[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
24747: Hermantin(News)Bush lauds Haiti aid report
leonie hermantin <lhermantin@hotmail.com>
Posted on Tue, Apr. 12, 2005
Bush lauds Haiti aid report
The governor's Haiti Advisory group called on Florida to take a more active
role in helping Haiti move forward by offering expertise and technical
assistance in three key areas: economic development, security and disaster
preparedness.
BY JACQUELINE CHARLES
jcharles@herald.com
Six months after convening a group of Haitian Americans and Haiti supporters
to advise him on how Florida can best support Haiti's road to recovery, Gov.
Jeb Bush welcomed the group's final recommendations Monday, calling them
``embedded in the real world.''
The 25 recommendations focus on three key areas: security, economic
development and disaster preparedness. Far from controversial, they mostly
call for Florida to provide technical assistance to some existing programs,
tweak others and play a more active role in helping those who want to assist
Haiti.
The recommendations were presented to Bush and interim Haitian Prime
Minister Gerard Latortue at a luncheon to mark the opening of the
Haitian-American Chamber of Commerce of Florida.
''These are doable recommendations,'' Bush told a packed room of nearly 400
Haitian business professionals and others including Miami Mayor Manny Diaz,
who enlisted his police department's support in possibly helping to train
Haitian police.
''These recommendations . . . tap the greatest resource Haiti has,'' Bush
said. ``The greatest resources Haiti has are its people.''
Latortue said Haiti needs business people to help spur economic recovery and
job growth because the root of the ongoing violence, he believes, ``lies in
poverty.''
Latortue declined to discuss Haiti's political problems, other than to
re-emphasize that neither he nor anyone in his interim government will
accept a post in the new government following planned elections later this
year. Instead, he took advantage of the gathering at the JW Marriott, 1109
Brickell Ave., to offer his own progress report on the job his government
has done.
He cited as successes audits of government-owned enterprises like the
telephone and electrical companies, curbs on government corruption and cuts
to unnecessary spending such as paying ``extravagantly for lobbyists in
foreign countries.''
Latortue continues to be the target of some critics who say his government
has failed to improve life after former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide resigned on Feb. 29, 2004.
Outside the gathering, about 100 pro-Aristide supporters demonstrated
against Latortue and U.S. Ambassador James Foley, who also attended the
event. ''Latortue is an assassin,'' they shouted while carrying life-size
posters of dead Haitians, victims of the country's ongoing violence.
``Arrest him.''
Ignoring the protests, Latortue said he wants to foster a national dialogue
among Haitians to help erase the divisions and to get Haitians out of the
mentality of demanding the resignation of a government every time they
become dissatisfied.
''Haitians [have] to learn that when a government comes to office they come
for a certain time . . . You don't make them leave before their time,'' he
said.
Asked whether this means he disagreed with the calls for Aristide's
resignation, which led to his appointment as interim prime minister,
Latortue said Aristide was different.
''The entire country stood up against him,'' he said. ``Aristide is in the
past.''