1.
Haiti needs emergency humanitarian aid � rescue, recovery, relief
and rebuilding, not military occupation.
The occupation of the Toussaint Louverture international airport
and other Haitian national spaces by foreign militaries, especially
by the US/UN, Canada and France, must end and these areas be returned
to the control of the people of Haiti.
Instead of spending all this resource to militarizes Haiti, these
funds could instead be better redirected to help with reconstruction,
viable reforestation, engineering projects, community-based policing
and development, educational initiatives, building of flood barriers,
dikes, flood resistant roads, bridges, dredging harbors, building
sewers and drainage networks, viable farms, schools, hospitals and
health centers. To assist Haiti in irrigation, fertilizer and necessary
farming equipment to increase domestic food production in the Artibonite
valley and Plaine du Sud farming areas. For planting fruit trees
to assist the small rural farmers towards self-sufficiency. For
creating indigenous Haiti manufacturing and eco-friendly green jobs
with an emphasis in helping meet the needs of women and children
in Haiti. (Proper Jatropha production is an excellent option.) To
support Haitian-led grassroots capacity building organizations.
For child health care, medicines, permanent clean water facilities.
For educational initiatives that don't deny Haiti's unique indigenous
culture.
2. End
indirect aid to Haiti. Foreign aid should go to Haiti directly to
strengthen the Haitian government not the churches and NGOs.
a.
US foreign policy undermined Haiti�s capacity to respond in emergency
situations because it forced Haiti to privatize state assets, funneled
all foreign aid to NGOs and not the Haitian government.
A recent article reported the
Haitian government has not seen one cent of that money that has
been raised for Haiti. I presume that that means the money is going
to NGOs," he said, referring to non-governmental aid groups.
He said a Puerto Rican group had presented him with a shipping receipt
showing it donated $3.5 million of food aid to feed Haitians. Preval
said he asked, "Where is the food?" and was told it had
already been given to aid groups. (Coordination
needed for Haiti aid: Aid flows to charities, but Preval hasn't
seen a cent.)
It is the Clinton and Bush neo-liberal policies or US support for
coup d�etat that has severely weakened the Haitian government, Haiti's
already limited infrastructure, public health and economy that is
needed to provide services in times of disasters like this. Neo-liberal
policies posits that governments should not provide social services
to the people � community policing, electricity, food, clean water,
health care, schools, roads, irrigation canals, literacy programs,
agricultural assistance. That these things should be privatized
and let the marketplace provide. This is the policy that has been
imposed on Haiti by both the Bushes and Clinton. And Obama has enlisted
these two to further �help� Haiti.
b. The Obama administration must support an international response
that respect Haitian sovereignty, not boost NGO profits and power
in Haiti.
This US foreign policy effectively forms a shadow government enchaining
Haiti that undermines Haiti�s sovereignty, emboldens and empowers
NGOs with no public responsibility or accountability to Haitians
or Haiti�s long term well-being. The idea that Haiti is too corrupt
to absorb aid or get it to the most needy applied during US-supported
Haiti dictatorships not, in general, when Haiti has a duly elected
government. Besides this fear does not support self-reliance but
dependency. There should be accountability measures to assure the
aid reaches its intended constituency.
Haiti
can no longer countenance World Relief NGOs in the country whose
method of doing business is inappropriate to Haiti�s reality, doesn�t
respect Haiti�s Vodouist/Konbit/Lakouculture and puts in place programs to exclude the majority
of Haiti's people from decisions affecting their every day life.
3.
Support the institutionalization of the rule of law
a.
Return former president Aristide to Haiti so he may assist Haiti�s
majority at this agonizing time and help in the relief and rebuilding
of the nation. No one can be made stateless. It�s a violation of
the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
b. Support community organizing, community policing, transparency
and participatory democracy.
4. Value life - Value life over political and economic interests.
Value the lives of the survivors not the interests of the US and
the international community.
Haitians, both in Haiti and in the Diaspora, who are historical
immune to adversities along with mobilized Black America and our
collaborators from all the nations and races, are ready to help,
with our bare hands, walking anywhere, doing anything, to get the
distribution done. Still are. The military takeover and their alliance
with World Relief Organizations who prioritize not saving lives
and providing disaster relief with dignity and human rights but
their bank accounts, is blocking this.
Eyewitnesses
in Haiti report that aid trucks are filed to the brim with supplies
blocked at the border and sitting idle at the ports. Once the US
got to Haiti on Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010 they privatized the airport
and blocked humanitarian aid in favor of: 1) landing military planes
and 1) evacuating foreign nationals. Food, water, medicine and doctors
could not enter through the airport, were diverted to the Dominican
Republic and trucked or drove in. One US retired general said USAID
and the State Department are not a rapid response entity and ought
not to head this mission. Even two weeks after the earthquake, there
still has not been widespread distribution of food, medicine and
water.
"The
next morning after the earthquake, as a military man of 37 years
service, I assumed � there would be airplanes delivering aid, not
troops, but aid," said retired Lt. Gen. Russel Honore ,..I
was a little frustrated to hear that USAID was the lead agency,"
he said. "I respect them, but they're not a rapid deployment
unit� In the first two days after Tuesday evening's quake, "we
saw national media in, but we didn't see Air Force airplanes taking
in food and water," Honore said. Nor were military doctors
on the ground treating the injured, he said. (Retired
general: US aid effort too slow.)
The
Obama Administration must do better. It must prioritize relief,
rebuilding and development initiatives for everyone in Haiti harmed
by the earthquake, especially the poor Black majority, not just
the wealthy, the foreign citizen, charity workers and their hotels
or other properties. Infrastructure rebuilding should be conducted
simultaneously in the poor as well as wealthier areas of the capital
and southern areas damaged by the earthquake. Rich and poor, foreign
or Haitian national ought to be similarly treated.
The Obama administration must support an international response
to the tragic Haiti earthquake that prioritize humanitarian assistance,
not security and that makes every effort to allow relief assistance
from Haitians abroad and from other nations and providers to enter
Haiti. In addition to stopping the blockage of assistance coming
from Haitians abroad, Black Americans and from other nations and
providers in favor of the major corporate charity organizations,
it must also prioritize the distribution and promote and allow Haitians
to set up an international coordination of international assistance
so that relief supplies, medical treatment and the necessary emergency
help actually gets to the most excluded majority in Haiti � reaching
the maximum number of earthquake victims immediately. The Haitian
people, in Haiti and abroad, with families victimized by the earthquake
are the best ones to know where the most urgent needs are still
to be met and allowed to direct medical and psychological assistance
and other relief to those areas.
5. Respect Haitian human rights and dignity. Stop criminalizing
the poor in Haiti. Stop the aid bureaucracy and security restrictions
that harms and insults the earthquake victims.
Stop USAID/State Department and the world relief corporate charities
from criminalizing the people of Haiti with their dividing of Port
au Prince into color-coated security zones (red, orange and yellow
� depicting criminal zones to less criminally-prone zones) and inevitably
parading around Haiti in vehicles with tinted or rolled-up windows
accompanied by an entourage of armed security that distances them
from the poor they are supposed to be helping, sending a menacing
message of dominance and greater authority over the suffering Haitians
in their own country. World Relief NGOs or aid providers working
in this crisis should always hire a local Haitian interpreter at
an equal wage to the NGO worker's salaries who
will act as translator to better communicate with the victims and
beyond the immediate need for food, water, shelter, medical and
psychological assistance, assess, not guess or make racists presumptions
about the people�s needs.
If
USAID and the major charities cannot let go of their fear of Blacks,
and are letting Haitians die while they wait for their required
UN or US military escorts, than let the Nation of Islam, Haitians
and their non-hysterical partners, from all the races and nations,
take care of the aid delivery to peoples in their � red and orange
zones.�
6. Value Family - Help reunite displaced families
The Obama administration must support an international response
to the tragic Haiti earthquake that values family and is sensitive
to the human agony of family lost and separated in Haiti.
Stop separating Haitian families, or exacerbating family separations
with insensitive US emergency relief policies and procedures at
a time family members most need to be together. For instance, lift
up the ban that prohibits Haitians with permanent residency, who
live in the US with their husbands, wives or children, but who are
not US citizen from returning to their families in America. Similarly,
allow the entry and return of Haitians living abroad, including
those who are not US citizens but legal US residents, into Haiti
so they may give aid, monies and moral and bereavement support to
their families. Respect the earthquake dead � identify the unclaimed
corpses, even if through taking a picture before putting them in
mass graves, so their love ones may, at some point see that they
are gone and have more closure. The mass displacement of the population
in the capital and in the South also means the injured and dying
are harder to locate and families have been separated from their
loved ones. Stop dropping food and water from the air. Haitians
are not livestock.
7.
Rebuild Haiti
The Obama administration must support
an international response that use its power to uphold Haitian-led,
Haiti-capacity building relief and rebuilding efforts that sustains
human rights, healing and dignity. And that helps save and protect
the lives, lands, property and human rights of the Haitian survivors
displaced by the 2010 earthquake. Show respect for the people of
Port au Prince and in the destroyed Southern areas, who, on the
first three days after the earthquake were mostly alone, and who
spontaneously organized themselves to save each other with the help
of those foreigners who got there to help and set up over a thousand
refugee camps to house over two million people throughout Haiti,
sharing with each other whatever they had. Show respect. They should
be a central and integral part of the redesigning and rebuilding
of Haiti.
Rebuilding efforts should hire companies that are committed to integrating
all levels of corporate responsibility - economic, social and environmental
- in their entire range of operations.
Rebuilding and redevelopment efforts
should prioritize agricultural production, building flood barriers
and better drainage systems. Infrastructure, sanitation, sewers,
electricity, earthquake and hurricane resistant homes, hospitals,
schools, supermarkets, etc. Better transportation such as inter-connecting
roads from the outback to the cities, a railroad, effective public
transportation, watershed protection, communication networks, projects
to combat illiteracy, building a universal education system that
respect Krey�l and indigenous Haitian culture and a universal health
care system that services the public, an integrated urban land,
public spaces and housing reform in the unique character of Haitian
art and culture, et al...
8. Relief, rebuilding and redevelopment should be designed
by Haitians and their collaborators, not USAID/State Department
or the �international community.�
USAID has a history of mistreating the Haitian majority, feeding
dependency, starving democracy and should not be the US agency overseeing
the US relief effort. And if they are, oversight and accountability
are needed. (See, Ezili�s
US Congress must provide more oversight guidelines for USAID.)
a.
Oversight and accountability
Demand more oversight of USAID earmarked funds for Haiti,
greater fiscal accountability, transparency and quantifiable evidence
of self-sustainable development achievements and, in particular
these new Haiti foreign assistance guidelines should ensure, that
food and other aid actually reach their intended beneficiaries and
not end up for sale in the open market or stay in Washington or
used in Haiti mostly on administrative salary, fees and expenses
for USAID's political benefactors, shipping companies and nonprofits.
b. Support Haitians to rebuild Haiti
The Obama administration should support an international
response to the tragic Haiti earthquake that supports relief, rebuilding
and development efforts designed by Haitians and that allows Haitians
with their collaborators in Black America and other chosen partners
first preference to assist the Haitian government with plans to
rebuild Haiti, and given contract preference and employment preference
to rebuild Haiti. Moreover, Haitian natives in Haiti ought not to
have to compete with anyone living abroad, including Haitians in
the Diaspora for relief, rebuilding and redevelopment jobs generated
in the rebuilding of Haiti.
c. Promote
Haitian self-reliance, self-respect, self-determination, not dependency,
injustice and indignities
Stop the stranglehold of USAID, its other international counterparts
and the over 10,000 NGOs over Haiti. Their grip must be loosened
if a new paradigm is to be installed for the people of Haiti that
promotes Haitian self-reliance not Haitian dependency.
Haitians are in need of justice, restitution, reparation, human
rights not charity. Fair trade not free trade. Haiti needs to have
its indigenous culture and domestic economic development respected.
It does not need the failed unholy Western enslavement trinities
of political, socio-economic and educational/religious institutions
keeping Haiti�s Black majority in physical and mental chains. Nor
does Haiti require further colonial paternalism, false benevolence
and to be burden with dependency through World Bank/IMF/IFI's debts
and such other modern tools of domination, economic enslavement
and financial colonialism. In particular, respect means humanitarian
assistance, rebuilding and redevelopment aid should go directly
to the Haitian government and not through USAID and its major corporate
subcontractors � Catholic Relief Services, World Vision, Care International,
International Red Cross, DYNCORPS, and other such Blackwater-like
sorts of private contractors because USAID projects undermines Haitian
sovereignty, does not promote sustainable development and the funds
allocated to USAID for Haiti generally do not reach the people most
in need.
USAID
was at the frontlines of the irregular warfare creating Coup D'etat,
chaos, anarchy and destabilization in Haiti culminating in the 2004
ouster of President Aristide and UN/US occupation.
"The objective of irregular warfare is control over the civilian
population and the neutralization of the state, and its principal
tactic is counterinsurgency, which is the use of indirect and asymmetric
techniques like subversion, infiltration, psychological operations,
cultural penetration and military deception." (Cuba: USAID
making ever-higher investments in subversion.)
9.
Prioritize jobs and skills transfer to Haitian nationals
It
should be the aim of the rebuilding to train qualified Haitians
and Haitians without jobs living in Haiti as their only abode to
take over the work that Haitians from the Diaspora or other consultants
may hold in the short term during the formulation, design, maintenance
of a rebuilt Haiti. For the initial phases of medical relief, there
are more Haitian doctors abroad then in Haiti and said doctors and
health care providers and collaborators must be immediately integrated
in the conceptualization, coordination and distribution of the medical
relief efforts. Haitian doctors leaving in Haiti should simultaneously
be trained to take over running the hospitals, clinics and health
care systems built during the reconstruction phase. This model should
apply, as possible, in all the other fields also.
10. Debt Cancellation
The Obama administration should support an international
response that supports debt cancellation for Haiti and supports
humanitarian relief, rebuilding and development efforts with grants,
not loans. Haiti cannot afford to invest in humanitarian relief,
rebuilding and development projects while continuing to make payments
on debts owed to multilateral financial institutions like the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank (WB) and the Inter-American
Development Bank (IDB). Debt service payments to these international
financial institutions were an onerous burden to Haiti even prior
to the earthquake and severely hindered the Haitian governments�
ability to meet its people�s need. The Obama administration should
support three specific debt cancellation initiatives and urge an
international response that also acts to:
a. Immediately cancel all debts owed by Haiti to the multilateral
financial institutions (IMF, WB and IDB);
b. Suspends all debt service payments to these institutions until
the debts are completely canceled; and,
c. Provides that all additional funds to Haiti for the rescue, relief,
rebuilding and redevelopment are to be given in the form of grants,
not loan debts.
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Additional
important information can be gathered by visiting the following:
Watch the Senate Foreign Relations Committee examine rescue, recovery and reconstruction efforts in Haiti
(January 28, 2010)
Statement on Haiti
adoptions from adoptees of color.
BlackCommentator.com Guest Commentator, Ezili Dant�/Marguerite Laurent is President, Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network. Click here to contact Ms. Laurent. |