INTL 190 - Haiti in a Transnational ContextMain MenuIntroductionHaiti and ChinaHaiti and ChinaHaiti & ChileHaiti and the BahamasHaiti and TaiwanAmy B., Dephny D., Mitchell S., Barbara W.Haiti and Brazil
Haitian Coup
1media/brazilflagsky.jpg2022-03-07T22:58:48-08:00Jessica Cordero75c2516b2b872e4c5c44eec43b683fbfed712bb83997715Yingjun Zhangplain2022-03-09T20:17:39-08:00Yingjun Zhangf6e3dda4e1c26842ac12821c63827070918a8cc4 Since the Haitian declaration of independence as the first black republic in 1804, the nation has been characterized by internal politics, dictatorships, as well as interference from external governments. Most recently, in 1991 and 2004, there was a coup for the first time for democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Aristide was overthrown and exiled in 1991, reinstated as president in 1994, re-elected as president in 2001, deposed in 2004, and exiled (Sansculotte- Greenidge & Moshi, 2004). The coup resulted from a conflict that was ongoing for some weeks. However, the overthrow of his government and his exile impacted Haiti in numerous ways, especially with the existing impoverished state of the nation. The political and economic crisis worsened the nation's situation, leading to increased migrants, mainly to Brazil and the US (Shellman & Stewart, 2007).
There is a video showing how is the Haitian people during the coup d'état
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1media/brazilflagsky.jpg2022-03-07T22:32:32-08:00Jessica Cordero75c2516b2b872e4c5c44eec43b683fbfed712bb8ContentsJessica Cordero6Haiti and Brazilvisual_path2022-03-09T20:19:43-08:00Jessica Cordero75c2516b2b872e4c5c44eec43b683fbfed712bb8