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Haiti’s famed Oloffson Hotel, a cultural landmark and celebrity haven, was incinerated amid rising violence by gangs that ...
The historic Hotel Oloffson, an emblem of Haiti’s cultural heritage, was destroyed in a fire blamed on armed gangs in Port-au-Prince.
The violent arson that destroyed the iconic Hôtel Oloffson leaves Haiti’s LGBTQ+ community without a rare refuge. For decades ...
Rolling Stone on MSN10d
The Hotel Oloffson Was a ‘Safe Haven’ in Haiti. Gang Wars Have Turned It to AshesOver nearly 100 years, the hotel survived political upheaval, military occupation, and earthquakes, the steadfast cultural ...
Haiti’s once-illustrious Grand Hôtel Oloffson has been burned down by gangs this past weekend. The beloved Gothic gingerbread home in Port-au-Prince that inspired books, hosted parties until dawn and ...
Prince, long a haven for artists and writers, poets and presidents, a symbol of Haiti's troubled politics and its storied ...
Building visited by creatives and politicians from around the world set alight by gangs as unrest grips country ...
Jackie Onassis and Mick Jagger once slept there, and writer Graham Greene immortalized it. Now Haitian gangs have destroyed it.
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The World from PRX on MSNHistoric hotel, symbol of Haiti’s past, burns amid gang violenceThe World's Host Carolyn Beeler speaks with Harold Isaac, a reporter based in Port-au-Prince, about the iconic Hotel Oloffson ...
The Oloffson served as a presidential summer palace in the early 1900s and then became a U.S. Marine Corps Hospital before a Swedish sea captain converted it into a hotel in the 1930s.
The Oloffson served as a presidential summer palace in the early 1900s and then became a U.S. Marine Corps Hospital before a Swedish sea captain converted it into a hotel in the 1930s.
The famous Hotel Oloffson hotel in Port-au-Prince, Haiti is pictured Jan. 20, 2000. The latest in the Oloffson's long line of operators is Richard Morse, the son of an American scholar and a ...
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