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Nov 17, 2021, 11:34:45 PM11/17/21
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Phil Panaritis


Six on History: Haiti

1) Haiti descends into chaos, yet the world continues to look away. Editorial           Board, Washington Post

Haiti has descended into a state of political, economic and security collapse.

"The free fall in the Western Hemisphere’s poorest country is accelerating, and it is a pipe dream to imagine it can pull itself together without outside intervention. To oppose a muscular international force that could restore some semblance of order is to shrug at an unfolding humanitarian disaster.

In the face of Haiti’s agonies, the heedlessness of the Biden administration and the United Nations is unconscionable.

With more than a third of Haiti’s population of 11 million already in need of food assistance, rampant criminal gangs have paralyzed fuel deliveries, without which economic activity — and the availability of food and medical care — has ground to a halt. The government is an empty shell and often in league with the gangs who have seized control of entire neighborhoods and critical roadways. An epidemic of kidnappings — whose victims include 17 missionaries, all but one of them Americans, now being held for ransom — has spread unchecked.

To oppose intervention is to be complicit in the resulting chaos and suffering.

The outlines of Haiti’s current chaos were predictable following the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in July. He presided over a hollowing-out of already feeble institutions and relied on gangs as enforcers [with US support from beginning to end]. His death triggered a collapse in what passed for order and governmental authority. Today, no one is in charge — except for violent armed gangs whose terrain is concentrated around the capital, Port-au-Prince.


Haitian civil society, its vibrant network of social, health and political organizations, is unarmed, divided and impotent. The police, long reviled as corrupt and feckless, are outgunned. Mayhem is enveloping nearly every aspect of daily life. Massacres, gang rapes and violent arson attacks on neighborhoods are widely reported.

No one with a passing knowledge of Haitian history can doubt that past interventions have left scars [sic], and that the troops [as in soldiers, not to be confused with state policies, ambassadors, generals, even an ex-president] who executed them did damage. But what are the alternatives today, as Haiti’s nosedive gathers speed, to stop the meltdown? Those who cite the shortcomings of past interventions as the rationale to oppose a new one have no viable answer to that question [just as you have no viable answer to the questions: What form will "intervention" take?  Who will your Haitian "partners" be?  What lessons have been learned from the ignominious legacy of past French, American and UN  interventions catastrophes - you know, the "scars" and "damage" thing?]

It is impossible to accurately predict what comes next in Haiti, but there is virtually no scenario in which the news will get better. Elections are impossible amid such disorder, so there is no prospect of establishing a government with a shred of political legitimacy.

Gangs led by strongmen might continue to fill the power vacuum. One particularly powerful warlord, openly maneuvering to seize power, is promoting pandemonium and halting fuel supplies in hopes of toppling the government. Whether he succeeds or fails, neither scenario provides a blueprint for restoring order, or the provision of food and medical supplies in a spiraling humanitarian crisis.



Following the Moïse assassination in July, the Post editorial board called for international intervention to prevent what we saw as a foreseeable emergency. That emergency has now arrived, with predictably dire consequences. Will the world continue to avert its eyes and give excuses for inaction?"




2) How the U.S. and France Made Haiti Poor, Al Jazeera Video

"Haiti is the first Black-led republic, but now it’s often characterized as “poor,” “dangerous” and “unstable.” What has contributed to Haiti’s misery? What is missing in this conversation?" #Haiti #France #Colonialism






3) America’s cruel reality does not live up to its ideals or, rather, its myths,           Leonard Pitts Jr., Miami Herald 

"Those pictures are traumatizing. 

That’s because they contain so much more than what’s in them, so much more than horse-mounted U.S. Border Patrol agents at the Rio Grande in Texas, running down and flogging would-be Haitian immigrants. No, those pictures contain George Floyd and forced removal from ancestral land, contain internment camps and the Pettus Bridge, contain every time the state, in its awful power, came down like a hammer on the head of the tired and poor yearning to breathe free. 

That’s why social media was set ablaze Monday, why the White House called the pictures “horrific” and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said they were “heartbreaking.” It’s why the Department of Homeland Security launched an investigation.

As well they should. Those pictures contain multitudes. 

It is a sad fact that we seem to have lost the thread where America is concerned. Indeed, outside the easy patriotism of Lee Greenwood’s song and the ignorant xenophobia of those who think what America really needs is to be made “great again,” there is real concern about the sustainability of this experiment. America, we once liked to say, is the only nation founded upon an ideal.

But an ideal, like any living thing, must be nourished in order to survive. Ours has become severely malnourished, having been fed on empty calories of jingoism and myth, a sepia fable of virtues many of us love to trumpet — liberty! justice! for all! — without really trying to live. 

The cognitive disconnect between trumpeting and living is something else that is visible in those pictures. “This is why your country is shit, because you use your women for this,” one agent announced to a group of women and children in a video uploaded by Al Jazeera. As if enslavement by colonizers, and a 19-year U.S. occupation that brought puppet government, forced labor, U.S. control of Haitian finances, brutal violence and racist paternalism — “Think of it!” said William Jennings Bryan, secretary of state under Woodrow Wilson, “Niggers speaking French.” — did not play some role in Haiti’s present challenges. 

No, says an ignoramus on horseback. Your country is bleep because you seek to flee its wretchedness. What country’s wretchedness do you suppose the ignoramus’ family once fled to get here? And why does the ignoramus forget? 

Never mind. 

This is not an argument that seeking asylum is a human and legal right, though it is both. No, this argument is grounded upon a simpler point: Human beings deserve to be treated like human beings.

One was appalled, but not particularly surprised, to have to say that when the Trump administration made cruelty its policy, caging mothers and fathers and snatching away their children. But one is both appalled and surprised to have to say it again now that Joe Biden is president. One is also disappointed. What happened this week on his watch is nothing less than an outrage. 

Obviously, there is a need to re-think U.S. immigration policy and enforcement. Like the military and the police, the Border Patrol must be purged of the nationalists and extremists who seem to have found a home in its ranks. Any individual who thinks it’s a good idea to jump on a horse and herd human beings like cattle is an individual who needs to be employed elsewhere. Because if those pictures contain multitudes, they also contain a warning thoughtful Americans will heed. 

You can starve an ideal only so long before you kill it altogether."





4) NYTimes.com: The prospect of U.S. military intervention in Haiti carries            haunting echoes.

" ... The Haitian government’s extraordinary request for U.S. forces to help stabilize the country in the aftermath of the assassination of its president last week carries haunting vestiges from American military interventions that happened more than a century ago.

Back then, the United States dispatched forces without an invitation from Haiti. The American government was motivated by Haiti’s internal turmoil and a willingness to meddle in the affairs of neighbors to protect its own interests under the Monroe Doctrine.

In 1915, President Woodrow Wilson sent the Marines into Haiti, calling the invasion a justifiable response to avert anarchy after a mob assassinated Haiti’s president, Jean Vilbrun Guillaume Sam. The American military stayed for nearly two decades.

But even before that, Mr. Wilson saw fit to take military action in Haiti, worried about what his administration saw as the growing influence of Germany there, according to a historical page about the U.S. interventions on the State Department archive website.

In 1914, his administration sent in Marines who removed $500,000 from the Haitian National Bank for what the administration called “safekeeping” in New York, giving the United States control of the bank, the website said.

Eighty years later, President Bill Clinton ordered more than 23,000 U.S. troops sent to Haiti in what was termed “Operation Restore Democracy,” aimed at ensuring a transition that would return the ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to power.

In 2004, President George W. Bush sent in the Marines as part of an “interim international force” after Mr. Aristide resigned under intense U.S. pressure. 

... "

https://www.nytimes.com/live/2021/07/09/world/jovenel-moise-assassinated/us-military-intervention-history?smid=em-share-live




5) Kim Ives on His Report, "WikiLeaks Haiti: The Aristide Files" (Democracy                             Now!) 2011

"DemocracyNow.org - A new exposé on Haiti reveals how the United States led a vast international campaign to prevent former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide from returning to his country while he was exiled in South Africa. It's part of a series of reports by The Nation magazine and the Haitian weekly Haïti Liberté that draw from almost 2,000 U.S. diplomatic cables on Haiti released by WikiLeaks. The cables show that high-level U.S. and U.N. officials coordinated a politically motivated prosecution of Aristide to prevent him from "gaining more traction with the Haitian population and returning to Haiti." The United States and its allies allegedly poured tens of millions of dollars into unsuccessful efforts to slander Aristide as a drug trafficker, human rights violator, and heretical practitioner of voodoo. Another recent exposé based on the cables details how Haiti's unelected de facto authorities worked alongside foreign officials to integrate at least 400 ex-army paramilitaries into the country's police force throughout 2004 and 2005. The WikiLeaks cables reveal just how closely Washington and the United Nations oversaw the formation of Haiti's new police force and signed off on the integration of paramilitaries who had previously targeted Haiti's poor majority and democratically elected governments. Democracy Now! interviews Haïti Liberté editor Kim Ives, whose latest article for TheNation.com is "WikiLeaks Haiti: The Aristide Files." For the complete transcript, to download the podcast, or for Democracy Now!'s special report on the return of Aristide to Haiti, visit http://www.democracynow.org/2011/8/11...
FOLLOW DEMOCRACY NOW! ONLINE: Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/democracynow
Twitter: @democracynow Subscribe on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/democracynow Daily Email News Digest: http://www.democracynow.org/subscribe






6) It's Not Just the Missionaries — There Were 782 Kidnappings in Haiti This                          Year, Cécile Accilien,Truthout 10-30-21

"President Joe Biden has received daily briefings this week on the 17 North American missionaries and children who continue to be held hostage in Haiti, according to the White House, and the U.S. has reportedly deployed three FBI agents to Haiti as well.

The involvement of U.S. citizens and one Canadian citizen in this particular hostage situation have caused the kidnapping to draw some attention to this incident within U.S. media, but the broader context of widespread kidnappings in Haiti continues largely to go unnoticed in the U.S.

In the first half of October alone, at least 119 known kidnappings (that is the official number) have taken place in Haiti. And according to the Center for Analysis and Research in Human Rights, there have been at least 782 known kidnappings in Haiti since January 2021.


The kidnapping that led to the hostage situation in which the U.S. has become politically involved occurred in Croix des Bouquets, a town located 11 miles from Port-au-Prince. According to the weekly New York-based Haitian Newspaper Haiti Observateur, on October 16, the notorious Haitian gang Katsan Mawozo (400 Mawozo) kidnapped more than 30 individuals, including 17 American and Canadian missionaries and children ranging in age from 8 months to 15 years who were in Haiti as part of the Ohio-based group Christian Aid Ministries. The gangs are asking for $17 million in U.S. dollars.

A day later, on October 17, another armed gang, the G-9 Family and Allies, drove off the de facto prime minister, Ariel Henry, prohibiting him from commemorating the assassination of Emperor Jean-Jacques Dessalines, the first leader of independent Haiti, who was assassinated on October 17, 1806. That this gang could categorically prevent the prime minister himself from entering the area of Pont Rouge for the ceremony speaks to the fact that gangs are becoming stronger and expanding their control of the country. Misery and fear continue for thousands of people in Haiti. Emperor Dessalines must be turning in his grave.



Because Americans are now being kidnapped in Haiti, we are hearing about an issue that has long plagued Haiti, which has the highest rate of kidnapping per capita of any country in the world. American and Canadian lives matter. Yet thousands of Haitians have been and continue to be tortured, killed, raped, extorted and kidnapped on a daily basis. Nearly 95 percent of kidnappings in Haiti since 2018 have targeted Haitian citizens. As a representative from the Christian Aid Ministries stated, “This time of difficulty reminds us of the ongoing suffering of millions of Haitians. While our workers chose to serve in Haiti, our Haitian friends endure crisis after crisis, continual violence, and economic hardship.”




A popular Haitian film, Kidnappings (2008), depicts the complexity and nuance of the kidnapping economy in Haiti. The rise of kidnappings is believed to have started in the early 2000s under former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who armed people in the slums as a way to protect himself because he didn’t have enough police. The great majority of the people who align themselves with Aristide — known as chimè — lived in Cité Soleil, a commune of Port-au-Prince.

Nearly 95 percent of kidnappings in Haiti since 2018 have targeted Haitian citizens.

Political parties, political authorities, the political elite and the business elite have been nurturing the gangs and fomenting the kidnapping crisis. The kidnapping business is in fact supported by the convergence of interests of the political and business elite and the international community, while the interests of the vast majority of Haitians are obviously not taken into account. Now the gangs cannot be tamed, and they are everywhere. The gangs need ammunition, weapons and ransom money in order to function. Clearly, all those resources flow through international channels.

Yet the gangs are now managing the very people who originally commissioned and controlled them. If the powers that be — both in Haiti and in the international community, including the United States — really want the kidnappings to stop, they have the ability to leverage banks and arms experts to make it harder for the gangs to continue their kidnapping business.

Some sources have stated that there are around 500,000 illegal guns in Haiti.



Indeed, there are so many guns that there are swaps between Haitian gangs and Jamaican gangs. The large number of illegal guns in Haiti facilitates the kidnapping trade. But Haiti does not produce guns. Where are the guns coming from? Who allows them into the country? Who benefits from their presence? Although Haiti signed the International Arms Trade Treaty in 2014, it is unclear to what extent it is respected. In spite of the U.S. arms embargo requiring that any firearms that are supposed to go to Haiti go through the U.S. State Department, it is still easy to import guns to Haiti, in part because of the weak police force and corruption of political and business elite.

[from where though? Who supplies the weapons and profits from this trade?  Qui bono? ... enter an elegant "free-market solution" ... so maybe somewhere in a country that manufacturers and sells a lot, really a lot, of weapons ... best to be a locale close to the Western Caribbean ... somewhere with a large Haitian émigré population ... getting warmer! ...  a place with a lotta (high-power cigarette) boats and marinas would be nice,  even better if that place had notoriously lax gun laws and was governed by an ambitious demagogue who claimed it was a veritable beacon of 2nd Amendment Freedom (think Parkland, Stand your Ground)   
                             
In the "gun problem" paragraph above, the U.S. is only mentioned in the context of setting out sensible and safe rules for importing guns -- poor trusting gringo victims -- imagine how disappointed they were to discover American good intentions were bollixed again by corrupt and incompetent "natives" (think Claude Rains: "There's gambling going on here!").  

So not only does the article completely omit the role of the U.S. free market as Haiti's primary gun supplier, it inserts a few disclaimers reminding readers that it's not our fault, but then makes no mention at all of the Sinkhole Sunshine State, except the old pre-assassination link below.  However, the first round of arrests outside the Island, besides the Columbian mercs already in Haitian jails from Day One, was in South Florida, where prosecutors said the assassination had been planned and financed!]


Until there is real conversation about the deep inequality that marks Haitian society and sustainable change is enacted, the business of kidnapping will continue. We cannot and should not talk about the gang violence in Haiti without putting it in a larger historical, geopolitical and social context. Among the issues we should probe are the role of the police and criminal legal system in Haiti. The police are not respected or trusted by a majority of Haitians. It is estimated that over 70 percent of Haiti’s prison population is in pretrial detention.

The business of kidnapping is not unique to Haiti, nor is it new. Kidnapping was spread through the Americas by the Europeans. Gangs and kidnapping have been imported to Haiti the same way cholera and guns were imported. Europeans went to the African continent and kidnapped people to enslave them for profit in the Americas. Prior to the arrival of the enslaved, Europeans kidnapped Native Americans (in the case of Haiti, the Taínos). For instance, in the early 16th century, Queen Anacaona, ruler of the kingdom of Xaragua, was abducted by the Spanish under false pretenses. In June 1802, Toussaint Louverture, a prominent leader of the Haitian Revolution, was kidnapped and taken to France on a ship called Le Héros and imprisoned in the Jura mountains, where he died in 1803.

We cannot and should not talk about the gang violence in Haiti without putting it in a larger historical, geopolitical and social context.

We could think of the U.S. occupation of Haiti (1915-1934) as a form of kidnapping — an abduction of Haitian freedom and the very notion of liberty. The U.S. Marines took $500,000 from the Haitian National Bank in 1914, supposedly for safekeeping, but really to protect U.S. assets and prevent a German invasion. Smedley Butler, a career Marine, described his role in the occupation in the following terms: “[I was] a high class muscle-man for Big Business, for Wall Street and for the Bankers. In short, I was a racketeer, a gangster for capitalism.”


Kidnappings, power and greed are all connected.

In 2004, former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide said the U.S. kidnapped him and forced him to leave Haiti.



In 2010, Radio Prague International reported the release of a Czech humanitarian aid worker and a colleague after they were kidnapped. In October 2012, it made headlines in Haitian newspapers when Clifford Brandt, a member of a prominent Haitian family, was arrested because he had kidnapped the children of another bourgeois family.


In February 2021, two Dominican filmmakers and their Haitian interpreters were kidnapped in Haiti. Since the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in July, the number of kidnappings has increased. There have also been unconfirmed rumors circulating in Haiti that Moïse was supposed to be kidnapped and not assassinated by the mercenaries.



Two Haitian proverbs can speak to the kidnapping issue in Haiti: “Grangou nan vant pa dous” (Hunger in the belly is not an easy thing), and “Jou mwen leve a se li mwen wè” (The day I get up, that is the only day I can count on). In order to understand the gang issues in Haiti and the attendant issue of kidnapping, we must analyze the context of social inequality and structural violence. Imagine a person who does not have a job and cannot eat. That person can easily be manipulated due to their desperate need to gain access to these basic necessities. There are barely any opportunities for the youth. The structural violence in terms of lack of education, access to health care, lack of food sovereignty (to name but a few) must be addressed. Many people are forced by necessity to participate in the economy of kidnapping. According to a 2020 report by the National Human Rights Defense Network, some gang members are providing services that the state should be providing, stepping in support some community members with food, health care and education costs.

What are the solutions to this problem?

Kidnapping must be understood and dealt with in terms of class relations and local power relations. There needs to be agreement among Haitians of all classes about the type of government they want. This should be a government that can hold elections democratically and fairly and create a sustainable infrastructure that puts education, health care and security as its main priorities.

Haitians in Haiti and in the diaspora are channeling some of their collective efforts to build a better Haiti into a project called the Commission for Haitian Solution to the Crisis (Forum Société Civile Haïtienne). Formed by 13 commission members from different Haitian civil society groups, the group was founded in May 2021. The commission brings together over 300 locals and regional organizations based in Haiti, seeking local strategies to the ongoing political, social and economic crisis in Haiti.



We must also view this issue in a geopolitical context, including colonial, post-colonial and neocolonial histories as well as neoliberal policies. It is clear that foreign interventions in Haiti have only worsened the situation. Foreign troops, organized crime, class inequalities, corruption, and the so-called Core Group (made up of the United States plus ambassadors from Brazil, Canada, France, Germany and the European Union, along with representatives from the United Nations and the Organization of American States) are a dire combination.

The narratives of Haiti as a failed state do not take into account the ways in which the Haitian state in conjunction with the international community has continuously and actively failed Haiti. This failure has contributed to the neoliberal policies; structural violence and inequality; a lack of infrastructures; and political, social and economic instability leading to ongoing social disruptions."

Haiti refugees immigration.jpg
A couple of people walk in the deserted street in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on October 18, 2021..jpg
Sylvio-Cator-Marines-inline-The U.S. Marines on patrol in rural Haiti, circa 1921.jpg
Faith Leader Haiti Policy Letter.pdf
Haiti resignation 2.png
A group of children checks out visitors at the Teren Toto camp in Haiti..jpg
Haiti resignation 1.png
Les Cayes, Haiti, August 16 2021 - A young woman who suffered injuries during the earthquake is loaded on to a motorcycle to be taken to the airport for transfer to Port-au-Prince at OFATMA hospital..jpg
Haiti’s capital, Port-au-Prince, in 2017..jpg
Marceline, Haiti, August 18, 2021 - Medical students set up their tent near a collapsed school. They used their own money to buy medicals supplies and transported.jpg
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