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20822: Esser: US and Haiti: Imperial Arrogance at its Worst (fwd)



From: D. Esser torx@joimail.com

Dissident Voice
www.dissidentvoice.org

March 25, 2004

US and Haiti: Imperial Arrogance at its Worst
by Justin Felux

Maybe I should have known better, but I almost couldn't believe my
eyes when I read a recent piece in the Miami Herald about Haiti.  In
describing the Bush administration's reaction to Jamaica briefly
hosting President Aristide and allowing him to reunite with his
daughters, the report said, "Jamaica's decision ... has infuriated
Bush administration officials ... Asked whether the United States
will take any concrete measures against Jamaica, U.S. officials say
the Bush Administration will not cut aid to fight AIDS in the region
or reduce other kinds of humanitarian assistance."  How utterly
gracious of the Bush administration!  You know a country has become
too powerful for its own good when it refrains from denying
life-saving aid to a tiny, helpless country and considers it an act
of courtesy.

Officials did warn, however, that "other nonhumanitarian bilateral
programs could be slowed down."  The U.S. is attempting to force
Jamaica to send Aristide to Nigeria, a place which he has expressed
no interest in visiting.  The U.S.-installed Prime Minister of Haiti
has complained about Aristide's visit, despite the fact that he
himself took refuge in Jamaica during the dictatorship of "Papa Doc"
Duvalier.  General James T. Hill, head of the U.S. Southern Command,
warned President Aristide to "keep his mouth closed" while in
Jamaica.  This sort of dastardly arrogance has typified U.S. policy
toward our neighbors in the Americas, and it has been especially
prevalent with regards to Haiti.  It is assumed that we have the
right to meddle in the affairs of countries less powerful than us and
punish them when they disobey our commands, as President Aristide was
guilty of.  Sadly, this shameful disrespect for national sovereignty
cuts across party lines.  A report in a 1995 issue of Haiti Progres
describes a not-so-cordial visit Al Gore made with President Aristide:

"Gore read the riot act to Aristide on adhering to the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Structural Adjustment Program
(SAP) ... Gore went beyond diplomatic niceties, and forcefully
insisted that Aristide implement the SAP, leave office in February,
and retain [unpopular neoliberal] Prime Minister Smarck Michel.  'We
discussed the need for continuing international assistance to meet
the developmental requirements of Haiti and the steps the government
of Haiti and its people need to take in order to ensure the continued
flow of these funds,' Gore smoothly threatened."

When a country is as dependent on aid as Haiti is, a threat to cut
off aid amounts to nothing short of a death threat to hundreds, if
not thousands, of innocent Haitians, especially children.  This is
why President Aristide referred to the cutting off of aid as
"economic terrorism."  It had the effect of suffering and death, just
as a bomb or a missile would.  Now that Aristide is gone, however,
expect the flow of aid to become uncharacteristically generous.  The
U.S. and France will do everything in their power to prop up and
support the new puppet government that came to power through a
violent coup.

Remember, the reason given for cutting off aid to the Aristide
government was the bogus charge that the 2000 legislative elections
were "flawed."  The charge was that seven Senate seats out of 3,500
positions filled that year should have gone to a runoff.  Instead,
the person with the most votes won.  Apparently, this offended the
democratic sensibilities of the U.S. government.  It seems a bit
strange then that the same U.S. government has no qualms about giving
aid to a "government" that came to power by violently overthrowing
the legitimate leader and having a "Council of Wise Men" arbitrarily
fill the vacated government posts.  Haiti Progres made a rather
poignant observation after the 2000 elections here in the United
States:

"Fraud, corruption, voter intimidation, confusing ballots, racial
profiling, lost ballot boxes, destroyed ballots, incompetent and
abusive polling site supervisors, polling sites closing early, and
many other irregularities have all come to light due to the
incredibly tight U.S. presidential race between Republican candidate
George W. Bush and Democrat Al Gore ...  Meanwhile, for many
Haitians, the U.S. election fiasco is proof that there is a God...
and that he has a sense of humor ... It was God himself who made this
thing happen the way it happened, so that the whole world can see how
the Americans have absolutely no moral authority to go supervise or
judge any election in any other country."

Meanwhile, the thugs have been rampaging across the countryside
killing, raping, kidnapping, intimidating, looting, and emptying
prisons.  According to a report in the Kansas City Star, "after weeks
of political violence in the capital had added to the corpses piling
up in the morgue, three trucks rumbled off in the middle of the
night, carrying more than 700 bodies."  Damages from looting are
estimated to be around $300 million.  The leader of the new puppet
government, Gerard Latortue, recently visited Gonaives and gave a
speech praising these killers as "freedom fighters."  These are the
same people the Bush administration had denounced as "thugs,"
claiming they had no connection to the "political opposition." 
Latortue was brought to the city in a U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopter
and gave his speech surrounded by black-shirted and heavily armed
guards.

Gonaives was the site of the infamous 1994 Raboteau Massacre.  Jean
Tatoune was convicted to life at hard labor in connection with the
massacre, but had escaped from prison and participated in the coup
against Aristide.  One has to wonder what the residents of the
Raboteau slum thought about Latortue's exaltation of Tatoune as a
"freedom fighter."  He also praised Amiot Metayer, a very popular
leader and former Aristide backer in the Gonaives area who had been
recently assassinated.  Aristide has been falsely accused of ordering
the assassination.  It is more likely that Metayer was killed by the
other side, perhaps by one of Guy Philippe's armed bands.  They are
obviously the ones who benefited from Metayer's killing.

Philippe, a known human rights abuser and drug trafficker, has been
described by the New York Times as a "gentleman" who is
"personable."  He and his armed gangs have refused to give up their
weapons and continue to kill and intimidate pro-democracy activists,
many of whom are in hiding.  Philippe claims they need to keep their
guns in order to maintain "security."  Aristide backers in the slums
of Port-au-Prince, on the other hand, have voluntarily turned in many
of their weapons after urging from the occupying forces.  Aristide
backers who have refused to turn over their arms are being forcibly
disarmed by the occupying forces whereas zero effort is being made to
disarm Philippe's gangs.

Aristide's supporters are being derisively referred to as "chimères,"
a term coined to demonize supporters of Lavalas.  Whenever I read the
word "chimères" I think of how the word "gook," the term used to
demonize NLF peasants during the Vietnam War.  The occupying forces
have attacked and killed several alleged "chimères" in the cities. 
Others have been caught in the crossfire or shot because they didn't
obey instructions due to the language barrier.  According to AHP
News, A man named Louis René Balmyr was shot seven times because he
didn't stop quickly enough at a checkpoint.  Despite being shot seven
times, he was handcuffed and not taken to the hospital until 20
minutes after the incident.  The report said that "For many weeks
now, citizens of Port-au-Prince have been locking themselves up
inside their homes as soon as night falls because of the ever-growing
sense of insecurity in the streets."

The situation remains the worst outside of Port-au-Prince, however,
where it seems the brutal former military is in charge.  Jean Charles
Moise, the mayor of Milo, reported from hiding that "They come into
your home. They take you, they beat you up, they kill you. They burn
down homes. They do anything they want, because they are the only law
in town.  The journalists are in Port-au-Prince, but here in the
north no one is reporting what's going on, that the former Haitian
military is killing people. They are killing about 50 people a day in
Cap Haitian. It's happening not just in the northern department but
also in the central plateau, in the Artibone region."  Father Paul
Carrier, a missionary who had just returned from Haiti, painted an
equally grim portrait:  "People you could tell are afraid and
intimated by the rebels in charge. They're driving around with guns
drinking rum, drunk. People disappear in the night. People are raped.
It's living under terror."

Many reports indicate that the police are working with the thugs and
former military people.  When the rebels attacked the Haitian
countryside, many people who expected they might be targets fled to
"safe houses" that they had arranged to hide in before the attack. 
These safe houses were established in cooperation with the police. 
However, once they got to the safe houses, they found them full of
Haitian police and former military.  This is the same police force
that was once accused of being "politicized" in support of the
Aristide government.  That same police force is now indiscriminately
arresting and harrassing Aristide supporters.  According to Carrier,
this situation has made people reluctant to even talk about
politics:  "They can't talk to each other because they don't know
what side people are on and people literally disappear. Rebels take
them, they're killed and bodies wash up on the seashores."

CARICOM will be meeting this week in St. Kitts to discuss the current
crisis and what to do about it.  Thus far, CARICOM has bravely stood
up to the world powers and their allies in the Haitian opposition. 
However, enormous pressure is being brought to bear by the U.S. and
others, and the 15 small, vulnerable countries of CARICOM will not
likely be able to stand up to the U.S. as the threats become more
serious.  They need the help of us citizens in the United States to
bring pressure onto our leaders and the world community to support
democracy in Haiti.  The media has already forgotten about Haiti. 
Even some of the alternative press has stopped paying attention.  We
must keep Haiti under the radar.

Justin Felux can be contacted at justins@alacrityisp.net.
.