PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – Money
is power and power is money. The Bush administration buys and sells
political constituencies every day in pursuit of world domination.
Haiti, which recently celebrated its bicentennial as the world's
first black republic, is not otherworldly or immune from purchase.
Softening the ground for the transaction is the corporate media that
blatantly acquiesce to the U.S. State Department's campaign to denigrate
the rights and humanity of Haiti’s poor black majority. There is
no other way to describe their current campaign to portray the opposition
in Haiti as the new "freedom fighters" of the hemisphere,
out to topple the repressive “dictatorship” of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide.
George Bush's earlier attempt to destroy the popular government of the poor
in Venezuela only expanded his learning curve in Haiti. The conclusions to
both these stories are not yet written.
The Washington-forged opposition grows lighter in color and more brazen with
each passing day, while former Haitian military leaders prance hand in
hand with Haiti's traditional economic elite, intellectuals and artists.
The poor black majority, who cannot read or write and continue to support
the constitutional government of President Aristide, has been deliberately
made indescribably poorer in an effort to force them to turn against
their own interests.
Going to bed hungry is not uncommon in Haiti. The greatest violence here
is the violence of hunger and poverty. It permeates and consumes everything
in its path. Haiti's phantom "middle class" – the relative few
who have something such as an education to cling to – can be easily manipulated
against a government that has declared itself to be working on behalf of
those who have nothing save for the conviction that tomorrow may yield a
better future for their children. This is especially true when the media
inside and outside of Haiti do everything possible to make it so.
Disinformation media
The Haitian press, most
notably Radio Metropole, Radio Vision 2000, Radio Kiskeya, Radio
Caraibe and Tele-Haiti, have shown themselves to be wanton whores
in the campaign to sow confusion and panic among the people. They
are active players in the U.S. campaign to destabilize Haiti's constitutional
government. With total disregard for principles of "objective
journalism," they circulate exaggerated reports of violence
by Lavalas, turn a blind eye to violence on the part of the opposition,
and underreport the size and frequency of Lavalas demonstrations demanding
President Aristide fulfill his five-year term in office. They regularly
produce and air commercials calling upon the population to "claim
their democratic rights" by joining anti-Aristide street actions. Just
as in Venezuela, where local elites use their media to spearhead
the opposition to President Hugo Chavez, the clear objective in Haiti
is to throw the constitution in the trash and force President Aristide
to resign.
Never mind that Radio Vision 2000 is owned by the same right-wing Boulos
family that funds the Haiti Democracy Project in Washington D.C. Never
mind that Tele-Haiti was founded by Andre Apaid, the self-proclaimed leader
of Group 184 that was "created from whole cloth" by the Haiti Democracy
Project. (See “The Bush Administration’s End Game for Haiti,” December
4.) Never mind that two prominent journalists of Radio Metropole were funded
by the U.S. State Department to tour the United States in mid-January of
this year to meet with editorial boards around the country
to spread their message of the evils of Aristide's "dictatorship." Ignore
the fact that they are a major source of information for the Associated Press,
Reuters and France's venerable RFI whose reporters can be seen openly sharing "information" with
them buddy-buddy style on any given day. Here’s the way it works: Metropole
reports a fabrication; AP and RFI pick it up for their wire services, then
Kiskeya and the others report it again in Haiti backed by the credibility
of the international press. The positive feedback loop of disinformation
for the opposition is now complete.
Partners in crime
On December 3rd the rumor
hit the streets of Port-au-Prince that President Aristide would be
forced to resign on December 5th. Not so coincidentally, the justification
for the latest round of protests against the Haitian government can
be traced to December 5th and what Apaid and his minions refer to
as "Black Friday." This date was previously etched
in the Haitian popular memory as a day of memorial for the victims
of a bomb that exploded during Aristide's first campaign for the
presidency in 1990 in Petion-Ville. Instead, it has now been displaced
with an alleged attack against university students by Lavalas.
”Alleged” is indeed the
case. A videotape has been discovered of events at the university
that day which appears to refute the description given by Radio Metropole
and Tele-Haiti. Both outlets reported that popular organizations
aligned with Lavalas broke through a back wall of the university,
destroyed computers at the site and then proceeded to break the legs
of the university's Rector after he entered the facility. However,
the videotape clearly shows that Lavalas militants were outside of
the building when these transgressions occurred and that the so-called "students" were
in complete control of the facility when the Rector entered. Although
they claim that Lavalas militants had burned a hole through a back
wall, the opposition "students" can be seen pummeling the
police and the press with large rocks and small boulders as they
attempt to approach the building. As the Rector proceeds to
enter with a police escort, the "students" can be heard
chanting "no police" several times from behind the large
metal gate, at which time the Rector is heard asking the police to
let him enter unescorted. This does not sound like a compound under
siege from within, but rather a site under the complete control of
those inside. As you hear the crashing sounds of computers in the
facility being broken, Lavalas popular organizations members comment
on the tape, "Oh my god. They are going to blame us or the police
after this is over." Photos have been taken of the "students" who
controlled the facility from their rock throwing perch on the balcony,
and some sources have said that arrests for questioning are imminent.
The tape irrefutably shows
that the only camera crew allowed to enter the facility was Tele-Haiti,
while the rock-throwing students kept the other media outside. In
that case, how could it be that Lavalas militants were inside and
in control of the university facility? One university student who
left the campus bloodied may hold the key. "We were attacked
by student members of the opposition for being pro-Aristide,” he
stated. “After they broke the computers they realized they had gone
too far and held a quick meeting. They had cell phones and talked
with someone on the outside. Then they brought into the room the
faculty member responsible for the computers and he talked for several
minutes with someone on the cell phone. I could not tell who it was
but he agreed with them."
The Haitian police appear to have been equally confused. The tape allows
us to easily
identify the faces of the rock throwing "students" casually standing
on a balcony above while the police arrest a mere two persons alleged to
be Lavalas militants below. Were two persons responsible for the entire damage
done to facility? As I watched the tape I could sense that the “facts” had
been rehearsed. The “students” shamelessly forced tears as they left the
facility blaming the evil Lavalas grassroots organizations for attacking
them. To this day the Rector of the university has refused to comment on
the incident.
Out of the shadows
Following the claims of "Black
Friday" came a torrent of protests against the government from “students” supposedly
violated by Lavalas. But Andre Apaid's Group 184 clearly emerged
as the true leadership of the demonstrations. December 22 saw a large
protest by Apaid’s group calling for the resignation of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide. These surrogates of Washington's war
against the poor in the Caribbean and Latin America, filled the streets
with nearly 10,000 people while a smaller contingent of Aristide's
Lavalas movement guarded the national palace. Michael Norton of the
Associated Press, as well as a heavy contingent of France's press,
witnessed this to conclude that it was merely a matter of time before
Aristide and his ugly little experiment in democracy for the poor
would fail. What they did not know, or could not know, was the depth
of the creative resistance of the poor black majority in Haiti. It’s
difficult to fault the foreign media’s judgment, however, for money
is power and power is money and they can afford their next meal while
the impoverished majority in Haiti cannot. In a country as poor as
Haiti, this is the difference between knowing what is real and what
is false. What non-Haitians must try to understand is that if only
half of the negative propaganda about Lavalas were true, particularly
that President Aristide no longer enjoys wide support in the country,
this government would have fallen long ago.
In the wake of the fabricated events of December 5 the Haitian government
and Lavalas endured weeks of clandestine attacks, while the opposition demonstrated
under heavy police protection. Then, on December 26, the great silent beast
of Haiti’s poor, portrayed as violent and anti-democratic by the Haitian
press and their friends in the international corporate media, awakened. Tens
of thousands of Lavalas supporters hit the streets with a singular purpose
and objective: that Haiti's constitution be respected and President Aristide
be allowed to fulfill his five-year term in office.
The real battle had just begun, as Haiti’s long-oppressed millions prepared
to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the world’s only successful
slave revolution and the first black republic.
In Pina's next report: The
Haitian media and U.S.-backed opposition risk political suicide in
their attempt to spoil the Bicentennial.
Kevin
Pina is a documentary filmmaker and freelance journalist who
has been working and living in Haiti for the past three years.
He has
been covering events in Haiti for the past decade and produced
a documentary film entitled "Haiti: Harvest
of Hope". Mr. Pina is also the Haiti Special Correspondent
for the Flashpoints radio program on the Pacifica Network's flagship
station KPFA in Berkeley CA.