Jean-Bertrand Aristide Article

Jean-Bertrand Aristide summary

Explore the life of Jean-Bertrand Aristide as a priest and his role as the president of Haiti

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Jean-Bertrand Aristide, (born July 15, 1953, Port Salut, Haiti), First president of Haiti (1991, 1994–96, 2001–04) to be elected in free democratic elections. A priest in the Roman Catholic Salesian order, he aligned himself with the poor and opposed the harsh regime of Jean-Claude Duvalier, son of François Duvalier, often putting himself at odds with the church hierarchy and the military. Expelled by the Salesians in 1988, he formally requested that he be relieved of his priestly duties in 1994. In 1990 progressive-centre forces united behind Aristide and swept him into power. He initiated dramatic reforms but was ousted in a military coup after only seven months in office. Though restored to office in 1994 with the help of U.S. occupying troops, he received little aid with which to address his country’s endemic ills. Constitutionally prohibited from seeking a consecutive term, he stepped down in 1996 but remained Haiti’s most potent political figure. In 2000 he was reelected president amid charges of electoral fraud. A coup against Aristide failed in 2001, but unrest with his rule increased until a full-scale rebellion in 2004 forced him to flee the country.