Addendum: In this morning's show, Amy interviews Aristide's attorney, who
provides 

a compelling motive for returning to Haiti, right now.  Haiti's election,
this Sunday,

 is a runoff of two candidates who led in the election of a month ago.
Lavelas, the

party of Aristide, as well as other, left of center parties, were not
allowed on that

ballot.  All of them boycotted that election, considering it a total fraud.
Both

remaining contenders are very right-wing, with long histories.  Both are
guaranteed 

NOT TO ALLOW ARISTIDE'S RETURN.  Ergo, if he is to return, it must be now. 

Obama has just asked/pressured So. Africa not to allow him to do so.

 

Ed 

 

http://www.democracynow.org/2011/3/16/amy_goodman_reports_from_south_africa

 

Aristide's Planned Return Trip to Haiti

Democracy Now:  Wednesday, March 16, 2011

 

Amy Goodman Reports from South Africa on Aristide's Planned Return Trip to
Haiti After Seven Years in Exile

 

Amy Goodman <http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/amy_goodman> ,
Democracy Now! host reporting from Johannesburg, South Africa. 

Katherine Kean <http://www.democracynow.org/appearances/katherine_kean_kk>
(K.K.), award-winning filmmaker and a personal friend of former Haitian
President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. 

Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide has decided to return to
Haiti this week ahead of Sunday's presidential runoff election. Aristide has
lived in exile in South Africa since 2004, when he was ousted in a
U.S.-backed coup. Despite U.S. pressure on the governments of Haiti and
South Africa not to allow him to return, Aristide and his family are
planning to leave on Thursday. Amy Goodman is in South Africa to cover
Aristide's return trip to Haiti. She joins us from Johannesburg along with
K.K. Kean, an award-winning filmmaker. [includes rush transcript]

JUAN GONZALEZ: Former Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide has decided
to return to Haiti this week ahead of Sunday's presidential runoff election.
Aristide has lived in exile in South Africa since 2004, when he was ousted
in a U.S.-backed coup. Amy Goodman is in South Africa to cover Aristide's
return to Haiti. She joins us now from Johannesburg.

Welcome, Amy.

AMY GOODMAN: Hi, Juan. Hi, Juan. It's great to be with you, and quite
amazing what is going to be taking place here in this historic country,
South Africa, to do with the history of another historic country, Haiti. We
flew in from New York earlier today to Oliver Tambo Airport. And just, that
is amazing in itself, right? He was the former president of the ANC, the
late president of the African National Congress, one of the great
anti-apartheid leaders. When we came in from the plane, the first image was
that of Nelson Mandela, the former president of South Africa. And on all the
wings of the planes are the flag of the new country of South Africa-you
know, in 1994, not so new-but the symbol of a peaceful revolution that took
place in this country.

Now, the reason we are here, though, is because President Aristide, as you
said, is returning to South Africa before-is returning to Haiti before the
Sunday elections that will be taking place for a new president in Haiti.
This is truly historic.

Regular listeners and viewers to Democracy Now! may remember back to 2004,
to the second coup against Aristide. The first was in 1991, unfortunately a
U.S-backed coup that threw the democratically elected president out of
office. The second was in 1994, when he was reelected, again a U.S.-backed
coup. Democracy Now! was on the plane to the Central African Republic to
Bangi, where he was flown into exile by U.S. military and U.S. security. We
went in a small delegation that was led by Maxine Waters, the Los Angeles
Congress member; Randall Robinson, the founder of TransAfrica; and others,
to return the Aristides to the Western hemisphere, amidst, at the time,
Condoleezza Rice and Donald Rumsfeld and Colin Powell, Secretary of State at
the time, warning the Aristides they were not to return to the Western
hemisphere, to which Randall Robinson responded, when we are on the flight,
"Whose hemisphere are they talking about?" And now-they returned to Jamaica,
ultimately in exile in South Africa, where they have been for the last seven
years. Now the Aristides are attempting to return to their country, to
Haiti.

I'm joined right now by K.K. Kean. We will both be on the plane, though
last-minute negotiations are taking place between, well, the government of
South Africa, the U.S., which is putting tremendous pressure on the
government of South Africa not to return the Aristides to Haiti and putting
pressure on the Haitian government. As I was on that plane-and K.K. Kean
was, as well, the renowned filmmaker who's made many films on Haiti, most
recently called Rezistans, covered the coup in 1991 and has done many films
since. We are going to hopefully return on this plane again, with the
Aristides, to chronicle this historic journey of the Aristides and their two
daughters to their country, to Haiti.

K.K. Kean, as you join us now, talk about the significance of this return of
the Aristides, though last-minute negotiations are taking place, even as we
speak, with the tremendous pressure that's being brought to bear on the
Aristides and the South African and Haitian governments by the U.S.

K.K. Kean: OK, thank you, Amy, and it's a pleasure to be here. It's
certainly a pleasure to be part of this long-awaited return, which we hope
will actually take place this time.

The Aristides have been in exile here in South Africa for seven years,
always wanting to go home, always looking for an opportunity. At this point,
they've been given passports by the Haitian government. So, according to the
Haitian government, it's fine for them to return. However, there's an
election next Sunday, and, no matter what happens, the Haitian government
will change. And we're far less secure of the new Haitian government,
whether they will allow Aristide to return or not. So, this is the reason
that it's a small window of opportunity, which Aristide and his friends are
trying to take opportunity of.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Well, Amy and K.K., on Monday, the U.S. State Department
urged former President Aristide to postpone his trip.

MARK TONER: However, former President Aristide has chosen to remain outside
of Haiti for seven years. To return this week could only be seen as a
conscious choice to impact Haiti's elections. We would urge former President
Aristide to delay his return until after the electoral process has
concluded, to permit the Haitian people to cast their ballots in a peaceful
atmosphere. Return prior to the election may potentially be destabilizing to
the political process.

JUAN GONZALEZ: That was State Department spokesperson Mark Toner. On Monday,
we asked Aristide's attorney, Ira Kurzban, to respond.

IRA KURZBAN: President Aristide's desire to return home is unrelated to the
election, but to a desire to be in Haiti to carry on his educational work.
However, he is genuinely concerned that a change in the Haitian government
may result in his remaining in South Africa. The Department of State has
previously said that this is a decision for the Haitian government. They
should leave the decision to the democratically elected government, instead
of seeking to dictate the terms under which a Haitian citizen may return to
his country.

The State Department statement today is full of misinformation. The claim
that President Aristide voluntarily left Haiti and could have returned the
past seven years is belied by the U.S. government's active involvement in
his removal as the democratically elected president of Haiti and their
active role in ensuring that he remained, and apparently remains, in South
Africa.

JUAN GONZALEZ: That was Ira Kurzban, President Aristide's longtime lawyer.
Amy, your sense of why it's so important at this critical time, just before
the election, for President Aristide to return?

AMY GOODMAN: Well, you know, it's very interesting to hear the wording of
Mark Toner's statement. Before that, well, now the resigned P.J. Crowley,
the State Department spokesperson, who had actually tweeted out at an
earlier time that the Aristides should not be returning.

Aristide is a Haitian citizen. He was the president of Haiti, but he will
return as a resident of Haiti. And, you know, right now, I have just seen a
letter that's being circulated to lawyers and law professors around the
United States, where they are calling on Cheryl Mills, the chief of staff of
the Department of State, to-criticizing the State Department's statement,
saying that he has every right to return. Also, the significance of who is
in the State Department, people who understand that well, like Harold Koh,
used to head the human rights clinic at Yale University, like Michael
Posner, the Assistant Secretary Michael Posner, who used to be head of the
Lawyers Committee for Human Rights, which is now called Human Rights
First-the issue of the human rights and the right of freedom of expression
and of a Haitian citizen to return home, of a Haitian family to return home.
This is a critical moment right now. The negotiations are taking place
behind the scenes. The safety of this trip is extremely important. And the
pressure that the U.S. has continually brought to bear on President Aristide
is one that is very important to highlight.

The U.S. can change its role in the troubled relationship it has had in
Haiti, since the very beginning. I mean, in 1804, Haiti was the first black
republic, born of a slave uprising, the only country in the world, and the
U.S. government would not recognize the republic of Haiti for decades,
because congressmen at that time were afraid that the slave uprising would
inspire slaves in the United States. So you go back to that time, and you
see the history. Again, in 1991 and 2004, the U.S. role in the coups against
the democratically elected leader, President Aristide. So, to change that
troubled history, especially in a country that is undergoing so much right
now-we're looking at the earthquake in Japan, so horrific. Let's remember
also the earthquake in Haiti that killed so many hundreds of thousands of
people, then the cholera outbreak. Haiti needs a break. Haiti needs to be
able to assert itself, not with the intervention of other countries, but
aiding the rebuilding of Haiti. And President Aristide has always been a
part of that.

One last thing, Juan, I just wanted to bring K.K. in. You know, she has been
here seven years in South Africa documenting the Aristides' stay here, in
fact documenting when President Aristide got his doctorate, another
doctorate, here in South Africa.

K.K. Kean: That is, I've made seven trips to South Africa. I haven't been
here for seven years. But yes, President Aristide was honored by UNISA, one
of the largest universities in the world. He was given a doctorate in
philosophy and African languages. And I documented that and also filmed him
talking about his thesis, which was called "Umoya Wamagama," which means
"The Spirit of the Words" and talks about similarities in Creole and African
languages.

AMY GOODMAN: And his meeting with Nelson Mandela? He had a meeting with
Nelson Mandela.

K.K. Kean: Yeah. Oh, yeah. But Mbeki was the president at that time and was
present at the ceremony, yeah.

AMY GOODMAN: And it was-

K.K. Kean: This film was shown on Haitian television, which was very
important at the time.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, I will be back with you, Juan, at the end of the
broadcast to look at this only-the only nuclear country in Africa, as we
look at the catastrophe that is unfolding in Japan, not only the earthquake,
but the catastrophes at the nuclear plants there. Juan, you had a question?

JUAN GONZALEZ: OK, alright. No, Amy, so we'll be back with you later on in
the show, as we're going to take a break now, and then we're going to move
to Japan and the continuing and heartbreaking crisis both of the aftermath
of the earthquake and tsunami, as well as the escalating nuclear crisis
there.

 

 

 



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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