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New York.– The Batey Relief Alliance (BRA) is launching two new programs addressing socio-economic needs of populations living in extreme poverty in both Haiti and the Dominican Republic.

Last year, BRA received $2.5 million from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to improve agriculture development for farmers inside the DR agricultural batey communities and provide training and microcredit loans to women in the SouthEast border region of Haiti.

The USDA-funded Cooperative Agricultural Program aims at creating food security and economic development for impoverished batey communities in the province of Monte Plata, by putting 7,700 unemployed farmers to work 1,500 acres of fertile land to produce food for 32,000 people.

It is expected that surplus crops will be sold to local communities by the cooperative – an effort to foster long-term sustainable re-investment into the program.

The USAID-funded Women’s Empowerment Program, under its new Development Grants Program, will allow BRA to partner with key local partner groups such as FONKOZE, Partners In Health and Esperanza International, to establish 30 women’s organizations, provide training to 600 hundred women, of which, 300 to receive microcredit loans to start or maintain small businesses.

The program targets Haiti’s SouthEast department, District of Belle Anse, covering the communes of Belle Anse, Grand Gosier, Thiotte and Anse-a-Pitres.

“In light of the current global economic crisis affecting millions around the world, especially in poor countries like Haiti and the Dominican Republic, BRA’s programs are timely as they will provide thousands with economic tools to meet their current economic hardships, and to better themselves and their communities,” said Gaillard.

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COMMENTS
13 comment(s)
Written by: cibaeño75, 2 Jan 2010 4:23 PM
From: United States, New York City
"Last year, BRA received $2.5 million from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) and the US Agency for International Development (USAID) to improve agriculture development for farmers inside the DR agricultural batey communities..."

What exactly does that mean? Are they somehow creating homesteading programs for batey workers INSIDE DR? DT, follow up and expand on this!!
Written by: cibaeño75, 2 Jan 2010 4:30 PM
From: United States, New York City
Notice how this article is titled "Batey Relief Alliance launches development programs in DR", alluding to some type of relief for DOMINICAN poverty when in reality this organization is using international aid to alleviate HAITIAN POVERTY on DOMINICAN soil. Vigilance, people, vigilance.
Written by: Lautaro, 2 Jan 2010 4:36 PM
From: Dominican Republic, Santo Domingo
You're absolutely right, ciby. While do you think the french sociologist Aymeric Chaupprade said that anti-poverty programs in the DR will never work? Cuz' until the intl. community wise up and realize were the root of the problem lies, namely, the socioeconomic ills within the haitian soil, the only thing that this kind of programs will do is incentivate the haitians to keep fleeing from their country, while the situation in Haiti remains unchanged. Maybe when the other islands and continental territories receive an avalanche of economic refugees from both sides of the fence will be the time when they will realize the folly of their one-sided charity policies, but then it will be too late to remedy things.
Written by: cibaeño75, 2 Jan 2010 4:55 PM
From: United States, New York City
Lautaro, I feel that there is something more sinister afoot.
Written by: Lautaro, 2 Jan 2010 4:59 PM
From: Dominican Republic, Santo Domingo
Tell me about. It's in the air here in the belly of the beast, so to speak. I fear that people are blinding themselves to it due to the overshadowing nature of the drug problem and the daily skirmishes that this one entails, the people of the communities and towns in and around the Santiago province being the only ones in open rebellion against the state's laissez faire treatment of the inmigration issue for all I know.
Written by: Bonahan48, 3 Jan 2010 6:58 PM
From: Dominican Republic
Ms. Jersey, I see that you are still drinking or smoking, please stop it. New Year Eve is gone. Let me take you back to reality. Helping this people is just the same as telling the rest of them "Come Over." This is a Haitian problem and Haitians should solve it. I don't see how you can jusfify abandoning poor Dominicans while spending resources in people who should not be in DR in the first place. Shame on you. You are not Dominican. Nothing more ungrateful than a Haitian. Given them a little education, next day they will be denoucing you for human rights abuses. They ask of Dominicans what they have denied to themselves since 1804. Down with the Haitians, Patria o muerte, coño. We rather bleed the island white....Jarto de esta situación. Es jarto que me tienen. Que dejen de parir estos rastreros, irresponsables.
Written by: Lautaro, 3 Jan 2010 7:07 PM
From: Dominican Republic, Santo Domingo
Bonahan, MSJersey solamente estaba siendo sarcastico con la situación, algo de lo que te hubieses dado cuenta si hubieses leido alguno de sus muchos posts en el tema.
Written by: Bonahan48, 3 Jan 2010 7:11 PM
From: Dominican Republic
Ah bueno. Ahora si. Batey Relief is an Anti-Dominican, pro-unification foreign agency. The founder is a Haitian who pretends to be a friend but all he does is making the settlement of Haitians more viable. I want all NGOs eliminated. We have to get rid of that. And we need to deport the people for Espacio Insular. Hang a couple for treason, if necessary.
Written by: cibaeño75, 3 Jan 2010 8:09 PM
From: United States, New York City
"Batey Relief is an Anti-Dominican, pro-unification foreign agency. The founder is a Haitian who pretends to be a friend but all he does is making the settlement of Haitians more viable."

You are a 100 percent correct. I know Mr. Gaillard personally and that is also my assessment of the man and his organization.
Written by: msjersey, 4 Jan 2010 9:06 AM
From: United States, New Jersey(Cibaeno/Los mina)
Speaking about EDUCATION:
http://www.quisqueya.name/Historia.html#anchor_191
Written by: Bonahan48, 4 Jan 2010 6:27 PM
From: Dominican Republic
Ms. jersey, this is another piece of ignorance perpetuated by a bunch of clowns and even some idiots who call themselves educated. read carefully. quisqueya is not a taino word. the island was never known as quisqueya. i went to a conference many years ago in which professor emilio cordero mitchel, president of te dominican academy of history, explained the myth behind the name quisqueya. he rightly concluded that the name simply never existed is relative new term made up by poorly educated historians...please, call cordero michel and ask for further reference. there is no one source documented the use of such a term. So, the people who created that website and nothing but a bunch of pariguayos, idiotas without any real knowledge of history.
Written by: cibaeño75, 4 Jan 2010 7:04 PM
From: United States, New York City
Bonahan, can you expand on that or better yet start a thread in the forum section concerning what you just said about the word "Quisqueya". This is not the first time I've heard that the word is a historical fallacy and as such I think it's something that needs to be brought to the table and further scrutinized.
Written by: DRandHaiti, 5 Jan 2010 3:32 PM
From: Canada, Montreal
Mosctha is working on Anse-a-Pitres http://mosctha.org/index.php?opti....ontent&view=article&id=85
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