The country has been raped by France, the US and by its own former President. 
It would have been like Costa Rica today.

France’s ransom
Haiti is one of the poorest countries in the world, and a new Times 
investigative series explores why. One stunning detail: France demanded 
reparations from Haitians it once enslaved. That debt hamstrung Haiti’s economy 
for decades — and kept it from building even basic social services, like sewage 
and electricity.

The series is based on more than a year of reporting, troves of centuries-old 
documents and an analysis of financial records. I spoke to my colleague 
Catherine Porter, one of the four reporters who led the project, about what 
they found.

Why tell Haiti’s story now?

I’ve been covering Haiti since the earthquake in 2010, and returned dozens of 
times. Any journalist that spends time in Haiti continually confronts the same 
question: Why are things so bad here?

The poverty is beyond compare to anywhere else. Even countries that are 
impoverished compared to the United States or Canada, or many Western countries 
— they still have some level of social services. Haiti just doesn’t.

Even if you’re rich, you have to bring in your own water, and you need a 
generator for electricity. There’s no real transportation system; it’s 
basically privatized. There’s no real sewage system, so people use outhouses or 
the outdoors. There’s no real garbage pickup, so trash piles up. There’s little 
public education — it’s mostly privatized — so poor people don’t get much, if 
any, formal schooling. The health care is abysmal.

The usual explanation for Haiti’s problems is corruption. But the series 
suggests something else is also to blame.

Yeah. This other answer lodged into the side of my mouth as I read more history 
books on Haiti. One by Laurent DuBois mentioned this “independence debt,” but 
he didn’t go into much detail. That was the first time that I read about it and 
was like, “What is this?”

So what was it?

After Haiti’s independence in 1804, France came back and demanded reparations 
for lost property — which turned out to include the enslaved humans. French 
officials encouraged the Haitian government to take out a loan from the French 
banks to pay.

It became known as a double debt: Haiti was in debt to former property owners — 
the colonists — and also to the bankers. Right from the get-go, Haiti was in an 
economic hole.

It is wild: The colonists asked the former slaves for reparations.

You have to remember that, at the time, no one came to help Haiti.

It was the only Black free country in the Americas, and it was a pariah. The 
British didn’t want to recognize it because they had Jamaica and Barbados as 
colonies. The Americans most certainly did not want to recognize it; they still 
hadn’t ended slavery.


The Citadelle was built to defend Haitians from a return by the French.Federico 
Rios for The New York Times
What might Haiti look like today without this double debt?

One example is Costa Rica. It also had a strong coffee export industry, like 
Haiti does. When Haiti was spending up to 40 percent of its revenue on paying 
back this debt, Costa Rica was building electricity systems. People were 
putting in sewage treatment and schools. That would be closer to what Haiti 
could have been.

We haven’t even gotten into the U.S. occupation from 1915 to 1934 and Haiti’s 
dictator family, both of which further looted the country. It was one crisis 
after another inflicted on Haitians.

That’s true. A dictator, François Duvalier, came into power in 1957. Before 
that, the Haitian government had finally cleared most of its international 
debts. The World Bank had said that Haiti should rebuild. Instead, Duvalier and 
then his son put the country into increased misery.

As if that wasn’t enough, after Haiti’s president asked for reparations in 
2003, France removed him from office, with U.S. help. Have France and the U.S. 
owned up to the damage?

France has had a slow softening. In 2015, its president, François Hollande, 
said that France had imposed a “ransom” on Haiti, and that he would pay it 
back. But very quickly, his aides corrected him, saying that he meant he was 
going to pay the moral debt back; he wasn’t talking about money.

The Times is translating these stories to Haitian Creole. What’s the goal?

If I’m talking to anyone on the street in Haiti, they’ll speak only Haitian 
Creole. So I felt that if we’re going to do a story about Haitian history, 
surely it should be accessed by the people of that country.

The most popular form of media in Haiti is the radio, especially in rural areas 
where illiteracy is high. My hope is that we can get the Creole version in the 
hands of some people to read parts of it over the radio, so people in Haiti can 
hear it and debate it and form their opinions.

This is a Haitian history. It should be made as accessible as possible to 
Haitians.

More on Catherine Porter: She grew up in Toronto and got her first full-time 
journalism job at The Vancouver Sun. In 2010, she went to Port-au-Prince for 
The Toronto Star to report on the earthquake — an assignment that changed her 
life. She has returned more than 30 times and written a memoir about her 
experiences there. She joined The Times in 2017, leading our Toronto bureau.

The Haiti series
The Times this weekend published several articles on Haiti’s history, including:

The reparations to enslavers are the root of Haiti’s misery, as the first piece 
in the series explains.
Haiti tried to set up a national bank. In reality, a French bank controlled it.
Wall Street called for an invasion of Haiti — and the U.S. obliged.
Haiti’s president asked for reparations. Then the U.S. and France removed him 
from office.
Roland.
Toronto.

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