Riots
in Haiti
over explosive rises in food costs have claimed the lives of six people.
There have also been food riots world-wide in Burkina
Faso, Cameroon,
Cote d’Ivorie, Egypt,
Guinea, Mauritania,
Mexico, Morocco, Senegal,
Uzbekistan and Yemen.
The Economist, which
calls the current crisis the silent tsunami, reports that last year wheat
prices rose 77% and rice 16%, but since January rice prices have risen
141%. The reasons include rising fuel costs, weather problems, increased
demand in China and
India,
as well as the push to create biofuels from cereal crops.
Hermite Joseph, a
mother working in the markets of Port au Prince, told journalist Nick
Whalen that her two kids are “like toothpicks - they’re not getting enough
nourishment. Before, if you had a dollar twenty-five cents, you could
buy vegetables, some rice, 10 cents of charcoal and a little cooking oil.
Right now, a little can of rice alone costs 65 cents, and is not good
rice at all. Oil is 25 cents. Charcoal is 25 cents. With a dollar twenty-five,
you can’t even make a plate of rice for one child.”
The St. Claire’s Church
Food program, in the Tiplas Kazo neighborhood of Port au Prince, serves
1000 free meals a day, almost all to hungry children - five times a week
in partnership with the What If Foundation. Children from Cite Soleil
have been known to walk the five miles to the church for a meal. The cost
of rice, beans, vegetables, a little meat, spices, cooking oil, propane
for the stoves, have gone up dramatically. Because of the rise in the
cost of food, the portions are now smaller. But hunger is on the rise
and more and more children come for the free meal. Hungry adults used
to be allowed to eat the leftovers once all the children were fed, but
now there are few leftovers.
The New York Times
lectured Haiti on April
18 that “Haiti,
its agriculture industry in shambles, needs to better feed itself.” Unfortunately,
the article did not talk at all about one of the main causes of the shortages
- the fact that the U.S.
and other international financial bodies destroyed Haitian rice farmers
to create a major market for the heavily subsidized rice from U.S. farmers. This is not the only cause of hunger
in Haiti
and other poor countries, but it is a major force.
Thirty years ago,
Haiti raised nearly all the rice it needed. What
happened?
In 1986, after the
expulsion of Haitian dictator Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) loaned Haiti $24.6 million
in desperately needed funds (Baby Doc had raided the treasury on the way
out). But, in order to get the IMF loan, Haiti was required to reduce tariff protections
for their Haitian rice and other agricultural products and some industries
to open up the country’s markets to competition from outside countries.
The U.S.
has by far the largest voice in decisions of the IMF.
Doctor Paul Farmer
was in Haiti then and saw what happened. “Within less
than two years, it became impossible for Haitian farmers to compete with
what they called ‘Miami rice.’
The whole local rice market in Haiti
fell apart as cheap, U.S.
subsidized rice, some of it in the form of ‘food aid,’ flooded the market.
There was violence, ‘rice wars,’ and lives were lost.”
“American rice invaded
the country,” recalled Charles Suffrard, a leading rice grower in Haiti in an interview with the Washington Post
in 2000. By 1987 and 1988, there was so much rice coming into the country
that many stopped working the land.
Fr. Gerard Jean-Juste,
a Haitian priest who has been the pastor at St. Claire and an outspoken
human rights advocate, agrees. “In the 1980s, imported rice poured into
Haiti, below the cost of what our farmers could
produce it. Farmers lost their businesses. People from the countryside
started losing their jobs and moving to the cities. After a few years
of cheap imported rice, local production went way down.”
Still the international
business community was not satisfied. In 1994, as a condition for U.S.
assistance in returning to Haiti
to resume his elected Presidency, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was forced by
the U.S., the IMF, and the World Bank to open up the
markets in Haiti
even more.
But, Haiti
is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, what reason could the
U.S. have in destroying
the rice market of this tiny country?
Haiti
is definitely poor. The U.S. Agency for International Development reports
the annual per capita income is less than $400. The United Nations reports
life expectancy in Haiti
is 59, while in the US
it is 78. Over 78% of Haitians live on less than $2 a day, more than half
live on less than $1 a day.
Yet Haiti
has become one of the very top importers of rice from the U.S. The U.S. Department of Agriculture 2008 numbers
show Haiti is the third
largest importer of US rice - at over 240,000 metric tons of rice.
(One metric ton is 2200 pounds).
Rice is a heavily
subsidized business in the U.S. Rice subsidies in the U.S.
totaled $11 billion from 1995 to 2006. One producer alone, Riceland Foods
Inc of Stuttgart Arkansas, received over $500 million dollars in rice subsidies between
1995 and 2006.
The Cato Institute
recently reported that rice is one of the most heavily supported commodities
in the U.S. - with three different subsidies together averaging over $1
billion a year since 1998 and projected to average over $700 million a
year through 2015. The result? “Tens of millions of rice farmers in poor
countries find it hard to lift their families out of poverty because of
the lower, more volatile prices caused by the interventionist policies
of other countries.”
In addition to three
different subsidies for rice farmers in the U.S., there are also direct
tariff barriers of 3 to 24 percent, reports Daniel Griswold of the Cato
Institute - the exact same type of protections, though much higher, that
the U.S. and the IMF required Haiti to eliminate in the 1980s and 1990s.
U.S.
protection for rice farmers goes even further. A 2006 story in the Washington
Post found that the federal government has paid at least $1.3 billion
in subsidies for rice and other crops since 2000 to individuals who do
no farming at all; including $490,000 to a Houston
surgeon who owned land near Houston
that once grew rice.
And it is not only
the Haitian rice farmers who have been hurt.
Paul Farmer saw it
happen to the sugar growers as well. “Haiti, once the world's largest exporter of sugar
and other tropical produce to Europe, began importing even sugar - from
U.S. controlled sugar production in the Dominican Republic and Florida. It was terrible to see Haitian farmers put out of work. All
this sped up the downward spiral that led to this month's food riots.”
After the riots and
protests, President Rene Preval of Haiti agreed to reduce
the price of rice, which was selling for $51 for a 110 pound bag, to $43
dollars for the next month. No one thinks a one month fix will do anything
but delay the severe hunger pains a few weeks.
Haiti
is far from alone in this crisis. The Economist reports a billion people
worldwide live on $1 a day. The US-backed Voice of America reports about
850 million people were suffering from hunger worldwide before the latest
round of price increases.
Thirty three countries
are at risk of social upheaval because of rising food prices, World Bank
President Robert Zoellick told the Wall Street Journal. When countries
have many people who spend half to three-quarters of their daily income
on food, “there is no margin of survival.”
In the U.S.,
people are feeling the world-wide problems at the gas pump and in the
grocery. Middle class people may cut back on extra trips or on high price
cuts of meat. The number of people on food stamps in the US is at an all-time high. But in poor countries,
where malnutrition and hunger were widespread before the rise in prices,
there is nothing to cut back on except eating. That leads to hunger riots.
In the short term,
the world community is sending bags of rice to Haiti.
Venezuela
sent 350 tons of food. The US
just pledged $200 million extra for worldwide hunger relief. The UN is
committed to distributing more food.
What can be done in
the medium term? The US provides much of the world’s food aid, but
does it in such a way that only half of the dollars spent actually reach
hungry people. US law
requires that food aid be purchased from US farmers, processed and bagged
in the US
and shipped on US vessels - which cost 50% of the money allocated. A simple
change in US
law to allow some local purchase of commodities would feed many more people
and support local farm markets.
In the long run, what
is to be done? The President of Brazil, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who
visited Haiti last week, said “Rich countries need to
reduce farms subsidies and trade barriers to allow poor countries to generate
income with food exports. Either the world solves the unfair trade system,
or every time there's unrest like in Haiti, we adopt emergency measures and send a
little bit of food to temporarily ease hunger."
Citizens of the USA
know very little about the role of their government in helping create
the hunger problems in Haiti
or other countries. But there is much that individuals can do. People
can donate to help feed individual hungry people and participate with
advocacy organizations like Bread for the World or Oxfam to help change
the U.S. and global rules
which favor the rich countries. This advocacy can help countries have
a better chance to feed themselves.
Meanwhile, Merisma
Jean-Claudel, a young high school graduate in Port-au-Prince
told journalist Wadner Pierre "...people can’t buy food. Gasoline
prices are going up. It is very hard for us over here. The cost of living
is the biggest worry for us, no peace in stomach means no peace in the
mind." I wonder if others will be able to survive the days ahead
because things are very, very hard."
“On the ground, people
are very hungry,” reported Fr. Jean-Juste. “Our country must immediately
open emergency canteens to feed the hungry until we can get them jobs.
For the long run, we need to invest in irrigation, transportation, and
other assistance for our farmers and workers.”
In Port au Prince,
some rice arrived in the last few days. A school in Fr. Jean-Juste’s parish
received several bags of rice. They had raw rice for 1000 children, but
the principal still had to come to Father Jean-Juste asking for help.
There was no money for charcoal, or oil.
Jervais Rodman, an
unemployed carpenter with three children, stood in a long line Saturday
in Port au Prince to get UN donated rice and beans. When Rodman got the
small bags, he told Ben Fox of the Associated Press, “The beans might
last four days. The rice will be gone as soon as I get home.”
People interested
in donating to feed children in Haiti
should go to http://www.whatiffoundation.org/
People who want to help change U.S.
policy on agriculture to help combat world-wide hunger should go to: http://www.oxfamamerica.org/ or http://www.bread.org/
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Bill Quigley, is a human rights lawyer and law professor at
Loyola University, New Orleans.
He has been an active public interest lawyer since 1977 and has served
as counsel with a wide range of public interest organizations on issues
including Katrina social justice issues, public housing, voting rights,
death penalty, living wage, civil liberties, educational reform, constitutional
rights and civil disobedience. He has litigated numerous cases with the
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, Inc., the Advancement Project, and with the ACLU of Louisiana, for which
he served as General Counsel for over 15 years. Bill is one of the lawyers
for displaced residents. Click
here to contact Mr. Quigley.
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