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27228: Dailey (Reply) to 27220 (fwd)






Dailey (Reply) to 27220

The response to Daniel Simidor is a perfect example of the contempt for the truth that for years has been the distinguishing hallmark of the Haiti-Progres editorial page.

The Batay Ouvriye's memorable statement in December, 2003 that Fanmi Lavalas and the Group of 184 were "two rotten buttocks in the same torn pair of trousers," came rather late in the game and paled in comparison to the sustained campaign of criticism that the Haiti Prog directed at Aristide and FL during that paper's relatively brief Prague Spring. If the U.S. State Department was sending out checks to those who helped to bring Aristide down then Ben Dupuy would have received and cashed his long ago, with no more compunction than he showed when he was selling out the Abner Louima movement.

Contrary to Kim Ives's assertion, the Dennis Report contained irrefutable evidence that between 2001-04 the Aristide Foundation and other Aristide-controlled entities were used as a vehicle for laundering at least $17 million- which Ives describes as "virtually nothing"- paid in by the Haitian Government and paid out to fictitious, non-existent entities and from them to off shore accounts. Another report establishes that during the same period $56 million went missing or was misappropriated from the funds allocated to the Presidency. And these reports barely scratch the surface. Virtually everything Aristide, Mildred Aristide, and Mildred's brother-in-law Lesly Lavlanet were able to touch became riddled with corruption.

Although the Foundation books, such as they are, do not contain a list of payments to Rene Civil or Dupuy under the category "Political Thuggery," when Dupuy teamed up with Rene Civil in January, 1999 and sent the JPP out to strongarm shopkeepers and crack heads, the young activists readily admitted that they were being paid.

Why would we take money when we have our trust funds, Ives coyly asks? Who knows or cares. Dupuy's private income didn't prevent him from selling out the Abner Louima campaign to the New York City Police Department for chump change. Aristide knew exactly who he was dealing with.

My first glimpse of Chairman Ben was in New York approximately 25 years ago when he was a common sight prancing around Haiti-related meetings in his Nehru suit. Thanks to money from Ives's family, Dupuy was assured of never having to work another day in his life, and was already launched on his freelance career as a self-promoting bloviator. The Prog, Dupuy's tiny New York cult, and the non-existent political party in Haiti have never had a single purpose other than to provide a screen onto which Dupuy's ludicrous self-aggrandizing fantasies of political power and revenge could be projected.

And guess who's the little man behind the screen?

Peter Dailey