Once
again, Haiti is hurting.
And
this time,
Hurricane
Matthew
has
left hundreds dead in the black island nation. There is no doubt that
Haiti needs help, just as the nation has been in need after other
natural disasters, other storms, and the
2010
earthquake,
which measured at magnitude 7.0 and left more than 160,000 people
dead and 1.5 million people displaced.
In
the aftermath of the earthquake and other catastrophes, many
international agencies have exploited Haiti’s tragedy, and the
funds never reached the victims who desperately needed them. It was
one big scam. Haiti was pimped. The
Red
Cross
raised
nearly half a billion dollars from millions of donations, more than
any other agency, and vowed to help rebuild the nation. It is hard to
know where the money went — and that is certainly a lot of
money which could have done much good — but one thing’s
for sure: It didn’t go to Haiti.
The
Red Cross built six homes, even as the organization
claimed
it provided housing to 130,000 people.
Then there were botched projects, lack of expertise and an
overreliance on foreign staff who could not speak Creole or French.
Internally, the Red Cross saw the earthquake as “a spectacular
fundraising opportunity,” as making money off of black
suffering is nothing new.
With
$13.34
billion earmarked for Haiti relief
according
to the United Nations, much of that money has not been released. The
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), which oversees the
aid to Haiti, has been a failure, hiring Beltway firms and not
putting money in the pockets of local businesses in Haiti. And for
every dollar that has gone to USAID — and we’re talking
$1.5 billion since the earthquake — reportedly
less
than a penny goes to Haitian organizations.
But the beltway contractors have taken
over
50 cents of every dollar,
very often in
no-bid
contracts.
Just
to show how much waste, fraud and abuse there has been at USAID, the
agency abandoned plans to build a port in Haiti after spending $4.5
million on a feasibility study. And a North Carolina company that was
paid $12.9 million to develop a Creole-based school curriculum came
up short because some of the staff did not even speak French. USAID
was supposed to build
15,000
homes,
but only 2,600 are planned and only 900 have been built.
The
UN
peacekeeping mission
came
in with its $2.5 billion operation and spread cholera throughout
Haiti, infecting 720,000 and killing nearly 9,000.
Lots
of checks were written in this major kickback scam, but Haitians did
not get the checks. And the Clintons are not immune from allegations
of influence peddling in Haiti, as Bill
was named special envoy
to
the Caribbean nation just after Hillary became secretary of state on
2009.
Bill
became co-chair of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission after the
earthquake, and the State Department reportedly directed firms
interested in competing for Haiti contracts to the Clinton
Foundation. And while Hillary Clinton was secretary of state,
U.S.
Embassy officials opposed a minimum wage increase
in
Haiti from 24 cents an hour to 61 cents — in this hopelessly
impoverished nation. And
South
Florida’s Haitian-American community
— 150,000 people of Haitian descent live in the state —
is not at all happy with the Clintons’ years of meddling in
Haiti.
Even
Wyclef
Jean’s
failed
charity Yele shut down after reports of broken promises and spending
large and questionable sums of money on salaries, consultants and
private jets for celebrities.
As
the first black republic in the hemisphere — only the second
republic after the U.S. — Haiti has been punished, made to pay
for its independence and its blackness. And nothing upsets white
folks more than the prospect of a slave insurrection. This time, the
plantation was the country, and black people took the whole damn
thing over. For years,
France
ordered Haiti to pay a fee,
a debt valued today at $20 billion, for France to recognize Haiti as
an independent nation. Now Haiti wants the money returned, but France
says no, because as French President Francois Hollande said, “We
cannot change the past, but we can change the future.”
And
Haiti can’t even win with its neighbor the
Dominican
Republic,
with whom it shares the island. Years of bad blood and racism led to
an ethnic purge and mass deportation in the Dominican Republic, with
hundreds of thousands of Dominicans of Haitian descent being stripped
of their citizenship and forced to register as foreigners. And
Haitians and Dominicans are equally black, an example of divide and
conquer and white supremacy by remote control.
Given
this troubling history, those who want to help the people of Haiti
should find other means to make that happen.
But
what we do know is that what has been done in the past never really
helped the Haitian people but helped put money in the pockets of
other folks, and that’s real.
This commentary originally appeared in The Grio
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