Jean Dominique

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Jean Dominique bigraphy, stories - Journalists

Jean Dominique : biography

July 30, 1930 – April 3, 2000

Jean Léopold Dominique (July 30, 1930 – April 3, 2000) was a Haïtian journalist who spoke out against successive dictatorships. He was one of the first people in Haïti to broadcast in Kreyòl, the language spoken by most of the populace. Despite fleeing the country twice when his life was under threat, he continued to return to his native Haïti, firmly believing in the cause of the Haitian plight. He was assassinated on April 3, 2000, a crime for which no one has ever been prosecuted.

Personal life and early career

Dominique was born into the elite of French society living in Haiti. His father, Leopold Dominique, moved the family there from France with a belief in the cause of the Haitian plight. After Jean completed his private schooling in both France and Haiti, he trained as an agronomist agriculturalist in Paris, France. He believed in educating and training the Haitian people so they could take care of themselves. Upon his return to Haiti, he began working with the poverty-stricken peasantry. Using his skills, Dominique helped rural farmers to better manage their land and stay out of debt of wealthy landowners. Some landowners, in an effort to maintain control over the farmers, convinced local authorities to jail Dominique for six months. After his release he emerged as one of the strongest critics of the militant regime of François "Papa Doc" Duvalier.

During the 1960s, he became interested in film and founded Haïti’s first film club. Later, he made one of Haïti’s first documentaries, But, I Am Beautiful.

In the early 1960s, he founded Haiti’s first independent radio station, Radio Haïti Inter, the first broadcast outlet in Creole, the language of 70 percent of Haitians. Dominique joined Radio Haïti initially as a reporter, and followed this in 1971, by purchasing the station’s lease. This was the first time that a Haïtian radio station had broadcast locally in the language spoken by most of the populace, as opposed to French, which was the language of the ruling elite.

“The only weapon I have is my microphone and my unshakable faith as a militant for change, veritable change,” Dominique once said.

Dominique was married to Michèle Montas, and they had three daughters: Jan-J (JJ), Nadine and Dolores.

The Duvalier years

Despite pressure from the regimes of both "Papa Doc" and Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier, Dominique continued criticizing the government, campaigning for electoral democracy and social and economic justice. His criticisms resulted in Radio Haïti being shut down several times. Duvalier sent Dominique to exile in New York in 1980. Six years later, after Duvalier’s ouster, Dominique returned. He was greeted at the airport by 60,000 people. There was some suggestion that he may have run for President himself, but Dominique declined to do so. He then became involved in the Lavalas party that won the 1990 elections.

Assassination

On April 3, 2000, at 69 years of age, Dominique was shot four times in the chest as he arrived for work at Radio Haïti. The station’s security guard was also killed in the attack. President René Préval ordered three days of official mourning, and 16,000 people attended his funeral at a sports stadium. Dominique’s wife fled to the United States in late 2003 after the murder of her bodyguard and repeated death threats.

Since the assassination, several large public protests have called for more action to be taken. There have been numerous inconsistencies in the investigations into the murder, including the mysterious death of one of the suspect. The first investigative judge, Jean Sénat Fleury (who was also judge on the Raboteau massacre trial) had a man named Markington arrested after the man admitted to seeing the murder. Markington, a police informer, then was able to get out of jail with an Argentina Visa and allegedly after providing a foreign visa to the wife of another judge. Fleury then resigned from the case after holding talks with Preval. Fleury he claims that powerful forces were behind it not being solver, and one possibility he claims is the CIA. This is discussed in more detail on pages 97–100 of the book Paramilitarism and the Assault on Democracy in Haiti (Monthly Review Press, 2012).