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Haitians Seek Diversion in Traditional Cockfights
Tue February 18, 2003 08:17 AM ET
By Michael Deibert

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (Reuters) - It's Sunday afternoon in the hilly and crowded Port-au-Prince neighborhood of Nazon.

As people head home from church dressed in their Sunday best and others pause to sample the aromatic pork fried by market women in black pots, Emil Piton, 63, heads to the "gague" or cockfighting ring he owns.

Inside, dozens of men gather around a concrete pit littered with feathers and speckled with blood. The tin roof above them does not quite reach down to the concrete blocks supporting it, and the resulting space lets some air into the otherwise sweltering room.

"How much men? Place your bets!" Piton says as the men, beer or rum bottles and cigarettes in their hands, eagerly gesture to the two birds, one black and one greenish-brown, being led into the pit by their owners.

In a flash the hoods the birds wear to keep them calm are off, and the two birds are clucking and clawing away at one another.

Cockfighting, a tradition in many Caribbean and Latin American nations, is older than the nation of Haiti itself, imported to the region from England and France, where it was hugely popular in colonial times, historians say.

NO FIGHT TO THE DEATH

Perfectly legal in Haiti, the sport is less vicious than the version practiced in some parts of the world. The birds do not wear metal spurs and rather than fight to the death, they fight only until an owner calls time and a winner is declared.

Although it seems brutal to some, cockfighting is as much a part of Haiti's traditional life as bullfighting is to Spain, and there have rarely been any voices raised in protest.

In Haiti today, as an economic downturn sends people scrambling for survival in an atmosphere of instability and political crisis, the tradition provides a much-needed release for Haiti's beleaguered poor majority.

"When there is a gague, people are there only to attend and watch the match, our problems can't enter," Lithene Pierre, 27, says as he eats bits of spicy conch from a plastic cup.

"Cockfighting is a distraction from the losing battle that so many Haitians are fighting with poverty," said Michele Wucker, author of "Why the Cocks Fight: Dominicans, Haitians, and the Struggle for Hispaniola."

"The cockfight mirrors Haiti's political violence, but it also provides a 'safe' arena where Haitians can release frustration and aggression. Spectators may lose money betting, or an owner's pride may get bruised, but only the birds really get hurt."

Haitians have watched their country get poorer in recent years as the value of its currency, the gourde, has tumbled, and the country has been wracked by political unrest.

Since his re-election in November 2000, Haiti's President Jean-Bertrand Aristide has been locked in a bitter dispute with opposition politicians over May 2000 parliamentary elections that observers charge were tabulated to favor Aristide's Lavalas Family party.

In recent months pro- and anti-government protests, riots and strikes have affected all parts of the impoverished Caribbean nation of 8 million.

ROAR OF THE CROWD

Inside the gague, none of that seems to matter. As the birds claw and peck at one another, a great roar goes up from the crowd whenever contact is made.

The birds stagger and rush around the concrete pit, with men standing on any available surface and leaning on their neighbors, straining to watch the action.

The crowd is overwhelmingly male, and the only women present are the vendors selling rum, moonshine and snacks.

As a reminder that cockfighting is not only a pastime, but also a significant business, a man passes out cards advertising a match to be held the following weekend.

The prize for first place will be 3,000 gourdes or roughly US$67, an astronomical sum to most Haitians and more than most families bring home in an entire month.

Outside the hall, men wait patiently, hooded birds under their arms. Others sit and play a dice game. From the seemingly never-ending expanse of hills that make up the neighborhood, more men trudge toward the gague.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=ourWorldNews&storyID=2244716

Source: http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20030218/lf_nm/haiti_cockfight_dc_1

 


 
Predawn rooster crowing sparks dispute in Southwest Ranches

By Milton D. Carrero Galarza
Staff Writer

Southwest Ranches -- Susan Chaoui took sleeping pills for three months to keep the crowing of her neighbor's roosters from waking her up.

She and her husband, Jorge, have complained to the Broward Sheriff's Office, debated dozens of people in a Town Council meeting and threatened to sue. They are still not getting any rest.

"I don't want to get up at 4 a.m. listening to somebody's birds going ballistic," Susan Chaoui said. "If I want to get up at 4 a.m., I'd set my alarm."

The roosters, which belong to Mirta Valdés, have become the talk of a town that sees itself as a haven for animal lovers.

The controversy has caused Mayor Mecca Fink to mail a survey to the nearly 7,000 residents on whether to change the town's interpretation of the Broward County noise ordinance.

The ordinance forbids allowing any animal to habitually bark, whine, howl, crow, crackle or make noise that annoys neighboring residents.

However, Town Administrator John Canada said, "farm animals are not considered to be a nuisance. That's our interpretation of the county code."

Susan Chaoui says such a policy leaves them without recourse.

"Here we are paying taxes, and the rights of the animals are protected more than the rights of the people," she said.

Southwest Ranches, by Davie and Pembroke Pines, incorporated two years ago with a mission of preserving its rural lifestyle and resisting what residents consider nitpicky rules. But the Chaouis and others think some rules are needed.

Jorge Chaoui lived peaceably in his $300,000 home at Country Estates on Southwest 49th Court for about eight years. When he married Susan, she and Jorge were friendly with their neighbors, the Valdés family.

But then the neighbors bought some roosters and chickens and eventually began breeding them. The noise levels increased, and several months ago Jorge complained.

He told the Valdés family he needs to sleep because he works as a contractor and leaves his home by 6 a.m. every day.

But the neighbors were unable to reach an agreement, so the Chaouis called the Sheriff's Office. The town pays the Sheriff's Office to enforce its codes, but this case was eventually dropped.

"The county [noise] ordinance is not stringently enforced," said Jim Leljedal, a Sheriff's Office public information officer. "There's a lot of room for subjectivity. [Town officials] have advised us that they don't believe farm animals are a nuisance."

The Chaouis, who own a dog, said they have nothing against animals, but the town should ensure that residents don't infringe on their neighbors.

Susan Chaoui, who works from home as a real estate agent, says the dispute has made it uncomfortable for her to walk to her patio, which borders her neighbor's property. She and her husband were hoping the town would mediate, but now they're considering legal action.

Valdés said her husband has moved 12 roosters to a relative's home. She still has a couple that roam around the patio with dozens of chickens and two geese.
The roosters, she said, are helping her son develop a sense of responsibility. She said her neighbors should adapt because crowing is not a crime.

"She can't sleep because she has the windows open," Valdés said. "That's not the roosters' fault. Close the window!"

Deputy Town Attorney Keith Poliakoff said the survey results, due in April, will be a guide for the town but will not be binding.

The mayor alluded to the rooster controversy recently on the front page of the town newsletter.

"Many of us who are neighbors with a rooster can remember at least one morning when, if the rooster hadn't cock-a-doodled so loudly, we could have slept late," she wrote. "Most mornings, though, the sound of a rooster crowing brings with it the joy of living in an area where, if I want to raise chickens, I can."

Milton D. Carrero Galarza can be reached at mcarrero@sun-sentinel.com or 954-385-7912.

Copyright © 2003, South Florida Sun-Sentinel


Another AR Fact We Could Call Mis-Information........

"That game cock there is missing his comb and waddle. It could be indicative of the fact he's used as fighting bird."
 
 
 
 
Metro Animal Services Confiscates Dozens of Roosters
 

Reporter: Andy Cordan

Metro animal cruelty investigators have confiscated dozens of roosters. Now the question is: are the birds involved in an illegal cock fighting organization?

Overseas, large crowds often gather to watch and wager on roosters that battle to the death.

Here in Tennessee, cock fighting is illegal, but it's an activity that still thrives in secret.

"We have found some things that raise an eyebrow."

At 10:00 Tuesday morning, investigators with Metro Animal Services raided an out of the way location, confiscating more than three-dozen roosters.

Officials here don't know yet if these birds are being raised for the cockfighting industry, but there are some disturbing signs.

"That game cock there is missing his comb and waddle. It could be indicative of the fact he's used as fighting bird."

Investigators told News 2, normal farm roosters have a comb on the top of their heads. It's usually red, but a high percentage of the roosters at the location Tuesday had their combs cut off. In the cock fighting industry, it's common - done to give battling birds less to grab onto.

"These have been sharpened, too."

In addition to birds with razor sharp talons, investigators also found discarded syringes and products like "rooster booster."

There was also something else odd there. There was an electric fence around the roosters, powered by an extension cord, which connected to a nearby power pole. Essentially, whoever is operating the rooster farm is also pirating power.

Nashville Electric Service investigators told News 2, there is no record of power being supplied to the property since the early 1980's, but whoever is operating there tapped into an open meter - a very dangerous proposition.

"You could be electrocuted."

Believe it or not, the man who owns the property is the man who called investigators. He claimed he hadn't been to the property in awhile, and when he finally stopped by, he was as surprised as anyone to see roosters everywhere.

Right now, the birds are with Metro Animal Services while the investigation into who was raising them and for what purposes continues.

News 2 at 6
02.18.03

Source: http://www.wkrn.com/Global/story.asp?S=1138013&nav=1ugFE4id