Political unrest in Haiti leaves Alabama church group stranded

Russellville First Baptist Church_Haiti

Volunteer groups from several American states have found themselves stranded in Haiti due to protests and political unrest on the small Caribbean island. Among those volunteers is a a team of 14 students and adults from First Baptist Church in Russellville, Ala. The church group found itself grounded after protesters took to the streets following a fuel price hike ordered by the government, which led to flights in the country being cancelled on Saturday and Sunday. CNN reported that a State Department Bureau of Consular Affairs official told American tourists and missions groups “do not attempt to travel at this time. Avoid protests and any large gathering of people. Do not attempt to drive through roadblocks.” Islanders, angered over their government’s attempts to raise fuel prices burned, looted and vandalized Haiti’s capital city Port-Au-Prince from Friday to Sunday. According to the Washington Post “several hundred people on Saturday attack a Best Western Premiere hotel in Petion-Ville, one of the capital’s wealthiest neighborhoods. Guests were forced to remain inside as rocks were hurled through windows around 10 a.m. local time. Security manned the building, but rioters shattered the main entrance before moving to another hotel.” But the Russellville group remains safe for now. They are currently scheduled to leave the island on Tuesday. “We have no reason to compromise our relative safety here at the guest house unless we’re certain we can get out of PAP,” the leader of the group posted on Facebook. “We are also working on alternative options, should the Tuesday flight not work for us. I’ll share those alternatives with you when they become more concrete.” You can follow the group’s progress here.

Terri Sewell introduces bipartisan Caribbean trade bill

shipping port

Alabama 7th District U.S. Rep. Terri Sewell reached across the aisle this week to join Florida 26th District Rep. Carlos Curbelo to introduce a bill that would give duty and quota-free access to apparel products manufactured in certain Caribbean countries. H.R. 3849: the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act would reauthorize the U.S. Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act (CBTPA) until 2030. Since 2000, CBTPA has allowed for the duty- and quota-free import of goods from Caribbean countries. In return, CBTPA requires that Caribbean Basin countries use U.S. formed yarns, fabrics, and thread. Eligible CBTPA countries include Barbados, Belize, Curacao, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, St. Lucia, and Trinidad and Tobago. “This bipartisan legislation to promote U.S. trade with Caribbean island countries is needed as many islands begin to recover from the devastation of recent hurricanes,” said Sewell. “Economic growth in Alabama is one of my top priorities, and this bill represents a great opportunity to expand my home state’s trade with Caribbean basin countries.” Although the CBPTA doesn’t expire for three years, in 2020, it’s causing uncertainty for various US retailers who source from the Caribbean. Sewell’s bill would extend the bill until 2030. “Reauthorizing CBTPA until 2030 and improving trade with countries like Haiti encourages future investment, promotes job creation, and lays the foundation for economic development for decades to come,” Sewell explained. “Since coming to Congress, I’ve worked to build a stronger, more competitive U.S. economy and today’s bill takes a big step towards that goal.” CBTPA works in conjunction with the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA) to facilitate the development of 17 independent countries of the Caribbean Basin region. For these two preferential trade programs to be effective, both CBTPA and CBERA must be authorized. Eligible CBERA countries include Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, the British Virgin Islands, Curacao, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Montserrat, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and Trinidad and Tobago. As of Wednesday, the bill has been referred to the House Committee on Ways and Means.

Rand Paul: A humanitarian in Haiti, a pit bull in 2016

Even while fighting blindness in the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere this week, Republican presidential contender Rand Paul intensified political attacks against rivals in both parties, vowing to continue pressing billionaire businessman Donald Trump in particular as the Kentucky senator embraces the role as the GOP’s leading pit bull. An ophthalmologist by training, Paul left Haiti on Wednesday afternoon after spending four days on a humanitarian mission to the island nation. From a small urban clinic guarded by a team of armed police, Paul joined six eye surgeons who restored vision to dozens of impoverished Haitians, many living for years in blindness because of ailments such as cataracts that are easily treated in the United States. The trip offered the tea party firebrand a brief respite from a presidential campaign in which his standing has slipped substantially in recent weeks. Yet the 2016 election — especially Trump — was a regular topic of conversation when Paul wasn’t in the operating room. “His candidacy is an insult to the intellectual movement that has called for small government for decades,” said Paul, wearing operating room scrubs, in an interview with The Associated Press shortly before returning to surgery Tuesday morning. He described the reality star’s candidacy as “buffoonery” and promised to continue leading the anti-Trump charge “until he fades away.” This week’s Haiti trip was organized by the University of Utah’s Moran Eye Center, an institution that organizes regular missions to combat “curable blindness” in developing nations around the world. Paul participated in a similar mission with the same group last summer in Guatemala. While the trip was not technically part of Paul’s presidential campaign, he invited a small number of political journalists and at least one prominent donor to join him this week. Due to security concerns, his team asked that reporting of the trip be restricted until Paul left the country. His team helped raise at least $70,000 for the eye center before the trip. One of the benefactors was Trump himself, who donated $10,000 to the university at Paul’s request roughly two months ago. That was shortly before Paul began aggressively challenging Trump’s conservative credentials. “No one is pure evil,” Paul said of Trump when asked about his contribution. “He has some redeeming qualities.” Paul arrived in Haiti on Sunday aboard the private jet of Republican donor Gary Heavin, the Texas-based founder of the Curves fitness center franchise. He and his wife were at Paul’s side for much of the week. Heavin, who has been active in Haitian charity work since a 2010 earthquake devastated the capital city, said he’s yet to decide whether to support Paul formally, but he’s already ruled out the other candidates. “If I support anyone in the Republican Party, it’s him,” Heavin said in an interview on a bustling street outside the eye clinic. He said he has the capacity to donate more than $10 million and would back Paul if Heavin is “confident in his ability to influence the process.” Paul, meanwhile, is betting that he can influence the process best by being aggressive. He condemned Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton, whose family foundation has raised more than $30 million for Haiti since the 2010 earthquake. “To me the most disgusting thing about the Clinton foundation is almost none of their money went to charity,” Paul said, suggesting that only 6 percent of the Clinton Global Initiative’s revenue went to charitable grants. A spokesman for the organization didn’t respond to a request for comment. The group previously said grants make up only a small fraction of its charitable work, which is largely handled by staff. Asked about Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker‘s recent criticism of Washington-based Republicans, Paul charged, “Part of problem we have is career politicians like Scott Walker.” “Has he ever had a job outside of politics?” Paul went on. “He was running for office when he was in college. I’m not going to be lectured by a career politician, that’s for sure.” And on Chris Christie, Paul noted that the New Jersey governor exaggerated his role in the response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks during the recent GOP debate. “People wrap themselves in tragedy so they don’t have to argue the point,” Paul said of Christie. Paul said he had little choice but to go on the attack to stand out in the crowded race. “Right now, people are choosing theatrics over substance,” he said. “And so, you just have to compete in the arena the way the arena is arranged.” Republished with permission of the Associated Press.