The station was founded as
Radio Haiti and was broadcast on both AM and FM and later renamed to
Radio Haiti-Inter.
Jean Dominique, who started working at the station as a reporter, bought the lease to the station in 1968. The station was the target of various attacks by oppressive government regimes throughout its history, due to the democratic and anti-corruption stance of Dominique. In 1980 the Haitian regime closed the station and arrested some station journalists, and Dominique was forced into exile. The station resumed its activity in 1986 after the fall of
Jean-Claude Duvalier, but closed again in 1991 after the coup d'état against
Jean-Bertrand Aristide. The station reopened in 1994 after Aristide's return. Jean Dominique was assassinated on April 3, 2000, upon attempting to enter the station. A station employee Jean-Claude Louissaint was also killed in the attack. The station continued to broadcast for 3 years after Dominique's death, helmed by his wife
Michèle Montas. Radio Haiti-Inter ended broadcasting in 2003, due to threats against Montas and other employees. The station and the story of its founder was documented in
Jonathan Demme's film
The Agronomist. ==See also==