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#1606: Questions about Leadership : Chamberlain replies to Dorce
From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>
Kathy Dorcé wrote:
"They" didn't let Aristide implement any of the social reforms necessary
to
heal Haiti. Stopping graft being just one of them. When you change the
entire system from one of entitlement (if you are in a position of power
you
may take what you can) to one of doing the job you were elected or
appointed
to do, for a set salary, that might be harmful to your health! "Just when
I get
elected they stop the money flow!"
________
Just a minute, let's not rewrite history as it speeds away from us. It's
true that
Aristide was overthrown, that the elite and maybe even the devilish
Americans
were glad about it and that much of the elite then set to and backed army
rule.
But the coup was set off by a dispute with the army over its budget, the
ill-thought-out humiliation of its leaders and above all by the reflex of
one of its
drug lords, Michel François (who conceived and executed the coup, not
Cedras,
and who Aristide was supposedly "pursuing").
Aristide did not try to "change the entire system." In fact, one of his
first actions
was to do the usual thing of appointing a cabinet of his friends and their
friends
(some competent, some corrupt), completely shutting out his political
allies who
organised his last-minute campaign. There was some perceived reduction in
corruption, but in most cases everything continued in the same rotten
old way, where 99% of people are appointed because of who they know, not
what they can do. Check out why his health minister, an honest guy called
Daniel
Henrys with years of solid work in NGOs, quit in disgust a week before the
coup.
Because Aristide was overthrown by a bunch of baddies, human psychology
is such that the victim at once becomes an angel. Very handy. If there is
a great
need, and people wish to believe in someone, this is what will tend to
happen,
but that belief rarely squares much with what's happening on the ground.
Aristide's one great achievement is his abolition of the army. He didn't
much fight
corruption and in recent years has not been fighting it at all (to put it
politely).
The money flow did not stop when he was elected either. In fact, his
government
negotiated a package of $500 million in foreign development aid a couple of
months
before the coup, evidence of foreign goodwill and the government's good
efforts.
The problem was and is the concrete presentation of projects to justify the
use of this money. The Haitian government and officials are pretty bad at
this, for all
the reasons we know. The foreign funding suppliers have since mostly been
waiting
and waiting and waiting... rather like the Dutch lawyer in the Pharval
case. There's not
much getting round this, by using desperate last-ditch devices of
questioning
definitions or blaming foreigners for everything, so as to avoid the
substantive issues.
How is the vicious circle to be broken?
Greg Chamberlain