http://www.blacklooks.org/2013/02/haiti-reframing-the-narrative/

Haiti – Reframing the narrative
February 27, 2013 By Sokari <http://www.blacklooks.org/author/admin/> Leave
a 
Comment<http://www.blacklooks.org/2013/02/haiti-reframing-the-narrative/#comments>

Peter Hallward, author of “Daming the Flood:Haiti, Aristide, and the
Politics of Containment”. Reframes the narrative of Haiti as disaster and
the problem as one of development. Rather he argues that the real issue is
one of political sovereignty, popular power and popular powerlessness.

Read through all the reports on Haiti over the past three years and you
will hardly hear the word Fanmi Lavalas mentioned so much so, its almost as
if there has been a conscious decision to erase the party, the ideology and
by inference, the popular masses. Hallward discusses Lavalas as a political
force and speaks to the origins and growth of the movement and the attempts
to break and silence the party.

Nonetheless despite the media erasure and attempts to destroy Fanmi Lavalas
by the US and other foreign powers, NGOs and UN, amongst people in the
neighbourhoods, activists, organizers,- the popular masses, there remains a
deep desire for regaining popular mobilization. One only has to consider
the silence of President Aristide and when he was summoned to court a few
weeks ago on spurious charges, the judge reconsidered and decided it
preferable for him to go to Aristide’s home rather than face huge numbers
of popular masses demonstrating in support of the former president.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=QTMRCmA3ooM#!


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Filed Under: #IRP13 <http://www.blacklooks.org/category/haiti/irp/>,
Haiti<http://www.blacklooks.org/category/haiti/>
, Social Movements
<http://www.blacklooks.org/category/social_movements/> Tagged
With: Earthquake <http://www.blacklooks.org/tag/earthquake/>, Fanmi
Lavalas<http://www.blacklooks.org/tag/fanmi_lavalas/>
, Haiti <http://www.blacklooks.org/tag/haiti/>, Jean-Bertrand
Aristide<http://www.blacklooks.org/tag/jean-bertrand_aristide/>
, UN MINUSTAH <http://www.blacklooks.org/tag/un_minustah/>

* *Vol. 6 • No. 33 • Du 27 Février au 5 Mars 2013

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*Also read* *Morne Bossa Neighbors
Nervous<http://haiti-liberte.com/archives/volume6-33/Morne%20Bossa.asp>
*

*Haitian Senate Calls for Halt to Mining Activities*

by Haiti Grassroots Watch and Inter Press Service

[image: ...]Outraged that they have not been consulted, this week Haitian
senators called for a moratorium on all activities connected with recently
granted gold and copper mining permits.

In a resolution approved by 15 of 16 senators present, the lawmakers also
demanded the establishment of a commission to review all of the current
mining contracts and “a national debate on the country’s mineral resources.”

The resolution – voted Feb. 20 in reaction to three new gold and copper
mining permits issued late last year by the government – decried “the
genocide that accompanied the pillage of our mineral resources in the 15th
century”, “the waste of resources… since the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake,” the
foreign mining experiences of the 20th century which caused “trauma,” and
“the incapacity of our country to calmly undertake negotiations related to
its mineral resources in a context of political disequilibrium.”

News of the permits first caused an uproar in January. Journalists,
experts, and politicians speculated on what Haiti had lost or would gain,
and accused the state mining agency (the Bureau des Mines et d’Energie –
BME) of granting “illegal” contracts.

[image: ...]*Parliamentary protest*

The senators say that the three new permits violate the Haitian
Constitution because they are based on 1997 conventions that were never
approved by the parliament.

The Constitution says that the parliament must “approve or reject
international treaties and conventions” (Art. 98-3). According to attorney
Mario Joseph, director of the Office of International Lawyers, “The
conventions are illegal, because the parliament did not ratify them.”

At a special hearing on Jan. 22, senators accused BME director Ludner
Remarais of subverting the law.

“In 20 years the parliament has never ratified any mining conventions,”
Senator Steven Benoit (West) thundered, while Senator Andris Riché (Grande
Anse) shouted: “We must not accept wacky contracts that seek to bury the
people.”

“I am sorry the Senate was never contacted,” Remarais responded, tears in
his eyes.

However, the conventions are not “international” because they concern the
government and companies that – at least on paper – are Haitian. The BME’s
former director, Dieuseul Anglade, maintains that the conventions are not
“illegal” because the government decided to sign and publish them as
decrees, i.e. without ratification.

“Decrees have the same authority as laws,” Anglade told IPS in a telephone
interview on Feb. 6, 2013. “If someone wants to be a demagogue or make
political hay, he can call the conventions ‘illegal,’ but they are legal.”

*New permits not really “new”*

The three “new” permits – for mining deposits in Morne Bossa, Douvray, and
“Faille B” in Haiti’s North and Northeast departments – are not new. They
are the conversion of permits for “exploration” into permits for
“exploitation.”

They were originally granted in 1997 by the René Préval government via two
mining conventions with two Haitian companies – St. Genevieve S.A. and
Société Minière Citadelle S.A. Because they were sold or they changed their
names, today the conventions are held by two small firms, also ostensibly
Haitian: Société Minière Delta and Société Minière du Nord-Est SA (DOMINE
S.A.).

But in both cases, the power rests overseas, in the hands of foreign
companies and shareholders.

The Société Minière Delta is the property of VCS Mining, a small U.S.
private company registered in the state of Delaware, infamous for its laws
which permit firms to hide their profits, keep their operations secret, and
pay minimal taxes.

DOMINE S.A. is a subsidiary of the Canadian mining company Majescor, which
says it specializes in “emerging” regions. Last month, Majescor offered for
sale over $2 million worth of shares for “the DOMINE project.” Majescor
says it controls DOMINE because it controls a company called SIMACT
Alliance Copper-Gold Inc., which in turn controls the majority of DOMINE
shares.

The three mining permits are the most advanced of the dozens of permits for
one-third of Haiti’s north (about 2,500 square kilometers) handed out in
recent years and will convert into concessions once the companies start
mining.

VCS Mining, the company working in Morne Bossa, maintains that it has
followed Haitian law from the beginning. Last year, VCS submitted the
required “feasibility study” for the site, which maps out the steps they
will take in order to prepare for mining, and it was finally accepted by
the BME in November, a representative told IPS in a telephone interview.

The spokesman – who asked not to be identified by name because his company
has decided to keep a low profile until the resolution of the BME-Senate
conflict – insisted, “We have done the work as required by law. The permits
are legal.”

The VCS representative also said that his company has invested over $4
million in the Morne Bossa site so far, and that since gold was first
discovered by UN geologists in the late 1970s, “over 38 million [dollars]
has been spent.”

*Now what?*

Seeking verification and clarification, IPS requested an interview with BME
director Ludner Remarais. The interview was three times promised, and then
denied. IPS wanted to confirm what VCS said, to ask for a copy of the
feasibility studies, and also to ask about the illegality of the original
conventions.

IPS also wanted to ask Remarais about the very low royalties in the two
mining conventions. Both award the Haitian state only 2.5% of the value of
the minerals extracted – a number that is “really low,” according to mining
royalties expert Claire Kumar.

“Anything under 5% is just really ludicrous for a country like Haiti,”
Kumar told IPS in 2012. “You shouldn’t even consider it. For a country with
a weak state, the royalty is the safest place to get your money.”

According to Haitian mining law, the financial agreements in a convention
can be “revised,” but so far, no government official has mentioned the
possibility.

The other major concerns are lack of transparency, and the lack of
participation from and benefits to local communities. (See “Morne Bossa
Neighbors 
Nervous<http://www.haiti-liberte.com/archives/volume6-33/Morne%20Bossa.asp>
”)

The Feb. 20 Senate resolution cannot legally block mining activities, but
it will undoubtedly cause the BME and the government to pause, according to
Eddy Laguerre, a lawyer and also a member of the editorial staff at the
Haitian weekly *Le Matin*.

“When the Senate votes a resolution, the executive needs to be careful,”
Laguerre told IPS in a telephone interview. “If the resolution is not
respected, the Senate can find ways to punish the executive, and can even
punish it politically by calling for a change in government.”

*Haiti Grassroots Watch is a partnership of AlterPresse, the Society of the
Animation of Social Communication (SAKS), the Network of Women Community
Radio Broadcasters (REFRAKA), community radio stations from the Association
of Haitian Community Media and students from the Journalism Laboratory at
the State University of Haiti.*

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