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  2. Tonton Macoute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tonton_Macoute

    In the exuberance, the Tonton Macoute went out into the streets and shot 27 people for the national party. [26] The lack of funds going to the Tonton Macoute was a result of those funds being intercepted by the Duvalier dynasty. It sometimes took nearly 80 percent of international aid to Haiti, but paid only 45 percent of the country's debts.

  3. Human rights in Haiti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_rights_in_Haiti

    Duvalier authorized more than 10,000 Tonton Macoute, organized in 500 sections across the country, to maintain complete control over the population. [13] " The macoutes were Papa Doc's version of brownshirts and the Waffen SS, except that their usual uniform was blue jeans, T-shirts, sunglasses, and they carried clubs or pistols," wrote ...

  4. Assassinations of Little Haiti journalists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassinations_of_Little...

    It was alleged that Billy Alexander, born ca. 1970, was contracted to kill D'Or for his opposition to Louis Thermitus, a local record store owner, who D'Or had accused of being a member of the Tonton Macoute and of supporting the regime that had ousted Haiti's elected President Aristide. At the time of his arraignment and later his conviction ...

  5. Anti-Duvalier protest movement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Duvalier_protest_movement

    Activists' listed grievances under Duvalier's regime, including general brutality against civilians and rising food costs, while some went to an aid warehouse to demand food. Law enforcement from the capital of Port-au-Prince came and quickly stopped the protests violently. The government imposed a curfew on the city.

  6. St. Jean Bosco massacre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Jean_Bosco_massacre

    The massacre was carried out by unidentified armed men, probably former Tonton Macoute, and took place without resistance by police or army, despite the church being opposite a barracks. [1] According to one witness, the police and army provided protection for the attackers, encircling the church. [ 6 ]

  7. 1991 Haitian coup d'état - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1991_Haitian_coup_d'état

    However, due to the popularity of his populist Lavalas movement ("the flood" in Haitian Creole), which advocated the use of legislation and popular mobilization for economic reform, an end to corruption, and justice for the victims of the Haitian military and the Tonton Macoutes, he received the majority of the vote, with 67.5%. [6]

  8. Luckner Cambronne - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luckner_Cambronne

    [1] [2] As head of the Tonton Macoutes, Cambronne led a campaign of state terrorism against all opposition, having opponents threatened, attacked, murdered and "disappeared". [4] He was known as the "Vampire of the Caribbean" for his profiting from the sale of Haitian blood and cadavers to the West for medical uses.

  9. Fort Dimanche - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Dimanche

    During the reign of Duvalier he and his Tonton Macoutes used the facility as an interrogation center and prison to incarcerate, torture, and murder political opponents. Also people who tried to escape from the island and were caught were brought to Fort Dimanche.