The U.S. is determined to “make the pursuit of freedom
the organizing principle of the 21st century,” said Condoleezza
Rice on the Paris leg
of her worldwide debut as Secretary of State. The real nature of this
pirate-imposed brand of “democracy,” designed
to bestow absolute freedom of action to U.S. corporations, is evident
in Iraq and Haiti.
After attempting to straightjacket future
Iraqi governments with laws that would have allowed 100 percent foreign
ownership of
key state assets – in direct contradiction of the Iraqi constitution – and
placing exiles in nominal power, the U.S. reluctantly agreed to hold
elections. Yet the Americans continue to harden at least 12 “enduring
bases” as if they have no intention of leaving, no matter what Iraq’s
future government says.
In Haiti, the U.S. organized and financed the overthrow of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s democratically elected government on February
29 of last year, then forced him into exile. Secretary of State Colin
Powell devised what may be the lamest excuse in history for gross
violations of international law: “He was democratically elected but
he (Aristide) did not democratically govern well” – a wholly new and
bizarre standard for national sovereignty and self-determination.
In both Haiti and Iraq, many thousands have been slaughtered in pursuit
of Condoleezza Rice’s “organizing principle” – a policy that the Bush
men fantasize will prevail for the remainder of the century. They are
delusional and increasingly desperate, but you wouldn’t know it from
consuming the American corporate media, which is as oblivious (or hostile)
to the opinions of mankind as are the rulers in Washington. The dead
of Haiti and Iraq lie uncounted except, of course, by Haitians and
Iraqis whose opinions and actions will ultimately unravel the imperial
project – early, rather than later, in this century.
As with Iraq’s recent election-at-gunpoint, foreign-occupied Haiti
is scheduled to hold municipal elections in October and choose a national
legislature and president a month later. In anticipation, the American-picked
regime of Gerard Latortue – formerly of Boca
Raton, Florida – is
busily arresting, hunting and killing activists of Aristide’s party,
Fanmi Lavalas, the overwhelming choice of the country’s poor majority.
Latortue’s police, now made up mostly of ex-members of the army that
Aristide disbanded in 1995, share a common background and murderous
mission with the gangster bands that kill at will in much of the countryside.
Lending legitimacy to the macabre arrangement are the Brazilian-led “peacekeepers” of
the United Nations Stabilization Mission
in Haiti, MINUSTAH, who reject “any
responsibility in the killing of people who have been taken into custody
by UN soldiers and handed over to the national police,” according to
the Haitian Press Agency (AHP).
Clearly, there is no right to freedom of
assembly – or even the right to life – in Haiti since the regime
change so shamefully facilitated by Colin Powell. (See , “Godfather
Colin Powell, the Gangster of Haiti,” March
4, 2004.) Therefore,
it became necessary to hold an extraordinary meeting of Haitian Lavalas
activists and allies in Washington, DC, this past weekend, to “gather
different parts of the force fighting here and elsewhere for Haiti
to win back its national dignity and the return of democracy to Haiti” – a
democracy that was stolen by the United States.
Heritage of struggle
The Kongre
Bwa Kayiman 2005 – Congress
of Crocodile Woods 2005, in the Haitian Creole language, in honor
of the first gathering of maroon chiefs to plot strategy against
the French in 1791 – brought together Haitians from the United States
and elsewhere, American Haiti support organizations, and fearless
activists who continue to operate inside Haiti. Organized by the
Fondasyon (Foundation) Mapou, September 30th Foundation, Haiti Action
Committee, Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network, and the Haitian Initiative
for Democracy, and hosted by Trinity University, the event sought
to “define strategies of resistance, which can allow us to reinforce
in Haiti and the Diaspora the mobilization for the return of democracy
and the recovery of national sovereignty.”
At least 3,000 Haitians have been murdered by ex-military marauders
and Latortue’s police and 100,000 forced into hiding since the February
29 “coup-napping,” as Mario Dupuy puts it. Dupuy is the Communications
Secretary of Haiti’s Constitutional Government – the Aristide government
still recognized by much of the world. “A humanitarian catastrophe
is going to arrive in two to three years,” Dupuy told the gathering
at Trinity College. Because of the reign of terror, the Haitian peasantry’s
modes of production have been disrupted. Normally, some seeds are saved
from each crop to plant for the next cycle. “But with the massive internal
displacement, forcing people to hide in the big cities…the first thing
we notice is that the peasants have been forced to eat the produce
that would otherwise be used for seeds.” Dupuy believes “there is an
imminent risk that we’ll have a situation similar to what we saw in
Ethiopia. There will be a huge influx in refugees.”
The refugee crisis will be both internal to Haiti and external, forcing
legions of Haitians to take to the high seas, as occurred in the early
Nineties after a previous coup against President Aristide, hugely contributing
to President Bill Clinton’s decision to oust the military and bring
Aristide out of U.S. exile in 1994. Clinton saw no alternative, since
the military and the tiny elite it served had no social base sufficient
to rule the country without resort to terror. The same applies to the
Latortue regime, today. Thus, as the regime moves reluctantly toward
elections in the Fall, to be overseen by the United Nations and the
Organization of American States (OAS), it attempts to co-opt the more “bourgeois” elements
of Fanmi Lavalas. “They felt it was necessary to take control of the
communications of the people, the Lavalas party,” said Dupuy. “They
think they have the right to determine the leadership of the Family
Lavalas party.”
The regime is caught in a hopeless contradiction – from which it should
not be rescued by naïve elements among African Americans who wish to “help” Haitians
by supporting direct aid to the Latortue government. As Dupuy pointed
out: “From March 2004 to now the U.S. gave the Haitian government $230
million. Much of this aid ended up on the market in the Dominican Republic,” including
aid in the wake of Hurricane Jeanne. “Not one school or hospital was
built in the country, despite $230 million over 11 months."
During Aristide’s tenure, an average of 37 schools were built every
year. Latortue heads a regime of piranhas. “That’s why Lavalas still
has the support of the people,” said Dupuy.
Elections in the midst of slaughter
Unlike in Iraq, where the resistance daily brings the fight directly
to the occupiers and their minions, the Haitian resistance in slums
like Cite Soleil and Bel Air resembles that of African Americans in
the old South confronting the depredations of the Ku Klux Klan – “an
armed resistance of necessity, but not coordinated,” said one participant
in the Washington conference. Aristide’s MLK-Ghandi creed of nonviolence
remains dominant among the Haitian masses, who are also too poor to
afford the ordinance of war. However, also unlike Iraq, where Sunnis,
Shia and Kurds pursue different paths to national or ethnic independence – with
the latter two groups participating more or less enthusiastically in
the recent election – the clear majority of Haitians have proven repeatedly
that they support Aristide and Lavalas. Without their participation,
there can be no credible election – just a joust among mini-parties.
Lavalas leadership announced on February 1 that they would boycott
the elections, calling “the interim government a regime of terror” engaged
in “massacring supporters of President Aristide in the populist districts,” according
to AHP. "How can one speak of elections when our senior officials
and activists are imprisoned and our supporters persecuted across the
country," asked Felito Doran, the former Lavalas Deputy from Pétion-Ville.
A report from the Council on Hemispheric Affairs (COHA) says
the threatened Lavalas boycott “is a direct result of the suppression carried out
against party supporters by paramilitary factions and gang leaders
who get their marching orders from the Latortue government.” The report documents “new evidence… that Latortue and
his rogue justice minister, Bernard Gousse,
are engaged in an all-out-war against Haiti’s poor, who make up the
vast majority of the population and who overwhelmingly support Aristide.”
Meanwhile, Canada, a frontline state in the imperial phalanx against
Haiti, along with France and the United States, prepares schemes to
establish a protectorate in Haiti – that is, to protect the citizens
of the first Black republic in the world (and the second republic in
the Western Hemisphere) from enjoying the rights of self-determination
and sovereignty. (See , “Haiti:
Colin Powell’s
Crime in Progress, December
7, 2004.)
According to the COHA report, the $45-50 million cost of the October
and November elections “will be covered in (small) part by the government
and in large part by contributions from international donors.” Three
guesses on who those donors will be, and who will actually be running
the show?
Under the pretense that elemental human rights exist in Haiti, U.S.
immigration authorities appear to have begun wholesale arrests and
deportations of Haitians, in November. In addition to the ancient imperatives
of all-American racism, the roundups are doubtless designed to increase
pressure on Diaspora Haitians, who can better be dealt with under the
tender mercies of Latortue and his thugs. A protester at a Fort Lauderdale
rally in late January told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel: “They
stop Haitians on the street, in the malls, where they work, everywhere.
I guess we're easy to be spotted, because we're black. They take them
and send them back to Haiti.”
The Bush men are heating the same pressure cooker that
forced Clinton to take action against the Haitian military junta in
1994. Only this time, poor Haitians have been allowed to taste nearly
a decade of democracy and participate in valiant steps toward self-development
under Aristide. A national transformation has already occurred, one
that cannot be “guided” by the unholy troika of the U.S., Canada and
France.
A different world
In ways that the Bush Pirates could never have contemplated, the hemisphere
and world have also been transformed, especially since the invasion
of Iraq. Although Brazil and Chile have acted shamefully in sending
their soldiers to Haiti under UN auspices – an occupation they rationalize
as a means of keeping even more homicidal U.S. soldiers out of the
country – it is not without great domestic political cost. The mildly
socialist Brazilian and Chilean heads of state heard the sentiments
of their own base constituencies at the recent World Social Forum in
Porto Alegre, Brazil, where thousands of delegates demanded:
That’s the idea, anyway. But it is doomed in Iraq, and in Haiti,
as well. In both countries, the mass political cultures are repulsed
by the alternately fawning and grasping behavior of the tiny comprador
classes, who cannot provide the Americans with a social base strong
enough to govern in Washington’s behalf – and are, in fact, not even
interested in real governance. The vital sectors are nationalist,
whether on the Right, as is largely the case in Iraq, or on the Left,
as in Haiti.
The great coup that the Bush men have pulled on themselves, is to
alienate the whole of mankind. This feat of incompetence is inseparable
from the heritage of Indian extermination and slavery, a history
that yielded unprecedented riches to the white settlers and thrust
them onto the world stage – armed with nothing but guns and a depraved
indifference to anyone but themselves. Lacking any understanding
of societies – including their own – they make enemies wherever they
tread. The very process of opposing the Americans uplifts and transforms
those whom the U.S. seeks to rule.
Haiti has had a very rough 200 years of independence. Yet the liberation
struggle led by Jean-Bertrand Aristide, essentially a battle against
compradors of the United States, has steeled a generation or two
of Haitians, many of whom were represented at the Kongre Bwa Kayiman
at Trinity College, in Washington. “They took a lot of risk in coming,” said
principal conference organizer Eugenia Charles-Mathurin.
“The most important thing is their determination to see change,” said
Ms. Charles-Mathurin. “They take the chance, because who else is
going to do it? We still have the same approach as we did in 1804” when
Haiti declared its independence. “The slave had to take chances to
meet. It was a risk to attend the first Kongre Bwa Kayiman (Congress
of Crocodile Woods) in 1791.” But 13 years later, Haiti had defeated
the French, British and Spanish to achieve republican nationhood
and an end to slavery.
It is a risk to rush into a brand new world. But that world appears,
nevertheless. The crocodiles are bigger, but just as stupid.