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  1. simact.net › project › belle-riveBelle Rive - SImACT

    About TheProject. Belle Rive is a proposed planned community to be situated on a 24-acre oceanfront site in Jacmel, Haiti. Upon completion, Belle Rive will be equipped with all the amenities of an upscale residential community comprised of villas, single family homes, condos and townhouses.

  2. Bellerive was born in Port-au-Prince in 1958. As the son of a prominent doctor, he left Haiti at a very young age to study in Switzerland, France, and Belgium. With a degree in Political Science and International Relations, Bellerive returned to Haiti in 1986, just before the overthrow of Jean-Claude Duvalier. He is married to Myriam Estevez De ...

  3. The Palace de la Belle Rivière (French: Palais de la Belle Rivière) is a former palace in Petite Rivière de l'Artibonite, in the Artibonite department of Haiti. It is also known as the ‘’palace of 365 doors’’ ( French : Palais de 365 portes or French : Palais de trois cent soixante-cinq portes ). [1]

  4. Belle-Rivière (English: "Beautiful River") is a communal section in the Nippes department of Haiti. It is the second communal section of Miragoâne. Neighboring sections • In December 1802, the malice of Belle-Riviere, still faithful to the French, was composed largely of men of color, most of...

  5. Former Prime Minister and Minister of Planning and External Cooperation, Republic of Haiti. Born in 1958 in Port-au-Prince, Jean-Max Bellerive received his schooling in Europe before returning to Haiti in 1986. In 1990, he founded Sibel Consult, a management and project development agency with some colleagues.

  6. Palais de la Belle Rivière (aka, Palais de 365 Portes) This is one of King Henri Christophe’s palaces (it does not, alas, have 365 doors–or windows for that matter). The pictures at the end of this gallery are from 1996, after an IOM-financed rehabilitation. After the rehab, this site was host to a school, dispensary, NGO offices, etc.

  7. En 1898, Guillaume Chéraquit entreprend pour la troisième fois de lancer un quotidien de renseignements et d'annonces à Port-au-Prince. Il fonde "Le Matin" qui devient quinze mois plus tard "Le Nouvelliste".

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