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Topic: Mildred Trouillot


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In the News (Fri 25 Dec 09)

  
  Mildred Trouillot - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mildred Trouillot (born 1963) is a Haitian-American lawyer who married Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the former President of Haiti, in 1996.
Mildred Trouillot practiced commercial litigation for the Manhattan law firm of Robinson, Silverman, Pearce, Aronsohn, and Berman.
Mildred gave birth to a daughter, Christine Aristide, at Canape-Vert Hospital in Port-au-Prince, in November 1996.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Mildred_Trouillot   (201 words)

  
 Mildred Trouillot -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Mildred Trouillot practiced commercial litigation for the Manhattan law firm of (additional info and facts about Robinson, Silverman, Pearce, Aronsohn, and Berman) Robinson, Silverman, Pearce, Aronsohn, and Berman.
Aristide was elected President while he was a (A member of a Catholic church) Catholic priest, and he had to abandon the priesthood to marry Mildred.
Mildred gave birth to a daughter, Christine Aristide, at Canape-Vert Hospital in (The capital and largest city of Haiti) Port-au-Prince, in November 1996.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/M/Mi/Mildred_Trouillot.htm   (247 words)

  
 Garry Pierre-Pierre, New Yorker is marrying Aristide, briefly becoming the first lady of Haiti
At City College in the early 1980s, Mildred Trouillot was a reserved, winsome bookworm, one of a coterie of American-born students whose Haitian roots had been transplanted to New York City.
Trouillot, the youngest child of a steelworker and a hospital laboratory technician, was to become the first lady of Haiti as the wife of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Trouillot was recruited to work as a legal adviser to Aristide's government in exile, which he headed from Washington.
www.hartford-hwp.com /archives/43a/585.html   (670 words)

  
 Harvard Gazette: Prisoners of poverty
Haiti's first lady, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, takes a question after her talk at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, while Michael R. Reich (left), director of the center, and Paul Farmer (right), the Maude and Lillian Presley Professor of Medical Anthropology at HMS, listen.
That is the message Mildred Trouillot Aristide, wife of Haiti's president Jean-Bertrand Aristide, delivered Friday (March 7) in a talk at the Center for Population and Development Studies.
Aristide, the daughter of Haitian immigrants, was born and raised in New York City and holds a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania.
www.news.harvard.edu /gazette/2003/03.13/27-haiti.html   (1402 words)

  
 The Neil Rogers Show - News - At least 4 shot dead after anti-Aristide rally - Wife of exiled Haitian president ...
Aristide resigned the Haitian presidency last Sunday and was taken along with his American wife, Mildred Trouillot, his brother and two bodyguards to the Central African Republic by U.S. and French military.
When Trouillot arrived with two bodyguards, Minister of Foreign Affairs Herve Charles Wenezoui waved her to the back of the room.
Trouillot -- wearing a fl suit and matching high heels, her hair cut short --sat in the rear of the room throughout the event without speaking, her head bowed.
www.neilrogers.com /news/articles/2004030802.html   (767 words)

  
 Haitian peasants voicing displeasure with Aristide's altared state   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Aristide's bride, Mildred Trouillot, was born 33 years ago in New York City to Haitian professionals.
Though she speaks the peasants' Creole and -- albeit haltingly -- the elite's French, she was brought up in the United States and studied there to become a lawyer.
Trouillot was never a political creature, but in 1993 was hired as an adviser to Aristide's government-in-exile in Washington at a salary of $10,000 a month -- more than the average Haitian earns in a lifetime.
www.chron.com /content/chronicle/world/96/01/20/haiti.html   (370 words)

  
 Aristide announces plans to marry, but media left guessing   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Sources close to the 40-year-old Aristide said his fiancee is Haitian-American lawyer Mildred Trouillot, 33, a legal aide in the Haitian Embassy in Washington.
Trouillot wrote some of Aristide's speeches in English and became a kind of cultural translator, acting as an intermediary between him and U.S. officials.
The wedding probably would be the final chapter in the story of Aristide's rocky relationship with the Vatican, which expelled him from the Salesian Fathers religious order in December 1988.
www.chron.com /content/chronicle/world/95/12/02/haiti.html   (373 words)

  
 Jamaica Gleaner - Aristide still a 'priest' - Tuesday | March 16, 2004   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Ousted Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide (left) addresses selected members of the local press, while his wife Mildred watches, shortly after their arrival at Norman Manley International Airport yesterday.
He was laicised from the Salesian order in 1988 for his political involvement, which was labelled as "incitement to hatred and violence" and viewed as being out of line with his role as a clergyman.
In addition, he has since wed Mildred Trouillot, which is forbidden under the laws governing the Roman Catholic priesthood.
www.jamaica-gleaner.com /gleaner/20040316/news/news2.html   (273 words)

  
 Dialysis - Taking the piss every month
The wife of former Haitian leader Jean-Bertrand Aristide is struggling to find willing accomplices to aid her in removing $84 million of the deposed politician's money to a safe location outside the war ravaged island.
Mildred Trouillot Aristide, has stayed in the capital after her husband fled to Central Africa at the end of a week of turbulent domestic unrest.
Since his flight Mrs Aristide has holed up at Porto Principe's central bank where the couple's huge wealth is stored, desparately e-mailing close friends, acquaintances, and latterly, complete strangers with the offer of a share of the cash for ensuring it's safe receipt in a stable domestic bank.
www.dialysis.co.uk /2004/march04.htm   (569 words)

  
 Indiana Printing & Publishing Co.
France, Haiti's former colonizer, and the United States, which sent 20,000 troops to restore Aristide after a coup in 1994, had suggested he step down for the good of his Caribbean nation of 8 million people.
It was not clear where Aristide's wife, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, was.
The couple had sent their two daughters to Trouillot's mother in New York last week.
www.zwire.com /site/news.cfm?BRD=1078&dept_id=151021&newsid=11043831&PAG=461&rfi=9   (250 words)

  
 HPH NOW, March 21, 2003, First Lady of Haiti Speaks about Public Health Needs on the Island
At left is Michael Reich, director of the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies.
The First Lady of Haiti described public health challenges in her country at a special event at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies in Cambridge on March 7.
Mildred Trouillot-Aristide, a Haitian-American lawyer, is the wife of Haiti's first democratically elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
www.hsph.harvard.edu /now/mar21/haiti.html   (178 words)

  
 MILDRED   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Search the MILDRED Family Message Boards at Ancestry.com (if available).
Search the MILDRED Family Resource Center at RootsWeb.com (if available).
Find graves of people named MILDRED at Find-a-Grave.com (or add one that you know).
www.worldhistory.com /surname/US/M/MILDRED.htm   (73 words)

  
 americas.org - Aristide To Marry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a former Catholic priest, confirmed rumors December 2 that he was planning to get married.
A Reuters report says he is engaged to Mildred Trouillot, a Haitian-American attorney who worked for Aristide during his three years in exile.
While in Washington, Trouillot reportedly worked in the office of lawyer and former U.S. Congress member Michael Barnes, a Maryland Democrat.
www.americas.org /item_12786   (62 words)

  
 Jamaica refuses to recognise new Haitian Govt. 17/03/2004. ABC News Online   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Mildred Trouillot Aristide, his wife, is at far right.
A row triggered by exiled president Jean Bertrand Aristide's visit to Jamaica has deepened, with authorities in Kingston saying they will not recognise the Government of Haiti's Prime Minister Gerard Latortue.
Mr Aristide and his wife Mildred, who arrived in Kingston Monday, were expected to spend several weeks in Jamaica, visiting their two daughters.
www.abc.net.au /cgi-bin/common/printfriendly.pl?http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/s1067563.htm   (616 words)

  
 NewsHour Extra: President of Haiti Resigns; U.S. Troops Enter Caribbean Nation -- March 1, 2004
Following weeks of violent protests, a U.S. military aircraft carried the displaced Aristide and his American wife, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, to the Central African Republic, where they are expected to stay "for a short time," according to state radio.
The couple had earlier in the week sent their two daughters to Mildred's mother's home in New York City.
In a letter explaining his resignation, the former president said that he left to prevent further bloodshed and to ensure that the new government would conform to Haiti's Constitution.
www.pbs.org /newshour/extra/features/jan-june04/haiti_3-01_printout.html   (833 words)

  
 Aristide Urges Peaceful Resistance to US 'Occupation' of Haiti
BANGUI, Central African Republic - Ousted Haitian leader Jean-Bertrand Aristide appealed from exile in Africa Monday for peaceful resistance to what he called the "occupation" of Haiti and repeated a claim he was kidnapped by U.S. forces.
Ousted Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide (R) arrives for a news conference with his wife Mildred Trouillot (L) at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Bangui, Central African Republic, March 8, 2004.
Aristide appealed from exile on Monday for peaceful resistance to what he called the 'occupation' of Haiti and repeated a claim he was kidnapped by U.S. forces.
www.commondreams.org /headlines04/0308-01.htm   (608 words)

  
 Boston.com / News / World / Aristide in Africa on first day in exile
BANGUI, Central African Republic -- A haggard Jean-Bertrand Aristide spent his first day in hastily arranged exile in Africa yesterday after rebels forced him from power as Haiti's first elected president.
Aristide, his wife Mildred Trouillot Aristide, and a few companions landed just after daylight in the Central African Republic, a nation as impoverished and nearly as coup-prone as Haiti.
Aristide called members of the US Congress and an African-American activist, Randall Robinson, later yesterday and told them he had been kidnapped by US troops.
www.boston.com /news/world/articles/2004/03/02/aristide_in_africa_on_first_day_in_exile   (616 words)

  
 americas.org - Rebellion Continues   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Spanish-language wire services reported that Aristide’s wife, Mildred Trouillot, left Haiti for Fort Lauderdale, Florida, along with her mother and her two young daughters on February 13.
Government sources said they were attending a family funeral and would return on February 16.
Trouillot left the country a few hours after her 14-year nephew, Luigi Leroy, was kidnapped as he arrived at his school in Port-au-Prince; the identity of the kidnappers was unknown.
www.americas.org /item_13617   (769 words)

  
 Aristide leaving—Problems staying
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Jan. 26—A dozen days from the end of his term, President Jean-Bertrand Aristide is preparing to leave the National Palace, but he will be leaving behind dozens of problem situations in a country where, over the past 16 months, most aspects of life have not improved and some have even gotten palpably worse.
For a few days, attention may have been drawn away from serious concerns by Aristide's marriage to Haitian-American Attorney Mildred Trouillot, but the realities of every day are inescapable.
The streets of the capital are piled high with garbage, many parts of the country have little or no electricity and this month the water company announced it does not have the capacity to serve Port-au-Prince's needs.
www.hartford-hwp.com /archives/43a/583.html   (1319 words)

  
 Marines Land in Haiti After Aristide Flees (washingtonpost.com)
As long as we don't see our real president (Aristide) we will stay mobilized," he warned.
Aristide and his wife, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, sent their two daughters to her mother in New York City last week.
Three hours after Aristide's departure, Supreme Court Justice Boniface Alexandre declared at a news conference that he was taking control of the government as called for by the constitution.
www.washingtonpost.com /wp-dyn/articles/A18479-2004Mar1_2.html   (652 words)

  
 Exiled Haitian Departs for Jamaica Over U.S. Protest (washingtonpost.com)
Monday and said he was "very happy" to be going to Jamaica, where he was invited by the prime minister for an extended stay.
Accompanied by his wife, Mildred Trouillot, Aristide then boarded a chartered jet, accompanied by Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.) and Randall Robinson, founder of the humanitarian organization TransAfrica, along with a Jamaican legislator and Aristide's attorney, who landed here Sunday to collect Aristide and fly him to Jamaica.
The mission was initially delayed pending permission from Bozize to leave the country.
www.buzztracker.org /2004/03/15/cache/107265.html   (709 words)

  
 STRONG V.I. SHOWING SET FOR HIV/AIDS CONFERENCE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
The conference has Delegate Donna M. Christensen on the speakers list.
Haiti's former first lady, Mildred Trouillot-Aristide, was also scheduled to speak, but conference organizers said they were unsure if she would make the event given Haiti's recent government upheaval.
The conference will be conducted in English, French, Spanish, and Dutch.
wwwrcm.upr.clu.edu /Noticias/2004/Marzo/05_strong_vi_showing_set_for_hiv.htm   (629 words)

  
 Conference Schedule Page
Mildred Trouillot Aristide serves as a Member of the Board of Directors for Aristide Foundation for Democracy where she promotes the work of the foundation by enhancing participatory democracy in Haiti and supporting economic cooperative initiatives.
She also serves on the coordinating committee for Lafanmi Selavi, a center for street children.
Mildred Troutillot Aristide earned her Bachelors of Arts degree in Urban Legal Studies from the University of New York and a Juris Doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
corona.tpsgi.com /rpc/Speakers.htm   (9501 words)

  
 CNN.com - Aristide's guest privileges pared in exile - Mar 6, 2004
BANGUI, Central African Republic (CNN) -- Ousted Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide remained for a fourth day Friday in a gilded cage in this dilapidated capital city, unable to communicate with the outside world, his spokesman said in a telephone interview from Paris.
Aristide, 50, and his American wife, Mildred Trouillot, have been billeted in an apartment on the grounds of the president's mansion since Monday, when they arrived here from Port-au-Prince accompanied by Aristide's brother and two bodyguards.
The villa is part of the presidential mansion, which is located in the middle of the capital on a five-acre spread overlooking the Ubangui River, within sight of neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo.
cnn.com /2004/WORLD/americas/03/06/aristide.exile   (788 words)

  
 CNN.com - Aristide appeals for peace in Haiti - Mar 8, 2004
Jean-Bertrand Aristide with his wife, Mildred, appealed for peace in Haiti during a news briefing Monday in the Central African Republic.
Aristide spoke a day after protests against him turned deadly in the streets of the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.
Seated with his wife, Mildred Trouillot Aristide, the former president appeared to speak openly.
cnnstudentnews.cnn.com /2004/WORLD/americas/03/08/haiti   (958 words)

  
 Democratic Underground - CAR sore about Aristide snub
The couple had sent their two daughters to Trouillot's mother in New York City last week.
Aristide, who has rejected calls to step down before his term ends in 2006, had accepted an internationally backed power-sharing plan that would allow him to remain as president but with significantly weakened authority.
Aristide’s daughters flee to US The two small daughters of Aristide left the stricken Caribbean island nation on Wednesday for the United States, Aristide's wife told CNN.
www.democraticunderground.com /discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=102x397509   (6160 words)

  
 THE DOUYON FAMILY HOME PAGE:Information about Jean Bertrand Aristide   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
He married Mildred Trouillot, daughter of Emile Trouillot and Carmen Jacob.
More About Jean Bertrand Aristide and Mildred Trouillot:
Children of Jean Bertrand Aristide and Mildred Trouillot are:
www.genealogy.com /users/d/o/u/Frantz-P-Douyon/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-1175.html   (66 words)

  
 Louisiana Weekly - Your Community. Your Newspaper.
As armed rebel forces closed in on Aristide's Port-Au-Prince palace last week, Aristide abruptly resigned and was whisked away by U. Marines.
He and his American-born wife, Mildred Trouillot, are being housed in Bangui, Central African Republic, reportedly without phone privileges after he told the Cable News Network that he'd been kidnapped.
Secretary of State Colin Powell has called the allegations "baseless, absurd."
www.louisianaweekly.com /weekly/news/articlegate.pl?20040315t   (936 words)

  
 Jean-Bertrand Aristide   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
Jean-Bertrand Arisitide and his wife Mildred, Feb. 2004
Aristide and wife Mildred are reunited with their children, 7-year-old Christine, left center, and 5-year-old Michaelle, on Friday, March 19, 2004 in Kingston, Jamaica.
Aristide, center, and his wife Mildred Trouillot, are welcomed
www.latinamericanstudies.org /aristide.htm   (284 words)

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