Aviole Paul-Blanc
Aviole Paul-Blanc, also known as Madame Ulrick Paul-Blanc, was a Haitian politician. She and Madame Max Adolphe were elected to Parliament in 1961, becoming the first female parliamentarians in Haiti.
Aviole Paul-Blanc | |
---|---|
Member of Parliament | |
In office 1961– | |
Constituency | Hinche 1 |
Biography
Paul-Blanc was a candidate of National Unity Party in the first constituency of Hinche in the 1961 parliamentary elections. With the PUN being the only party to contest the election, she was returned unopposed to Parliament, becoming one of the first two female MPs alongside Madame Max Adolphe.[1]
In 1975 she was arrested and jailed after a shipment of illegal arms in her name was uncovered. Her husband was also jailed and died in prison in July 1976.[2] She was released in December 1976 as part of a Christmas amnesty.[3][4]
References
- First Women Deputies Sit In Unicameral Haiti Sun, 14 May 1961
- Caribbean Refugee Crisis, Cubans and Haitians: Hearing Before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-sixth Congress, Second Session, May 12, 1980 p88
- Patrick Lemoine (2011) Fort-Dimanche, Dungeon of Death P154
- 427. Telegram 3658 From the Embassy in Haiti to the Department of State Office of the Historian
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