|
Aristide in Exile
by Naomi Klein,
The
Nation
July 14, 2005
This article will appear in the August 2005 issue of The
Nation.
******************
Also published at : http://www.commondreams.org/views05/0715-03.htm
, and Truthout - http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/071605E.shtml
******************
(Demand stop to UN forces killing Haitian civilians in Haiti, go to:
)
******************
When United Nations troops kill residents of the Haitian slum Cité
Soleil, friends and family often place photographs of exiled President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide on their bodies. The photographs silently insist
that there is a method to the madness raging in Port-au-Prince. Poor
Haitians are being slaughtered not for being "violent," as
we so often hear, but for being militant; for daring to demand the return
of their elected president.
It was only ten years ago that President Clinton celebrated Aristide's
return to power as "the triumph of freedom over fear." So
what changed? Corruption? Violence? Fraud? Aristide is certainly no
saint. But even if the worst of the allegations are true, they pale
next to the rap sheets of the convicted killers, drug smugglers and
arms traders who ousted Aristide and continue to enjoy free rein, with
full support from the Bush Administration and the UN. Turning Haiti
over to this underworld gang out of concern for Aristide's lack of "good
governance" is like escaping an annoying date by accepting a lift
home from Charles Manson.
A few weeks ago I visited Aristide in Pretoria, South Africa, where
he lives in forced exile. I asked him what was really behind his dramatic
falling-out with Washington. He offered an explanation rarely heard
in discussions of Haitian politics - actually, he offered three: "privatization,
privatization and privatization." The dispute dates back to a series
of meetings in early 1994, a pivotal moment in Haiti's history that
Aristide has rarely discussed. Haitians were living under the barbaric
rule of Raoul Cédras, who overthrew Aristide in a 1991 US-backed
coup. Aristide was in Washington and despite popular calls for his return,
there was no way he could face down the junta without military back-up.
Increasingly embarrassed by Cédras's abuses, the Clinton Administration
offered Aristide a deal: US troops would take him back to Haiti - but
only after he agreed to a sweeping economic program with the stated
goal to "substantially transform the nature of the Haitian state."
Aristide agreed to pay the debts accumulated under the kleptocratic
Duvalier dictatorships, slash the civil service, open up Haiti to "free
trade" and cut import tariffs on rice and corn in half. It was
a lousy deal but, Aristide says, he had little choice. "I was out
of my country and my country was the poorest in the Western hemisphere,
so what kind of power did I have at that time?"
But Washington's negotiators made one demand that Aristide could not
accept: the immediate sell-off of Haiti's state-owned enterprises, including
phones and electricity. Aristide argued that unregulated privatization
would transform state monopolies into private oligarchies, increasing
the riches of Haiti's elite and stripping the poor of their national
wealth. He says the proposal simply didn't add up: "Being honest
means saying two plus two equals four. They wanted us to sing two plus
two equals five."
Aristide proposed a compromise: Rather than sell off the firms outright,
he would "democratize" them. He defined this as writing antitrust
legislation, insuring that proceeds from the sales were redistributed
to the poor and allowing workers to become shareholders. Washington
backed down, and the final text of the agreement - accepted by the United
States and by a meeting of donor nations in Paris - called for the "democratization"
of state companies.
But when Aristide began to implement the plan, it turned out that the
financiers in Washington thought his democratization talk was just public
relations. When Aristide announced that no sales could take place until
Parliament had approved the new laws, Washington cried foul. Aristide
says he realized then that what was being attempted was an "economic
coup." "The hidden agenda was to tie my hands once I was back
and make me give for nothing all the state public enterprises."
He threatened to arrest anyone who went ahead with privatizations. "Washington
was very angry at me. They said I didn't respect my word, when they
were the ones who didn't respect our common economic policy."
Aristide's relationship with Washington has been deteriorating ever
since: While more than $500 million in promised loans and aid were cut
off, starving his government, USAID poured millions into the coffers
of opposition groups, culminating ultimately in the February 2004 armed
coup.
And the war continues. On June 23 Roger Noriega, assistant secretary
of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, called on UN troops to take
a more "proactive role" in going after armed pro-Aristide
gangs. In practice, this has meant a wave of Falluja-like collective
punishment inflicted on neighborhoods known for supporting Aristide.
On July 6, for instance, 300 UN troops stormed Cité Soleil, blocking
off exits and firing from armored vehicles. The UN admits that five
were killed, but residents put the number of dead at no fewer than twenty.
Reuters correspondent Joseph Guyler Delva says he "saw seven bodies
in one house alone, including two babies and one older woman in her
60s." Ali Besnaci, head of Médecins Sans Frontiéres
in Haiti, confirmed that on the day of the siege twenty-seven people
came to the MSF clinic with gunshot wounds, three-quarters of them women
and children.
Yet despite these attacks, Haitians are still on the streets - rejecting
the planned sham elections, opposing privatization and holding up photographs
of their president. And just as Washington's experts could not fathom
the possibility that Aristide would reject their advice a decade ago,
today they cannot accept that his poor supporters could be acting of
their own accord - surely Aristide must be controlling them through
some mysterious voodoo arts. "We believe that his people are receiving
instructions directly from his voice and indirectly through his acolytes
that communicate with him personally in South Africa," Noriega
said.
Aristide claims no such powers. "The people are bright, the people
are intelligent, the people are courageous," he says. They know
that two plus two does not equal five.
Naomi Klein is the author of No
Logo: Taking Aim at the Brand Bullies (Picador) and, most
recently, Fences
and Windows: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the Globalization Debate
(Picador).
|
 |
 |
 |
International
Solidarity Day Pictures & Articles
May 18, 2005 |
Pictures
and Articles Witness Project |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Click
photo for larger image |
 |
Emmanuel "Dread"
Wilme - on "Wanted poster" of suspects wanted by the
Haitian police. |
 |
 |
_______________
Community
Leader,
Emmanuel
"Dread" Wilme reported killed July 6, 2005
_______________ |
_______________
Emmanuel
"Dread" Wilme speaks:
Radio Lakou New York, April 4, 2005 interview with Emmanuel "Dread"
Wilme
_______________ |
_______________
Urgent
Action
Alert- Demand a Stop to Killings
in Cite Soleil:
Background Info,
Sample letters and Contact information provided, April 21, 2005
|
 |
_______________
The
Crucifiction of Emmanuel
"Dread" Wilme,
a historical
perspective
|
 |
 |
 |
Charlemagne
Peralte - The old Bandit King of Haiti
* In 1919 the US murdered him and put the body on public display |
_______________
Urge the Caribbean Community to stand firm in not recognizing
the illegal Latortue regime: |
 |
|
 |
Selected
CARICOM Contacts |
 |
Key
CARICOM
Email
Addresses |
 |
 |
Slide
Show at the
July 27, 2004 Haiti Forum Press Conference during the DNC
in Boston honoring those who stand firm for Haiti and democracy;
those who tell the truth about Haiti; Presenting the Haiti
Resolution, and; remembering Haiti's revolutionary legacy
in 2004 and all those who have lost life or liberty fighting
against the Feb. 29, 2004 Coup d'etat and its consequences |
|
|
|
|
|
|