Much
of what I feel about the monumental crisis in Haiti is similar to
the Katrina hurricane in that it was a man-made event waiting to
happen.� Haiti has existed in the backwater of the most powerful
country in the world for 200 years as the poorest example of human
hospitality.� Since
the defeat of France (the French) by Haiti in 1804,
the character of US policy and relations has resembled Western resentment
and as such, Haiti has been left essentially to it own devises.�
Frederick Douglass, who served briefly as US consul to Haiti in
1889 said in a speech that, �Haiti is so near us and so capable
of being serviceable to us�.[yet] she is the one country to which
we turn the cold shoulder.�� He felt that the deep reason for the
�coolness� is that �Haiti is black.�� He resigned when it became
clear that the US aimed to annex the major port in that country
against the wishes of the rulers of the country.�
Since
the days of Shirley Chisholm the Congressional Black Caucus has
attempted to influence the development of a positive policy toward
Haiti.� It tried to replace the current racist policy of allowing
whites from Cuba and other countries to enter the US, but denying
Haitian immigration, a policy followed by US presidents since Jimmy
Carter.� Despite the fact that over 10,000 Haitians attempted to
come to the US in 1991 seeking political asylum for fear of retribution,
since the popular elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide was overthrown
in a military coup, most were sent to third countries or returned
to the Island.
Now,
President Barack Obama has moved swiftly into the morass of this
crisis, posing a striking difference to the manner in which George
Bush handled Katrina.� In this, he has enunciated a short term goal
of American leadership in providing relief, such as food, water,
medical assistance and finding survivors.� He has pledged $100 million,
more than the paltry sum of $130 million of US assistance per year
now given to a country that has an 80% poverty rate, the highest
in this hemisphere.� The long term set of policies must focus on
the reconstruction of Port au Prince and surrounding damaged areas
of the country to set it on a path enter into the 21st century.�
This could be a legacy that might far surpass much of what ever
else Obama confronts among Third World countries.��
Given
this, I disagree with the major recommendation of Jeffrey Sachs
of Columbia University whose closeness to the World Bank has caused
him to propose a special redevelopment committee attached to the
Inter-American Development
Bank.� Part of the problem of the strategy of Haiti�s development
may, in fact, be placed at the doorstep of the IDB, since it, like
the United States ha allowed the utter fractionation of the economic
development and human assistance.� There are more private development
and human service agencies in Haiti than in any other country in
the world, yet they have not turned the corner on the country�s
growth or human service needs.� Much of this, I suspect reflects
the same bureaucratic paralysis characteristic of the World Bank
agencies in dealing with Africa and other Third World countries.��
I
would propose that a separate independent agency be set up responsible
to the United Nations that would have the ability to move with flexibility
and speed to affect the reconstruction.� It should have Haiti as
the primary planning agency, but other members such as the United
States, China, the Dominican Republic, Brazil -- in effect, countries
with the regional� and development capacity to move large-scale
projects quickly.� Cuba should be considered for the excellence
of its medical system that will be needed by Haiti for some time.
Then,
a closer relationship between the United States and Haiti must be
developed that deepens the inter-play between skilled Haitians and
their interaction with their home country.� There are thousands
of skilled Haitians in this country, but we have not developed the
mechanisms to address wage differentials, etc. and other problems
that would allow them to easily transfer skills to their home country.�
Right now, remittances constitute one quarter of the Haitian GDP,
a magnet for leaving there and keeping skills in this country.
The
opportunity that could come from this crisis through an era of intense,
positive involvement of America with Haiti, so close to our shores,
could not only create pride in what Douglass called �the black man�s
country,� but contribute to the reduction of racial animus here
as well.
BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member, Dr. Ron Walters, is the Distinguished
Leadership Scholar, Director of the African American Leadership
Center and Professor of Government and Politics at the University
of Maryland College Park. His latest book is: The Price of Racial Reconciliation (The Politics of Race and Ethnicity) (University of Michigan Press). Click here to contact Dr. Walters. |