[News] Haitians Protest UN Occupation and Pending Foreign “Intervention”

Anti-Imperialist News news at freedomarchives.org
Wed Jul 19 13:35:54 EDT 2023


 Haitians Protest UN Occupation and Pending Foreign “Intervention”
<https://www.blackagendareport.com/haitians-protest-un-occupation-and-pending-foreign-intervention>
Ann Garrison <https://www.blackagendareport.com/author/Ann Garrison, BAR
Contributing Editor> - 19 Jul 2023

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*Haitians protest oligarchic rule, UN occupation, and foreign military
"intervention." *

The US and Canada have been arguing for a multilateral military
intervention in Haiti led by the army of a third country, possibly even
Rwanda, to support the puppet regime that they installed. They are using
“gang violence” as the racist excuse, but there are actually more gang
killings in Jamaica. In fact, the people of Haiti have been protesting in
the streets to get the UN <https://binuh.unmissions.org/en> and the Core
Group
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_Group#:~:text=The%20Core%20Group%20is%20an,the%20Organization%20of%20American%20States.>
out of Haiti and get the US to stop supporting the illegitimate, unelected
prime minister, Ariel Henry.

I spoke to Haiti Action Committee <https://haitisolidarity.net/> activist
Seth Donnelly, a public school teacher who has traveled to Haiti over 20
times since the 2004 coup that removed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

*ANN GARRISON:* Seth Donnelly, can you tell us what you see going on in
Haiti?

*SETH DONNELY:* Yes, absolutely. The current situation is one of a
neocolonial dictatorship, installed primarily by the United States, under
the UN occupation.

*AG:* That's the UN mission <https://binuh.unmissions.org/en> that the UN
Security Council renewed on July 14, right? Not the foreign military force
that the US and Canada are pushing for.

*SD:* Right. So since the US-orchestrated coup in 2004 against President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide and hundreds of other democratically elected
officials at all levels, Haiti has been under occupation. And within that
context, in 2011 the US installed the current regime that is in power in
Haiti, that of the Haitian Tèt Kale Party
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haitian_T%C3%A8t_Kale_Party> (PHTK).

When I say installed, there's extensive evidence that Hillary Clinton, the
Secretary of State, literally intervened
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/post-partisan/wp/2016/03/10/hillary-clinton-needs-to-answer-for-her-actions-in-honduras-and-haiti/>,
went to Haiti and maneuvered Michel Martelly into power after US-sponsored
elections that were already fraudulent, given that the the largest
political party in the country, Fanmi Lavalas, wasn’t allowed to
participate.

Martelly is like the godfather of the PHTK, a very right-wing powerbroker
connected to the Haitian oligarchy. He handpicked a successor, Jovenel
Moise, who took power after more fraudulent
<https://globalexchange.org/2016/12/15/haiti-november-20th-elections-delegation-report/>
US-sponsored elections in 2016.

Readers may know that Jovenel Moise was then assassinated in the summer of
2021. Based on the evidence
<https://www.nytimes.com/2021/12/12/world/americas/jovenel-moise-haiti-president-drug-traffickers.html>
that keeps being unearthed, this was quite possibly a US-backed
assassination involving elements within the PHTK, including the current
US-backed, unelected prime minister, Ariel Henry.

So under this current Ariel Henry regime, we have seen a proliferation of
massacres carried out by the police and what US media calls gangs. They're
more accurately understood as paramilitaries, heavily armed paramilitaries,
many of which work closely with the police, such as the G-9 Federation, led
by the ex-police officer, Jimmy Chérizier, popularly known as “Barbecue.” A
few notorious examples of such massacres include the 2018 Lasalin massacre
<https://www.nlg.org/report-the-lasalin-massacre-and-the-human-rights-crisis-in-haiti/>
(see this video
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6kQH-_IrAg&ab_channel=TheRealNewsNetwork>)
and the 2019 massacres
<https://www.ijdh.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/DelegationPressReleaseFinal5-08-2.pdf>
in the Tokyo and Site Vensan (Cite Vincent) neighborhoods. The Harvard Law
School International Human Rights Clinic documented this pattern in its
2021 report “Killing with Impunity: State-Sanctioned Massacres in Haiti.”
<https://hrp.law.harvard.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/Killing_With_Impunity-1.pdf>

These paramilitaries and the police have laid siege to popular
neighborhoods of resistance to the regime. They've destroyed them, burned
down houses, and massacred men, women, and children.

*AG:* And what has the International Monetary Fund been doing amidst all
this?

*SD:* The PHTK regime has loyally implemented IMF dictates. For
example, removing
the fuel subsidy <https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2022/09/19/nbqg-s19.html>.
And that has resulted in cost-push inflation, which has created the worst
hunger crisis in Haiti in many generations. Over half the population is now
suffering from extreme food insecurity and malnutrition. Children are once
again eating mud cookies. By March 2023, a record 4.9 million people
<https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/mar/24/haiti-faces-hunger-emergency-amid-escalating-gang-violence-and-surging-inflation>
were experiencing acute hunger, nearly half the population. Haiti’s food
inflation is among the highest in the world, increasing by 48%
<https://tradingeconomics.com/haiti/food-inflation> between February 2022
and February 2023.

*AG: *There haven't been any recent elections, have there?

*SD:* There's not a single official legitimately left in office, because
the regime is incapable of holding free and fair elections. All formerly
elected officials are legally termed out.

So this is the situation in which the Biden administration is arguing for
yet another “intervention,” which is really more of an invasion, as if
that's the solution. It’s akin to pretending that the arsonists will put
out the fire they started.

*AG:* Canada too, right? Both US and Canadian mining companies are heavily
involved in Haiti.

*SD:* Right. Canada too, and that’s clearly one of the main reasons the US
and Canada have both been pushing this intervention.

*AG: *And what about the Haitian people?

*SD:* The Haitian people have been out in the streets protesting the idea
of a foreign intervention. Operating at the base of the mass movement of
the poor majority is Fanmi Lavalas, the most significant political party in
Haiti, which has consistently been the target of US-backed political
repression and terror. The mass movement demands that there be no foreign
intervention. The Haitian people are struggling today to complete the
revolution of 1804, to affirm their right to self-determination, to
dismantle this hated neocolonial regime, and install a genuine transition
government
<https://haitisolidarity.net/fanmi-lavalas-calls-for-sali-piblik/>.

So that's where we're at, and the Biden administration has doubled down in
supporting the government, despite opposition from even some Democrats in
Congress. Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken continue to treat
Ariel Henry as if he's a legitimate leader that needs to be at the table
for negotiations. They continue to fund
<https://haitiantimes.com/2022/07/15/us-gives-training-and-48m-more-to-fight-crime-in-haiti/>
the police hand over fist despite massive evidence that the police are
linked to the gangs and paramilitaries.

*AG:* Biden has been mercilessly deporting Haitians too, hasn’t he?

*SD: *Biden has deported
<https://quixote.org/biden-has-deported-nearly-as-many-haitians-in-his-first-year-as-the-last-three-presidents-combined>
more Haitians than the last three presidents combined. That’s Trump, Obama,
and Bush Jr.

Haitians are fleeing hunger and violence, and if they make it to the
US/Mexico border, they’re rounded up en masse, as we saw in the photos of
the US Border Patrol chasing refugees, border patrol agents on horses using
the reins as whips.

So this is an absolute humanitarian disaster. It's arguably the worst human
rights crisis in the Americas. And it's made in the USA.

*AG:* What about Biden’s support for the police?

*SD:* The police in Haiti are deeply connected to the repression and to the
massacres, as well as targeted killings of journalists. There've been a lot
of journalists, independent journalists, killed by the police. For example,
on October 30th, 2022, police shot an unarmed journalist
<https://www.usatoday.com/picture-gallery/news/world/2022/11/01/protests-haiti-over-death-journalist-romelo-vilsaint/10659085002/>,
Romelo Vilsaint
<https://apnews.com/article/caribbean-journalists-port-au-prince-haiti-b973049adf13229dccdd3dd4c6825bdf>,
in the head, and killed him during a protest at the Delmas police station
where he and other journalists were demanding the release of a jailed
colleague, Robest Dimanche. Police had previously detained Dimanche when he
was covering a street protest.

And we can contrast the Biden administration support for the police with
how the administration sanctioned the Cuban police after a relatively minor
crackdown in Cuba after the protests in July 2021. I think there may have
been one fatality in that, whereas in Haiti, the police killings are
epidemic, and all the US does is shower them with more money.

*AG:* The news is reporting that there are only 9000 police in Haiti, and
more are needed. This proposed international intervention is supposed to
help them. I don't think those pushing it are likely to get it past the
Security Council, and they know that, so they’re talking about some sort of
multilateral force organized and sent in without UN Security Council
approval.

*SD:* Right. One of President Aristide’s greatest accomplishments— before
the second US-backed coup d’état in 2004—was to dissolve the Haitian
military. The military had been a backbone of US control during the Papa
Doc and Baby Doc dictatorships throughout the 20th century.

President Aristide instead sought to develop a small, professional police
force, with training from countries such as Switzerland, that could
protect, rather than terrorize, the Haitian people. Since the 2004 coup,
the US has supported the reintegration of former military and death squad
elements back into this police force, funding its transformation once again
into an agent of terror.

The narrative being put out in the US media, and by the US and Canadian
governments and UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres—who is very much
involved in this occupation—is that the police are outgunned by the “gangs”
and that the police need more equipment and weapons and training and the
support of foreign intervention.

What that narrative misses is that the police are heavily weaponized
against the people, and overwhelmingly, at very high levels of command,
working with the paramilitaries to terrorize the population.

*AG:* How are people on the ground resisting all this?

*SD:* There was an interesting development that started this past spring.
The population rose up against the paramilitaries or “gangs” who had been
occupying their neighborhoods. This became known as the “Bwa Kale”
movement. And then, within a matter of weeks, the population brought the
level of violence and the kidnappings down dramatically.

This did involve violence by ordinary people who have just been pushed to
the brink, but what Bwa Kale shows you is that when the people organize at
a base level, they can tackle the problem of insecurity. So clearly funding
the police is not working to bring down crime. What brings down crime is
people taking power.

*AG:* What sort of privilege is the regime getting from being in power?

*SD:* Well, first, it's your classic neocolonial regime, in the most direct
sense that it was literally installed by the US. Hillary Clinton, who, like
I said, maneuvered the first PHTK leader, Martelly, into power, so there's
that classic architecture of colonialism.

Second, Haiti is mineral rich. It’s got bauxite. It's got petroleum, gold,
and more. Because of the racism in the US media and the ignorance it
inflicts, Americans are always asking, “Oh, why is Haiti so poor?” but
Haiti is not poor.  Haiti is resource
<https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/what-are-the-major-natural-resources-of-haiti.html>
rich. It's just the most plundered country in the Americas, similar to the
Congo.

The regime has even been trying to change the mining law to give it more
power. As it is now, the parliament has to approve mining concessions, but
the PHTK regime wants to make that an executive decision, so that gold
mining companies from Canada and the United States can just come in without
having to go through Parliament.

Regime officials also accumulate wealth by:

   - Engaging in pervasive corruption and the massive looting of public
   funds
   <https://www.npr.org/2019/06/11/731640235/protesters-demand-resignation-of-haitian-president-over-corruption-allegations>
   .
   - Perpetuating land grabs
   <https://capiremov.org/en/experience/women-resist-land-grabbing-and-free-zone-in-haiti/>
   and the dispossession of Haitian farmers
   <https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/latest-news/haitian-farmers-file-complaint-at-inter-american-development-bank-for-financing-caracol-industrial-park-project-that-caused-displacement/>,
   including by former PHTK President Jovenel Moise himself to enlarge his
   personal banana republic
   <https://landportal.org/news/2016/02/haiti%E2%80%99s-fraudulent-presidential-frontrunner-seizes-land-his-own-banana-republic>
   .

There's tremendous pocketing of public monies by high level PHTK officials.
Hence what they call the PetroCaribe scandal
<https://www.miamiherald.com/news/nation-world/world/americas/haiti/article245045015.html>,
provoking huge street protests in 2018.

There are linkages between this regime and the small number of families
that dominate the import/export businesses, including organized crime, in
Haiti. That’s most likely why Jovenel Moise was killed. He was probably
stepping on the wrong toes.

So there are a lot of economic advantages to the regime, and I'm sure that
filters down to various levels of the police force, who are getting paid
off and protected from paramilitary violence by working with the
paramilitaries.

*AG:* Are there any decent police?

*SD:* There are officers who are dedicated to protecting the population,
but many of them have been killed. There’ve been police protests against
the PHTK regime by police officers who say they’re being set up to be
killed because the government and the PHTK are working with the
paramilitaries.

*AG: *Okay, so you say there's a lot of resource extraction going on. It's
just not benefiting the people. And this means gold, petroleum, and various
minerals, including bauxite?

*SD: *Yeah. It would be good to do the type of research that folks have
been doing since the coup in Peru against Castillo—looking at the mining
concessions under the current regime in Peru.

*AG: *I’ve seen in the Congo that studying and reporting on mining
concessions can be a good way to get yourself killed.

*SD:* I’m sure but I know folks have been doing that research in Haiti.

And in addition to the mining there are of course the free trade zones for
exploiting Haitian labor. The Clintons funded the construction of this big
free trade zone in the north of Haiti, the Caracol Industrial Park
<https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/karlazabludovsky/haiti-industrial-park-caracol>
for textiles that led to a lot of land grabbing
<https://www.actionaidusa.org/work/land-grabbing-in-haiti-the-caracol-industrial-park/>
.

*AG:* When you say the Clintons, do you mean the Clintons operating through
various NGOs or Bill Clinton when he was president?

*SD:* No, I mean, more recently, the Caracol Industrial Park was backed  by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and funded by the Obama Administration.
When Bill Clinton was president he likewise pushed the neoliberal policies
onto Haiti that led, among other things, to the destruction
<https://haitisolidarity.net/in-the-news/how-the-united-states-crippled-haitis-domestic-rice-industry/>
of Haiti’s domestic rice production.

*AG:* In this context, I think we should note that Hillary Clinton's
brother Tony Rodham
<http://www.haitianphotos.com/photos/hillary-clintons-brother-and-haiti-gold-mine-permit-raises-e.html>
was put on the board of a corporation that was then given a Haitian gold
mining lease.

*SD:* Yes.

*AG:* And not because he knows anything about gold mining.

*SD: *I don't think many people in this country adequately grasp the sheer
criminality of the Clintons in particular. The Clintons, as instruments of
US imperialism in Haiti, have been very destructive in so many ways, going
all the way down to the trailers that were sent to supposedly house people
after the 2010 earthquake. The Clinton Foundation installed trailers
<https://www.thenation.com/article/archive/shelters-clinton-built/> that
were sent from New Orleans and that were contaminated with formaldehyde.

*AG: *OK, let me try to summarize the layers of conflict you’ve been
describing here. The US, which represents various resource extractivist
industries and individuals, put an oligarchic regime in power. This
oligarchic regime is using the police and some of these paramilitary gangs
to control the people amidst all this spiraling violence and chaos while
the US and Canada are both doubling down in their support for it. There are
various police, paramilitary, criminal and oligarchic elements competing
for power. And at the same time you have a popular uprising being repressed
by the oligarchy, the police, the paramilitary “gangs,” and the UN
occupation, which could soon expand to further “multilateral intervention”
backed by the US and Canada.

*SD: *That’s it in a nutshell.

*AG: *Lastly then, could you tell us some more about the popular movement
and the role that Jean-Bertrand Aristide is still playing in it?

*SD: *Lavalas refers to the mass, grassroots movement of workers, peasants,
street vendors, students, and other sectors that successfully toppled the
Baby Doc Duvalier dictatorship and created the conditions for the free and
fair elections of 1990 that led to the landslide victory of President
Aristide. In Kreyol <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kreyol>, Lavalas means
flood, the idea being that each of us is a drop of water and that when we
unite, we become a flood. The Lavalas movement and its political party,
Fanmi Lavalas, remain the most potent political forces on the ground today
in Haiti. The Haitian people have not forgotten the very real achievements
<https://65c874.p3cdn1.secureserver.net/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/We_Will_Not_Forget_2010.pdf>
in education, healthcare, housing, food production, and human rights when
Lavalas was in power prior to the last coup.

Fanmi Lavalas candidates have dominated in every free and fair election,
thus the 2004 coup and political exclusion and repression ever since under
US domination. Despite this, President Aristide returned to Haiti from
exile in South Africa in 2011, against the opposition of President Obama.
Since his return to Haiti, he has, with international solidarity
<https://haitiemergencyrelief.org/>, reopened and expanded UNIFA
<https://unifa-edu.info/contenu/>, a flagship university—with medical,
legal, engineering, and agronomy schools—that provides education to those
otherwise unable to access it. UNIFA is a beacon of hope today in Haiti and
a symbol of the new Haiti that the masses of the people in the street are
struggling to build.

*Ann Garrison is a Black Agenda Report Contributing Editor based in the San
Francisco Bay Area. In 2014, she received the Victoire Ingabire Umuhoza
Democracy and Peace Prize
<http://www.rifdp-iwndp.org/letter-from-ann-garrison-on-sharing-the-victoire-prize-with-pere-sampol-i-mas/>for
her reporting on conflict in the African Great Lakes region. She can be
reached at ann(at)anngarrison.com <http://anngarrison.com>. Please help to
support her work on Patreon <https://www.patreon.com/annmgarrison>.*

*Seth Donnelly is a public school teacher who has been to Haiti more than
20 times since the 2004 coup that removed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
He is also the author of “**The Lie of Global Prosperity: How Neoliberals
Distort Data to Mask Poverty and Exploitation*
<https://monthlyreview.org/product/lie_of_global_prosperity/#:~:text=The%20Lie%20of%20Global%20Prosperity%20convincingly%20exposes%20the%20spurious%20arguments,capitalism%20in%20the%20new%20millennium.>*”
from Monthly Review Press.*
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