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The
U.S. in Haiti as a corruptible element - The U.S. war against Haitian
democracy and development
June
7, 2004
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See also:
US
Plants Agents in Haiti Police
Still Up Against the Death Plan in Haiti
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The U.S. in Haiti as a corruptible element did not begin with the events
of February 29, 2004 where military barracks replaced a school, nor
where U.S. Marines did nothing to stop the releasing of 3,000 Haitian
prisoners in Port au Prince.
The subversion of Haitian democracy, Haitian justice, prison and police
system continued from the first U.S.-supported Coup D'etat unabated.
That is, despite the U.S. return of President Aristide. Besides the
well documented destabilization tools of creating an artificial crisis
before February 5 through 29, 2004, through mass media propaganda, IRI,
NED, USAID, U.S. Embassy and even OAS and European Union support and
funding of a phony "civil society" opposition with minuscule
popular support base, the training and arming of former Haitian soldiers
and paramilitaries and a U.S. humanitarian embargo against the people
of Haiti, there was a consistent recruitment process going on in Haiti
to strum political and developmental paralysis and create the political
climate of chaos and disorder that culminated in the lost of life, since
February 29, 2004 of at least 3,000 Haitians with the destruction of
Haitian property and assets, including the assets of Haitian-Americans
who sends close to $900 million dollars a year to support their families
and family's assets in Haiti.
The tools for the recruitment process for Haitian saboteurs to destabilize
Haiti come in many forms, including use of U.S.
immigration laws, use of U.S power in the world to seek
asylum arrangements for ex-military officers, convicted killers and
suspected drugdealers who participated in the first Coup d'etat against
the people's mandate; use of the visa
carrot and U.S. funding to recruit and subvert journalist,
students, disappointed former Lavalas and most insidious of all, the
use
the professional training programs in Haiti and
the war on drugs and terrorism
to, sometimes manufacture conflicts and subvert otherwise clean and
non-coopted Haitian police officers and Lavalas officials attempting
to sincerely carry out their service duties on behalf of the mass Haitian
electorate. Haiti does not need, nor do the Haitian populace want, any
government authority to cuddle drugdealers and human rights violators.
Yet, it has been alleged that many times the U.S. agents in Haiti are
not so concerned about eradicating drug dealing and assisting with Haitian
democracy and that, in fact, drug enforcement and supporting Haitian
justice system has little to do with U.S. presence because, for the
most part, as long as the U.S. agents find a Haitian useful to their
war against Haitian democracy and President Aristide then they don't
seem to care about that persons actual involvement in drug-dealing or
human rights violations.
Examine, for example, the Guy Philippe, Jean
Tatoune and Louis Jodel Chamblain not to mention
the Michel Francois cases. Examine further the Toto
Constant and Danny Toussaint cases and how
the use of U.S. jail, threats of jail
and promises of leniency or asylum operates to undermine
the institutionalization of Haitian justice at the article "A
Marked Man" By Jim DeFede, Miami Newtimes,
August 28 -September 3, 1997; and, for further background information,
"Separating Cops, Spies" by Sam Skolnik written in March 1,
1999, Legal Times, and the Harkin's Senate speech regarding the credibility
of those who furnish information to U.S. policymakers about President
Aristide and Haiti in general.
Marguerite Laurent, Esq.
Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network
(Dedicated to protecting the human, civil and cultural rights of
Haitians
living at home and abroad)
*******
US plants agents in Haiti police
GreenLeft
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/1996/219/219p20c.htm
In an article to be published in the February 26 issue of the US left/liberal
weekly The Nation, investigative reporter Allan Nairn charges that the
US Central Intelligence Agency has placed agents inside the newly created
Haitian National Police.
Nairn cites peasant leader Chavannes Jean-Baptiste, head of the transition
team for president-elect René Preval, who was inaugurated on
February 7. Unnamed US officials confirmed the story, saying that much
of the CIA recruitment took place during training of the new police
by the International Criminal Investigations Training Program last year
at Fort Leonard Wood, in Missouri. ICITAP is run by the Federal Bureau
of Investigation (FBI).
Nairn also charges that the US government "is pressing on at least
two fronts to prevent further revelations about its secret work in Haiti",
in particular operations with the now disbanded Haitian military and
the paramilitary group, Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti
(FRAPH).
On one front, the US continues to withhold some 150,000 pages of documents
the US military seized from the Haitian army and the FRAPH shortly after
US-led United Nations forces began their occupation of Haiti in September
1994. Without guaranteeing the return of all the documents, the US now
wants the Haitian government to sign an eight-point memorandum severely
restricting the use Haiti can make of the "non-sensitive"
documents the US does turn over.
The second front is Emmanuel ("Toto") Constant, a former CIA
informant and the head of the FRAPH. Last December 7 Constant -- in
custody in the US since April -- called Nairn and offered to reveal
"everything". Four days later, Constant dropped his offer
after the US agreed that it would eventually deport him to Haiti in
a US government plane with "no advance notice" to the Haitian
government. Pentagon contractor Brown and Root is to provide the ground
services when the plane lands, and Constant will be processed "at
an isolated location" and protected through "crowd control".
[From Weekly News Update on the Americas, 339 Lafayette St., New York,
NY, 10012, USA; email nicanet@blythe.org.]
Still Up Against the Death Plan in Haiti
The Aristide government is straitjacketed by U.S. low-intensity warfare
and neoliberal economic demands
by Tom Reeves
Dollars and Sense magazine, September/October 2003
http://www.thirdworldtraveler.com/Caribbean/UpAgainstDeathPlan_Haiti.html
This March I visited Haiti for the first time since 1997. I expected
the worst. In publications across the political spectrum, North American
analysts condemn the government of President Jean Bertrand Aristide.
Haiti, they say, faces worse poverty and repression than ever. A corrupt
and devious Aristide is portrayed as a far cry from the lowly priest
the people overwhelmingly chose in 1991. Recently I asked a prominent
Canadian journalist why in a recent article he called Aristide a tyrant.
He replied, "Everybody knows that."
But on the street in Haiti, the picture was much more complicated. In
terms of violence and public order, for example, the situation has improved
dramatically. "Baby Doc" Duvalier (1971-1986) governed through
an obvious and paralyzing fear, engendered by the army and Macoute presence
in every neighborhood. (The Tontons Macoute were a paramilitary secret
police force that supported the Duvalier regimes.) During the coup period,
from 1991 to 1994, the military junta under Cedras did not even pretend
to govern Haiti. It simply exploited and terrorized the country. Huge
mounds of trash piled on every corner, even downtown and in elite business
areas; dead bodies lay rotting in the streets; gunfire peppered the
night air. Everywhere, the hopeless poor pressed on visitors under the
watchful eyes of military and Macoute, who stopped them if they actually
threatened a "blanc," the revealing term for foreigners of
any color.
Today, although the joyful street scenes that accompanied Aristide's
post-coup return in 1994 are gone, so too are the omnipresent military
and police. There is more calm and less panic. Most of the garbage is
cleared from the streets-and the streets are even washed at night in
many neighborhoods. People are sprucing up homes and businesses. The
country's improved sense of security was evident at this spring's Carnival,
which attracted nearly a million people with not a single death and
only a few minor incidents.
On the other hand, the standard of living in the country has not improved.
Most Haitians continue to live in abject misery, facing spiraling inflation
for basic items like rice and gas, an ever-devalued gourde (the national
currency), an unemployment rate of about 70%, and an average wage of
around $1 a day for those few who can find work. On this visit I saw
countless men and women with missing or stunted limbs, almost naked,
filthy, pulling themselves up steep hills by scooting over rough ground,
or if they were lucky on splintered boards. I saw hoards of children
as young as five or six running dangerously after cars to get a gourde
(about 2 cents).
None of this was much different from what I'd seen in 1986,1993 or 1997.
The numbing reality of the majority in this oppressed society has not
changed, nor has the smirking, self-righteous superiority and obvious
affluence of the tiny group at the top.
Aristide admitted he could not erase the effects of centuries of oppression
in a few years. This was especially so after he was entrapped in the
neoliberal box the United States imposed when it restored him after
the brutal 1991 coup that it had covertly sponsored in the first place.
Aristide promised that even the poor in Haiti would live in dignity
under his administration. If his program for the people failed, he pledged,
he would never again seek political office. North American media, the
tiny Haitian opposition, and quite a few Haitian intellectuals say he
has failed and must keep his promise: he must go, now. Many ordinary
Haitians disagree.
THE AMERICAN DEATH PLAN: NEW AND "IMPROVED"
Aristide, however poor a president, is not to blame for Haiti's ongoing
plight. The lion's share of the fault, instead, lies with what internationally-acclaimed
public health expert Paul Farmer has called "the structure of poverty
and oppression," imposed on Haiti by the United States and other
imperialist powers since its independence two hundred years ago. The
current version is "structural adjustment," the typical package
of policies the U.S. government and international financial institutions
(IFIs) demand of Third World nations: free trade, privatization, strict
adherence to debt repayment schedules, and so on.
Marie Kennedy and Chris Tilly described the effects of structural adjustment
on Haiti in these pages in 1996:
"The economy has gone from bad to worse. The resulting struggle
for survival undermines the possibilities for democracy. And the economic
program [the United States and international institutions] are imposing
threatens to further devastate the country. Haitians have a variety
of names for the program: "the neoliberal plan," "the
American plan." But the most vivid name was offered by a peasant
who said simply, "We call it the 'death plan'."
Aristide was unfortunate to be elected (for the second time) in 2000,
the same year as George W. Bush. Elitane Atelis, a member of Fanm des
Martyrs Ayibobo Brav (Women Victims of Military Violence), put it bluntly:
today, her country faces "what every Haitian baby knows is Bush's
game." The game is low-intensity warfare, a policy mix long familiar
to observers of U.S. policy toward "undesirable" regimes in
Latin America and elsewhere. The mix includes disinformation campaigns
in the media; pressure on international institutions and other governments
to weaken their support of the "target" government; and overt
and covert support for rightist opposition groups, including those prepared
to attempt a violent overthrow. Haitians are well aware of the U.S.
government's gambit. Haiti Progress, an independent leftist weekly often
critical of Aristide, last spring outlined what the writer called "a
multi-front strategy" the United States is carrying out for regime
change in Haiti.
Progressives, at least, should have been suspicious about the team Bush
put in place to manage his Haiti policy. Otto Reich at the National
Security Council and Roger Noriega in the State Department are among
those directing Bush's Haiti policy; joining them in orchestrating U.S.
foreign policy as a whole are Elliot Abrams, John Poindexter (until
his departure under fire in July) and John Negroponte. All of these
men were deeply involved in the Reagan administration's dirty war against
the Sandinistas in Nicaragua and the Iran-Contra scandal. "The
resurfacing of the Iran-Contra culprits has been nothing short of Orwellian
in this administration," opined Peter Kornbluh, senior analyst
at the National Security Archive, in News
AID EMBARGO
Shortly after Bush's own tainted election, his administration questioned
the outcome of some of the 2000 Haitian parliamentary elections, then
used these allegations to block the release of Interamerican Development
Bank (IDB) loans already approved for Haiti. The administration pressed
the World Bank, the IMF and the European Union to reduce other planned
assistance. The IDB loans alone total $512 million.
The U.S. rationale for withholding the aid has been repeated uncritically
in virtually all international media, including the liberal press. For
example, a March 2003 piece in the New York Review of Books deplores
"gross electoral fraud by the ruling party." Yet at the time
of the elections, not even the U.S. government asserted fraud, and the
elections for president and most legislative seats were declared free
and fair by the Organization of American States (OAS). All sides concede
that Aristide won the presidential ballot with 92% of the vote (with
varying reports of voter turnout). The sole disagreement is over run-off
elections for seven senators from Aristide's party (Fanmi Lavalas, or
FL) who obtained pluralities but not majorities in the first round.
The seven senators eventually resigned, making way for new elections.
Compared to the U.S. presidential election that year, the Haitian elections
can scarcely be called fraudulent.
A Domino's restaurant in Port-au-Prince is closed in observance of a
general strike called by the Coalition of 184 Civic Institutions, January
24, 2003. Businesses that cater largely to Haiti's small upper and middle
classes were the only ones that observed the strike.
In any case, the aid embargo has had severe consequences for Aristide's
ability to govern. Needless to say, without these resources, Aristide
was unlikely to be able to keep many of his promises to Haiti's poor.
Another result is that the Haitian government has been under tremendous
pressure to comply with U.S. and IFI requirements in order to get the
aid restarted. These requirements included paying the country's debt
service arrears. The Haitian Platform to Advocate Alternative Development
(PAPDA) and other organizations on the left have proposed a moratorium
on debt repayment. But Prime Minister Yvon Neptune laments, "Until
we have a clear alternative for investment, we simply cannot go it alone.
The embargoed aid is desperately needed by the Haitian people."
Paul Farmer agrees: "[Without the aid] the misery will just increase,
and thousands will die of AIDS, malaria and other diseases without any
hope of treatment. Those who say the aid is not worth what Haiti has
to do to get it do not live daily with the reality of poverty and suffering."
In mid-July, Haiti paid $32 million of its debt service arrears, using
virtually all its capital reserves. The United States then announced
that $34 million would go at once to Haiti for health care, water, and
roads (although virtually all of this amount will go directly to mostly
U.S.-based "contractors"). In late July, the IDB finally announced
the release of $143 million of the nearly $500 million pledged.
POLITICAL INTERFERENCE
Although aid may now begin to arrive, Aristide's government is still
operating under severe constraints on what it can conceivably accomplish.
On the political front, the United States has been working hard since
the elder Bush's presidency to forge an opposition that could depose
Aristide or at least prevent his administration from governing effectively.
The Convergence, as it's called, consists mostly of what Haitians call
particules, tiny political parties, from Maoists to freemarket liberals
and ultra-right wing Duvalierists. Perhaps the only opposition faction
with a genuine base is that of Chavannes Jean-Baptiste, founder and
leader of the progressive and successful Mouvman Paysan Papay (MPP)
in the Central Plateau, who has actually shifted his allegiance away
from the Convergence. With all these factions, support for the Convergence,
even according to U.S. government-sponsored polls, has never registered
more than 12%.
The Convergence was a product of "Democracy Enhancement,"
a project of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID),
which has been an arm of both low-intensity warfare and neoliberal restructuring
in many countries (including Iraq today).
Noam Chomsky cites Haiti expert Amy Wilentz, who characterized the State
Department's "democracy enhancement" project as "specifically
designed to fund those sectors of the Haitian political spectrum where
opposition to the Aristide government could be encouraged." Today,
the International Republican Institute (IRI), affiliated with the U.S.
government-funded National Endowment for Democracy, provides the Convergence
with significant support. The IRI has received an average of $3 million
annually from Congress since it established a permanent base in Haiti,
as well as millions more from private Haitian and U.S. sources. The
organization insists it is independent of the Republican Party, but
a look at its board members suggests otherwise: nearly all are current
or former Republican Party officials, Republican officeholders, or members
of Republican administrations.
This July, even the departing U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, Brian Curran,
lashed out against some U.S. political operatives, calling them the
"Chimeres of Washington" (a Haitian term for political criminals).
The most recent of these Chimeres have been associated with the Haiti
Democracy Project (HDP), headed by former State Department official
James Morrell and funded by the right-wing Haitian Boulos family. In
December 2002, the HDP literally created from whole cloth a new public
relations face for the official opposition, the "Coalition of 184
Civic Institutions," a laundry list of Haitian NGOs funded by USAID
and/or the IRI, as well as by the Haitian-American Chamber of Commerce
and other groups.
During the coup and since, USAID-sponsored "democracy enhancement"
has done its job: whole segments of the popular movement were chilled
or co-opted. Popular leaders were at first killed off or encouraged
to emigrate; later, many of the rest were bought off. What was once
among the most mobilized populations in the hemisphere has become severely
demobilized.
VIOLENT OVERTHROW
Aristide's ability to govern has not only been limited by the political
activities of an opposition forged and financed from abroad. Convergence
parties-and so, too, their U.S. backers-have been implicated in a series
of violent attacks on the Haitian government and its supporters. The
Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA), an independent research group,
has sounded the alarm. In early 2002, COHA wrote:
"Aristide has lived with the continued threat of a military coup
since his initial election.... The [Aristide] government weathered two
violent coup attempts in July and December 2001." The December
2001 armed attack on the National Palace has been downplayed by Aristide's
critics. Yet there is evidence that this was a genuine attempt to destabilize
Haiti in order to prove Aristide inept. Ernest Edouard, a Haitian radio
commentator in Miami, predicted the attack in advance. He said he had
attended a Miami meeting that included Haitians from the Dominican Republic,
as well as two Americans, who were well-funded and planning to carry
out such an attack.
More generally, COHA's reports itemize violent demonstrations and attacks
on both sides, but they emphasize the violence of some Convergence leaders
and blame the United States for supporting them. Throughout 2003, FL
leaders and government officials have been murdered by men in Duvalier-era
army uniforms or wearing the emblems of the "San Manman" (Motherless)
army. In late July, a car with five government officials was ambushed
near the Dominican border in the Central Plateau, killing four. Observers
said the attackers were clearly identified as part of the San Manman
army.
On May 6, Dominican police arrested five Haitians, including the official
Convergence representative in the Dominican Republic, Arcelin Paul,
at a meeting near the Dominican border, which they say was a recruitment
session for a planned attempt to overthrow the Haitian government. Soon
afterward, armed men attacked and disabled the largest electrical plant
in the country. Ben Dupuy, general secretary of the left-wing party
PPN, which is generally critical of Aristide, was quoted in Haiti Progres,
"There is no doubt these guys are true terrorists working with
the CIA under Dominican protection." All sides have noted the U.S.
buildup along the Dominican border, where 900 U.S. soldiers patrol jointly
with the Dominican army, whom they have armed with 20,000 M16s.
All of this seems to add up to what documentary filmmaker Kevin Pina,
who has been covering Haiti for over a decade, calls the "U.S.
funding of the Haitian 'Contras'."
Whatever we call them, there is an organized and well-funded armed group
with ties to the Convergence, based in the Dominican Republic, which
aims to overthrow the Aristide government. The Bush administration's
support for the Convergence and its refusal to denounce this violence,
as well as the U.S. military presence along the border through which
the "Manman" army easily travels, clearly implicates the United
States in this aim.
MEDIA DISINFORMATION
The Bush administration's effort to oust Aristide is complemented by
misinformed and biased media coverage in both the United States and
Haiti. The CIA's flagrant campaign in the mid-1990s to discredit Aristide
as mentally ill was proven totally false. A more recent example involves
numbers of anti- and pro-Aristide demonstrators. Everyone agrees that
the largest Convergence rally to date was the one last November 17 in
Cap-Haitien. According to Kevin Pina, some Haitian radio stations reported
60,000 demonstrators, and this figure made it into several North American
newspapers. Local officials put the number at 4,000, and independent
observers claimed no more than 15,000. Pina also notes that the pro-Lavalas
rally of November 2S had as many as 30,000 participants, according to
independent observers, yet the highest number quoted in mainstream media
is 2,000.
Brian Concannon, an attorney with the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux
(BAI), a group of international and Haitian lawyers sponsored by the
Haitian government to assist the judiciary with human rights cases,
gives an even starker example of the double standard the media (and
human rights groups) employ. "In December, 2001, an FL supporter,
Joseph Duverger, was attacked by a machete-wielding, proConvergence
mob near Petit Goave and left for dead. His enraged friends found Brignol
Lindor in the street. Lindor was a Convergence supporter with a weekly
radio show. The FL group killed him. Lindor is in every human rights
report (as one of the murdered journalists). Duverger is almost never
mentioned."
When the Haitian government has limited but clear successes in some
areas, the international media are virtually silent. Kevin Pina has
said that every time he has drawn the attention of foreign journalists
at Reuters or the Associated Press to successes in the Haitian government's
literacy campaign, the reporters have ignored him. One reporter finally
told him to stop giving him such stories. "We are not going to
report on positive programs in Haiti," Pina says he was told.
Although claims are made that journalists are unable to function freely
in Haiti, there are far more daily and weekly newspapers and strident,
popular radio stations there than one could imagine in the United States
or Canada. Many of them are shrill critics of Aristide. In media financed
by elite business interests, there are constant cries for the overthrow
of the government. None of this fits the image of a country where opposition
journalists face severe repression.
But the 2000 murder of Jean Dominique has been very damning to Aristide's
cause. Dominique was a crusading journalist of impeccable integrity
who angered most powerful groups in Haiti. Although four alleged trigger-men
were arrested in 2001, Dominique's widow, Michelle Montas, has expressed
outrage that the real culprits behind the murder have not been named.
But despite what she calls pressure from international groups, she refuses
to blame Aristide directly, though she does point to suspects within
his party. The Dominique case remains the most troubling human rights
stain on Aristide's reputation and has disillusioned countless former
supporters both in Haiti and abroad.
This case and a handful of others show that justice is very slow in
Haiti. Human rights activists, especially those who say they have received
threatening calls, deserve support and protection, as do journalists
who criticize the government. Yet all of this must be put in perspective.
The number of killings pinned on Aristide's supporters pales in comparison
with the more than 5,000 murders of Lavalas supporters that took place
during the three years of military rule in the 1990s.
ARISTIDE'S RECORD
This is the environment in which the Aristide government must function:
attempts to overthrow him; calls from Washington lobby groups for outright
regime change; an embargo on virtually all international aid. Yet one
hears the same cry from leftists, moderates and the right wing: it is
Aristide who has failed and must go. Leftists damn Aristide in particular
for neoliberal economic policies that they claim go beyond just complying
with the already draconian requirements of the United States and the
IFIs.
They say he has abandoned his original populist and socialist ideas
about justice in order to hang on to power at any cost-and to please
his greedy cronies.
The record does suggest a weak government with a President who is often
absent and invisible at crucial moments, yet who can be seen to interfere
directly in minute details when it shores up his image or protects his
close allies. But the record does not support the view that Aristide's
government has entirely abandoned its goals or compromised its values.
Rather, it shows modest but clear gains in a few areas, defensive moves
with regard to key public works and agriculture, and, in certain crucial
areas, a refusal to budge that explains the extreme antipathy of the
U.S. government.
During his first term, which began in January 1991, Aristide began to
make good on his populist platform. He revised the tax code, which had
taxed the middle class heavily, put a severe burden on the peasants,
and required virtually no taxes of the elite. Within months, income
taxes collected from the rich had already begun to generate significant
income, and import fees were being enforced for the first time. At the
same time, Aristide pressed for an increase in the minimum wage and
new price controls on oil and basic foodstuffs.
By the summer, he was under pressure from the IFIs, USAID, and other
potential donors to reverse these proposals. Aristide compromised on
some points, such as subsidies for oil, but continued to press for tax
reform and raising the minimum wage. A few months later, he was overthrown
by forces some of whom were trained and funded by U.S. military and
intelligence operatives.
In 1994, in return for the Clinton administration restoring him to office,
Aristide made huge compromises. His representative met with IFI and
other donor representatives in Paris and accepted virtually the whole
neoliberal program for Haiti, including holding down wages, lowering
tariffs, and privatizing government-owned enterprises. Members of the
Haitian diaspora and the solidarity movement were highly critical; many
argued that Aristide should have held firm against the neoliberal economic
program, even if it meant that the military government in Haiti would
continue in power. When Aristide spoke to an audience of Haitians and
solidarity activists in Boston in May 1994, he met fierce resistance
to his return under the conditions he eventually accepted. Aristide
responded clearly: "We may take some steps backward in order to
go forward, but we cannot do anything positive until we are in Haiti.
It is not only the mighty U.S. who can play a double game."
Members of Aristide's administration defend his decision to accept the
Paris agreement, in part on the basis that once back in office, they
would not necessarily implement all of the concessions they'd made on
paper. Lesley Voltaire, Aristide's former Chief of Staff and currently
Minister of Haitians Living Abroad, explains: "But you see that
his real policies have not been to follow their bidding even on economic
issues, and that is why they are opposing him. Despite all the pressure,
Haiti has not abolished tariffs-only lowered them. On privatization,
both Preval and Aristide dragged their feet so that only the two least
profitable public enterprises have been privatized all these years later-concrete
and flour."
The BAI's Concannon confirms the Haitian government's dilemma, and its
strategy: Small, poor countries do not say 'get lost' to the IFIs and
the U.S. They do occasionally, very politely, and pay for it: Arbenz,
Allende, Aristide in 1991. Small countries do say 'sure, we'll do that,'
then do the opposite or at least drag their feet. The best example is
the privatizations. The announced government policy has been, since
1994, to privatize. But the enacted government policy is very different."
The Aristide government's free trade zone agreements with the Dominican
Republic have come under particularly harsh criticism from progressives.
This year, Haiti has gone ahead with the first free trade zone project
in Maribaroux, and in June announced a second project in Ouanaminthe,
despite bitter protests by local peasants, among others. It's hard to
defend the free trade zones, but Prime Minister Neptune does: "Those
who criticize us, where would they find jobs that could put even a few
poor Haitians to work? Surely, even low-paying jobs and a small increase
in the minimum wage are better than nothing. It is also part of our
policy to spread the jobs outside Port-au-Prince, to keep people living
in the countryside." PAPDA head Camille Chalmers disagrees, calling
the job creation rhetoric "propaganda."
PAPDA and others urge alternative, regional economic initiatives for
Haiti. They propose a much closer alliance with Cuba, using money under
a debt moratorium to fund joint projects for agrarian reform and the
support of Haitian agriculture. In fact, the Haitian government does
have cooperative projects with Cuba and with the Chavez government in
Venezuela as well-both regimes on the U.S. government's hit list. The
Venezuelan government has offered to provide regular shipments of oil
at very reduced prices, which should help to stem Haiti's rampant inflation.
Under treaties between Haiti and Cuba, more than 800 Cuban medical workers
are currently in Haiti. Haiti also works with the CARICOM (Caribbean
Community) nations on crafting a regional economy which can partially
curb U.S. dominance. "CARICOM is an alternative economic and political
initiative," according to the BAI's Concannon. "The organization
does not talk a lot about opposing imperialism, but it is working towards
a trade bloc that may be a bulwark against the FTAA and other initiatives."
Haiti's ambassador to Cuba, Andrine Constant, told me she regularly
meets informally with her Cuban and other Latin American counterparts
to discuss regional strategy to offset U.S. hegemony. That alone must
drive the Bush administration wild.
WHAT THE HAITIAN PEOPLE WANT
Most people I talked to-workers, peasants, intellectuals, activists-criticized
the government severely for inaction at best and rampant corruption
at worst. Most were disappointed in "Titid" (as the peasants
call Aristide) and complained bitterly of a lack of direction for the
country. "Aristide is absent-we just don't know where he is,"
Wesner, a young former FL supporter in Cap-Haitien, told me. One of
the country's foremost poets-for years a staunch champion of Aristide-went
further. "Aristide is the smallest man I've met," he said,
"the most ignorant president we have had. Nobody is running the
country."
But at the same time, most Haitians appear to want Aristide to continue
in office. In spite of his criticism, the poet continued, "Aristide
must stay and finish his term. We got rid of a real tyrant, Duvalier,
but it took us four years to get even minimal stability. Now the opposition
says, 'Let's do it again!' By bringing back the military whom the U.S.
created for the express purpose of oppressing the Haitian people? No!"
Twenty-eight of thirty people who responded when I polled them in a
crowded Port-au-Prince market agreed. People are dissatisfied with the
disastrous economy, and they hold the government partly responsible.
Yet virtually everyone I met, including strident critics of Aristide,
wants to see the democratic process respected.
The Convergence and the "184 Institutions" appear to have
little or no support. PAPDA's Chalmers is very critical of Aristide.
But he is even more critical of the official opposition. "Aristide's
first administration made a good beginning, and they had the right program,"
he said in an interview. "I would say the international pressures
and the pressure of trying to govern without the ability to really reform
have robbed the government completely of its credibility. But the official
opposition is worse-it would be a joke if it were not so serious with
its U.S. backers."
Wesner, the Cap-Haitien youth, says, "It's the army I really despise.
At least now I can sit here with my friends and complain. Under the
military, I would be shot. When I saw Himmler leading the demonstration
by the Convergence last November, I was really scared." The aptly
named Himmler is Himmler Rebu, a former army officer who has been involved
in several coup attempts.
THE LEFT AND HAITI
Roger Noriega, speaking at the April 28 conference of the Council of
the Americas in Washington, linked U.S. policies in Haiti to those in
Venezuela and Cuba. He congratulated the OAS for overcoming its irrelevance
in past years" by adopting the Inter-American Democratic Charter.
Article 20, he said, lays out a series of actions to be taken ... in
the event that a member state should fail to uphold the essential elements
of democratic life." Noriega sees Article 20 as a formula for intervention.
He added, "President Chavez and President Aristide have ... contributed
willfully to a polarized and confrontational environment. It is my fervent
hope that the good people of Cuba are studying the Democratic Charter."
How could U.S. Ieftists fail to see the link between U.S. policies in
Cuba, Venezuela, and elsewhere, and those in Haiti? Why are so many
progressive voices raised much more loudly against Aristide than against
U.S. policy in the region? As one drawn into the energizing battle to
support Aristide, I think I understand. Twelve years ago, Haiti under
Aristide-a genuinely home-grown radical with a clear program for social
change seemed so promising. How disappointing is his record since being
elected overwhelmingly in 1991. He is not the intellectual giant and
moral hero most progressives-and Haitians-hoped for. Progressives also
underestimated how difficult it would be to make real headway against
U.S. imperatives in the region. Nor had we bargained for such a sharp
turn to the right in U.S. policies.
It is easy from the outside to bemoan Aristide's failures and to focus
solidarity work on that failure. But progressives should balance our
critique of Aristide with a determination to shine a light on how U.S.
policy maintains the "structure of poverty and violence."
Paul Farmer sums up this view: "Conditions in Haiti today are akin
to a battlefield in an undeclared war on the poor.... How can you rebuild
Haiti without massive resources...? Until that happens, there will be
misery and hunger and inequality.... Such 'structural violence, "which
has been perpetrated from above and without, will be reflected in local
violence.... You'd think that progressive observers, at least, would
make this connection. But many don't."
Tom Reeves is a retired professor of history and
politics from Roxbury Community College in Boston, where he was director
of the Caribbean Focus Program from 1986 to 2001. He was a founder of
the New England Observer Delegations to Haiti (NEOD), which sent eight
delegations to Haiti in the 1990s. His first visit to Haiti was in 1986
and his most recent visit was in March, 2003, when he gathered some
of the information on which this article is based.
**********
HAITI
Noam Chomsky
Let's stay in Latin America and the
Caribbean, which [former US Secretary of War and of State] Henry Stimson
called "our little region over here which has never bothered anyone."
Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president of Haiti in what's been
widely described as a free and democratic election. Would you comment
on what's happened since?
When Aristide won in December 1990 (he took office in February, 1991),
it was a big surprise. He was swept into power by a network of popular
grassroots organizations, what was called Lavalas-the flood-which outside
observers just weren't aware of (since they don't pay attention to what
happens among poor people). There had been very extensive and very successful
organizing, and out of nowhere came this massive popular organization
that managed to sweep their candidate into power.
The US was willing to support a democratic election, figuring that its
candidate, a former World Bank official named Marc Bazin, would easily
win. He had all the resources and support, and it looked like a shoe-in.
He ended up getting 14% of the vote, and Aristide got about 67%. The
only question in the mind of anybody who knows a little history should
have been, How is the US going to get rid of Aristide? The disaster
became even worse in the first seven months of Aristide's office. There
were some really amazing developments.
Haiti is, of course, an extremely impoverished country, with awful conditions.
Aristide was nevertheless beginning to get places. He was able to reduce
corruption extensively, and to trim a highly bloated state bureaucracy.
He won a lot of international praise for this, even from the international
lending institutions, which were offering him loans and preferential
terms because they liked what he was doing.
Furthermore, he cut back on drug trafficking. The flow of refugees to
the US virtually stopped. Atrocities were reduced to way below what
they had been or would become.
There was a considerable degree of popular engagement in what was going
on, although the contradictions were already beginning to show up, and
there were constraints on what he could do.
All of this made Aristide even more unacceptable from the US point of
view, and we tried to undermine him through what were called-naturally-"democracy-enhancing
programs." The US, which had never cared at all about centralization
of power in Haiti when its own favored dictators were in charge, all
of a sudden began setting up alternative institutions that aimed at
undermining executive power, supposedly in the interests of greater
democracy. A number of these alleged human rights and labor groups became
the governing authorities after the coup, which came on September 30,
1991.
In response to the coup, the Organization of American States declared
an embargo of Haiti; the US joined it, but with obvious reluctance.
The Bush administration focused attention on Aristide's alleged atrocities
and undemocratic activities, downplaying the major atrocities which
took place right after the coup. The media went along with Bush's line,
of course. While people were getting slaughtered in the streets of Port-au-Prince
[Haiti's capital], the media concentrated on alleged human rights abuses
under the Aristide government.
Refugees started fleeing again, because the situation was deteriorating
so rapidly. The Bush administration blocked them-instituted a blockade,
in effect-to send them back. Within a couple of months, the Bush administration
had already undermined the embargo by allowing a minor exception-US-owned
companies would be permitted to ignore it. The New York Times called
that "fine-tuning" the embargo to improve the restoration
of democracy!
Meanwhile, the US, which is known to be able to exert pressure when
it feels like it, found no way to influence anyone else to observe the
embargo, including the Dominican Republic next door. The whole thing
was mostly a farce. Pretty soon Marc Bazin, the US candidate, was in
power as prime minister, with the ruling generals behind him. That year-1992-US
trade with Haiti was not very much below the norm, despite the so-called
embargo (Commerce Department figures showed that, but I don't think
the press ever reported it).
During the 1992 campaign, Clinton bitterly attacked the Bush administration
for its inhuman policy of returning refugees to this torture chamber-which
is, incidentally, a flat violation of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, which we claim to uphold. Clinton claimed he was going to change
all that, but his first act after being elected, even before he took
office, was to impose even harsher measures to force fleeing refugees
back into this hellhole.
...Haiti, a starving island, is exporting food to the US-about 35 times
as much under Clinton as it did under Bush. Baseballs are coming along
nicely. They're produced in US-owned factories where the women who make
them get 10¢ an hour-if they meet their quota. Since meeting the
quota is virtually impossible, they actually make something like 5¢
an hour.
Softballs from Haiti are advertised in the US as being unusually good
because they're hand-dipped into some chemical that makes them hang
together properly. The ads don't mention that the chemical the women
hand dip the balls into is toxic and that, as a result, the women don't
last very long at this work.
In his exile, Aristide ha[d] been asked to make concessions to the military
junta.
And to the right-wing business community.
That's kind of curious. For the victim-the aggrieved party-to make concessions
to his victimizer.
It's perfectly understandable. The Aristide government had entirely
the wrong base of support. The US has tried for a long time to get him
to "broaden his government in the interests of democracy."
This means throw out the two-thirds of the population that voted for
him and bring in what are called "moderate" elements of the
business community-the local owners or managers of those textile and
baseball-producing plants, and those who are linked up with US agribusiness.
When they're not in power, it's not democratic.
(The extremist elements of the business community think you ought to
just slaughter everybody and cut them to pieces and hack off their faces
and leave them in ditches. The moderates think you ought to have them
working in your assembly plants for 14 cents an hour under indescribable
conditions.)
Bring the moderates in and give them power and then we'll have a real
democracy. Unfortunately, Aristide-being kind of backward and disruptive-has
not been willing to go along with that.
Clinton's policy has gotten so cynical and outrageous that he's lost
almost all major domestic support on it. Even the mainstream press is
denouncing him at this point. So there will have to be some cosmetic
changes made.
But unless there's an awful lot of popular pressure, our policies will
continue and pretty soon we'll have the "moderates" in power.
Let's say Aristide is "restored." Given the destruction of
popular organizations and the devastation of civil society, what are
his and the country's prospects?
Some of the closest observation of this has been done by Americas Watch
[a US-based human-rights monitoring organization]. They gave an answer
to that question that I thought was plausible. In early 1993, they said
that things were reaching the point that even if Aristide were restored,
the lively, vibrant civil society based on grassroots organizations
that had brought him to power would have been so decimated that it's
unlikely that he'd have the popular support to do anything anyway. I
don't know if that's true or not. Nobody knows, any more than anyone
knew how powerful those groups were in the first place. Human beings
have reserves of courage that are often hard to imagine. But I think
that's the plan-to decimate the organizations, to intimidate people
so much that it won't matter if you have democratic elections.
***************
"Transformation is only valid if it is carried
out with the people, not for them. Liberation is like a childbirth,
and a painful one. The person who emerges is a new person: no longer
either oppressor or oppressed, but a person in the process of achieving
freedom. It is only the oppressed who, by freeing themselves, can free
their oppressors."
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Barbados
Pressed not to engage with Death regime
May 18, 2004 |
Barbados' Shameless Path-
Pressed Not to Engage Haiti by Dawne Bennett
Caribbean Net News - Barbados Coresspondent |
International
Solidarity Day Pictures & Articles
May 18, 2005 |
Pictures
and Articles Witness Project |
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Ayiti
Flag Day
May 18, 2005 |
Three
unarmed Haitians died from Bullets on Haiti's Flag Day
Marguerite Laurent
HLLN
May 19, 2005 |
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Ayiti
Flag Day
May 18, 2004 |
At
least 9 demonstrators killed during huge march on Haiti's Flag
Marguerite Laurent
HLLN
May 19, 2004 |
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Ezili Danto Witness
Project: Direct
form Haiti - Jean's Report on the May 18, 2005 Demonstration |
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May
18, 2005 Pro-democracy anti-occupation demonstrations flare across
Haiti
Haiti Progrè, This Week In Haiti
May 25 - 31, 2005
Vol. 23, No. 11 |
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UG
group solid with Haiti
Thursday,
May 19th 2005
Stabroeknews.com |
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Haiti
Occupation and Solidarity
by Jean St.Vil
Zmag.com
May 16, 2005 |
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Paper
Tiger, Rising Dragon
China's Deployment in Haiti Treads in Familiar Footsteps
by Pranjal Tiwari
May 19, 2005 |
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