Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Jean-Bertrand Aristide (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ bɛʁtʁɑ̃ aʁistid]; born 15 July 1953) is a Haitian former Salesian priest and politician who became Haiti's first democratically elected president in 1991 before being deposed in a coup d'état.
Lavalas emerged as a powerful social movement in the late 1980s, [2] and it backed Jean Bertrand Aristide's election campaign in 1990. The establishment of the Lavalas movement as a formal political party, renamed Fanmi Lavalas, took place in 1996 as a split by Aristide from the Struggling People's Party (OPL) over the question of his resumption of the three years he lost in exile following ...
Guy Philippe (French pronunciation: [ɡi filip]; born 29 February 1968) is a Haitian former police officer, politician, and convicted money launderer, who led the 2004 Haitian coup d'état against president Jean-Bertrand Aristide after being fired from the police in 2000.
December 21 Agreement, a coalition of 35 political parties, civic organizations, women’s and young people’s groups as well as churches and business leaders. They got their name after backing a ...
Take a look at CNN’s Fast Facts on the life of the first democratically elected president of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Jean Marie Chérestal (born 1947) 2000: 2 March 2001 15 March 2002 1 year, 13 days Fanmi Lavalas: Jean-Bertrand Aristide (2001–2004) 11 Yvon Neptune (born 1946) — 15 March 2002 12 March 2004 : 1 year, 363 days Fanmi Lavalas: 12 Gérard Latortue (1934–2023) — 12 March 2004 9 June 2006 2 years, 89 days Independent: Boniface Alexandre ...
The presidential election, held on 16 December, resulted in a victory for Jean-Bertrand Aristide of the National Front for Change and Democracy (FCND). The FCND also won the parliamentary elections for which voter turnout was 50.8%.
An upgraded version of X’s artificial intelligence chatbot Grok can now generate images — of almost anything.