
Remember, you are marching today for those who couldn't be here,
To say to them, "We haven't forgotten. We'll never forget."
And to say to those that are still here,
We will take a stand for the rebuilding of Haiti.
- Right to Housing Collective, January 12, 2012
On the morning of January 12, 2012, a group of women, children and men wound their way through the city wearing white, the Haitian color for mourning. Part memorial, they deposited wreaths of flowers on sites that had become mass graves during the 2010 earthquake, and part protest, they carried a banner that read "Two years later: Enough is enough." They alternated between singing a funeral dirge and chanting, "We need houses to live in!"

We raise our voices to denounce with all of our might, before the national and international community, the threat of forced eviction, and arbitrary and illegal acts of violence being carried out against us by the major. We can't take the pressure anymore. We ask all the institutions involved (the president, the government, the mayor, NGOs assisting displaced people, human rights organizations, etc.) to press, press our case, to take this issue into consideration so that the government and mayor sign a moratorium to block the aggression against people living in this camp, to plan what should be done with regards to displaced people, to respect the rights that we have as people. As Article 22 of this country's constitution and Article 25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights declare, "All people have the right to housing."
From a speech given by Marie Frantz Joachim of Haitian Women's Solidarity (SOFA), on behalf of the National Coordination of Women's Organizations (KONAP), composed of a wide variety of feminist organizations, during the January 12, 2012 memorial march:
Out of respect for the battle our ancestors carried out, we too undertake the struggle to force our leaders to take responsibility for... the people living under tents. The housing problem is a structural problem and demands a structural response. Displaced Haitians cannot continue to live in the chicken cages that are being constructed for them. Haitians should be living in dignity... And so we say, "This is our battle: the right for people to live in adequate housing." And we ask that everyone in the social movement, all organizations, come together so that we can clearly, collectively, respond.
From the Eye-to-Eye Platform (Platfom Je nan Je), a 12-member grouping that includes four of Haiti's largest peasant associations, in a declaration to the Haitian Parliament following a march attended by thousands of protestors:
The Eye-to-Eye Platform supports people from all four corners of the country by submitting the following demands and recommendations to the government:
Remove people from under tents as quickly as possible; but that doesn't mean to send them back to pre-existing slums or to the shantytowns created after the earthquake;
The government must implement a disaster risk management plan to identify safe construction sites, with land for farming set apart from land for housing;
The government must create and implement a housing policy, with urban planning and zoning; In this plan we must clearly see what needs to be done in both urban and rural areas; This plan needs to designate responsibility for land and housing to state institutions;
Guarantee the security of displaced people, especially in the places to which they are being relocated...
From the report by the National Human Rights Defense Network (RNDDH), one of Haiti's most prominent human rights organizations: Advocacy for the Situation of January 10, 2010 Earthquake Victims:
Recommendations of RNDDH to the relevant institutions:
From a speech by Colette Lespinasse and Reyneld Sanon of the Right-to-Housing Collective, made up of 30-some Haitian organizations, grassroots groups and displacement camp associations.
We, organizations of survivors living in internally displaced persons' [IDP] camps, as well as social and grassroots organizations, state:
We resolve to remain mobilized in the struggle to change our society and our government. We resolve to regain the sovereignty of our country to construct a society in which we can enjoy guaranteed access to housing and all our fundamental rights.
From a presentation on housing in Camp Carradeux on January 12, 2012 by Olrich Jean Pierre of Noise Travels, News Spreads (Bri Kouri Nouvel Gaye), an alternative media group doing advocacy and public education:
When we struggle for housing, we're not just asking for houses. There are other services that should accompany housing. A house in an area where potable water isn't available does not respect the right to housing. People need access to healthcare. The battle for housing is not simply a battle for 4 square meters to live in. It's a battle for public schools to educate our children so that they don't have to go work in factories. It's a battle to have access to healthcare when we're sick.
We're not just mobilizing to denounce the situation. No, the struggle before us is the struggle to pressure the government, to ask them, "Where are the houses that you've prepared for us?" And then to ask if there are toilets inside of them. Because we are a people with dignity. And with rights that need to be respected.