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12585: Haiti's Not-So-Free Zones - Multinational Monitor (fwd)



From: Tttnhm@aol.com

Multinational Monitor

June 2002 - VOLUME 23 - NUMBER 6

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T H E    F R O N T
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Haiti's Not-So-Free Zones

At the beginning of April, Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and his
Dominican counterpart, Hypolito Mejia, met near the border town of
Ouanaminthe in northeast Haiti to inaugurate the construction of a new
industrial free zone. The first two of a projected 26 factories to be built
on the site are expected to begin operating early next year.

Funding for the joint venture will come in the form of a $7 million
investment by Grupo M, a Dominican apparel company based in the city of
Santiago. Grupo M, which already has 24 factories and 13,000 employees in the
Dominican Republic, will use the plants in the new Haitian zone to fulfill
labor-intensive contracts such as the assembly of t-shirts and pants for
export. The company already counts among its list of clients such famous
brand names as Gap, Tommy Hilfiger, Banana Republic and Abercrombie & Fitch.

Grupo M President Fernando Capellan told the Dominican press that groups of
140 Haitians will be trained in sewing operations every two months, and the
first two factories would employ some 1,500 Haitians within three years.

In his speech at the inaugural ceremony, President Mejia said the free zone
was "the first child of a marriage without divorce" between Haiti and the
Dominican Republic. Relations between the neighbors have long been strained,
and a particular source of tension has been the treatment of the tens of
thousands of Haitians who cross the border each year to find work on
Dominican sugar cane plantations and construction sites. These migrant
workers have few, if any rights, and are poorly paid. The Dominican army
periodically sweeps through areas of the country, rounding up Haitian-looking
(i.e. black-skinned) men and, if they have no residency papers, immediately
deporting them to Haiti at the nearest border crossing.

Mejia stressed that the best way to stop Haitians from crossing the border in
search of a living in the Dominican Republic was to help create jobs in
Haiti. He said a further 8,000 workers will be employed in other clothing
manufacturing plants to be established later in the same park,

The Haitian government too has portrayed the new free zone as an initiative
that can boost its faltering economy. Poverty and unemployment in Haiti
deepened during three years of international sanctions imposed while a
military regime held power from 1991 to 1994, and most international
development aid has been suspended since Aristide's Lavalas Family Party took
power in May 2000.

However, a number of Haitian nongovernmental organizations and peasant groups
have voiced strong opposition to the Ouanaminthe industrial zone, and to
plans to establish a dozen other free zones along the 300-kilometer long
border.

Of particular concern is the way that the plans for the Ouanaminthe
industrial park have proceeded under a veil of secrecy. Dorsainville Alpha of
the Peasant Movement to Develop Ouanaminthe complains that the surveying of
land to be used for the zone had not only caused damage to peasants' crops,
but that "no explanation has been provided by the authorities. Not a squeak
from the mayor, deputies or senators."

Peasant farmers are concerned that the industrial park is being built on 50
to 80 hectares of some of the best agricultural land in the region.
Agronomist Gaston Etienne told the Haitian AlterPresse news agency, "One
hectare of land on this fertile plain, planted with rice, and properly
irrigated, would yield around 10,000 gourdes [US$357] per month, whereas if a
peasant works in the free zone factory he will earn a monthly wage of just
800 gourdes [US$28]."

One peasant farmer added, "When the time comes for the assembly factories to
relocate to healthier climes, what are we going to grow on all that
concrete?"

Haitian authorities blocked a demonstration of local opposition at the time
of the inauguration ceremony. Peasant groups linked to the Solidarité
Frontaliere (Border Solidarity) network say that banners and placards in
Creole and Spanish that they had prepared for the event were seized by
authorities representing the northeast departmental delegation.

Agronomists, human rights groups and political activists planned another
demonstration in Ouanaminthe on May Day, but this too was derailed when
government officials announced that at the same time and same place they
would distribute free tools to peasant farmers.

Two coalitions of Haitian organizations, the Platform to Advocate for
Alternative Development (PAPDA) and the Refugees and Repatriated Support
Group (GARR), have demanded that the government reveal the wage rates and
work conditions in the factories, what rights unions will have, which
country's labor laws will be followed, and how a population influx to the
area will be handled. But progressive organizations fear that the plan will
go ahead regardless.

Huguette Charles of Solidarité Frontaliere say peasants will not passively
accept the free zones. "The authorities have promised to compensate us for
the land, but what use is the money really? We know that the minimum daily
wage in Haiti is just 36 gourdes [US$1.30] and that doesn't cover our daily
needs. Even if the free zone generates 10,000 jobs, it's not enough. All we
want is our land, and if we have to spill blood to keep it, then so be it."

-- Charles Arthur

Charles Arthur is author of Haiti in Focus.



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