The Huffington Post January 15, 2010

Bill Quigley
Posted: January 14, 2010 08:45 PM

What the Mainstream Media Will Not Tell You About Haiti: Part of the
Suffering of Haiti is "Made in the USA"

Part of the suffering of Haiti is indeed "Made in the USA." While the
earthquake would harm any country, actions by the United States have
absolutely magnified the harm from the earthquake in Haiti.

How? In the last decade alone, the U.S. slashed humanitarian
assistance to Haiti, blocked international loans, forced the
government of Haiti to downsize, ruined tens of thousands of small
farmers, and replaced the government with private non-governmental
organizations.

The result? Small farmers are starved out of the countryside and
migrate by the tens of thousands to the cities where they built cheap
shelters on hills. International funds for roads and education and
healthcare are halted by the U.S. The money that does come into the
country goes not to the government but to private corporations. Thus
the government of Haiti is nearly powerless to provide assistance to
its own people on regular days - much less in the face of a real
disaster like this one.

Some specifics from recent years.

In 2004, the U.S. assisted in a coup against the democratically
elected President of Haiti, Jean Bertrand Aristide. This continues a
long tradition of the U.S. deciding who will rule the poorest country
in the hemisphere. No government lasts in Haiti without U.S. approval.

In 2001, when the U.S. was mad at the President of Haiti, the U.S.
successfully led an effort to freeze $148 million in already-approved
loans and many hundreds of millions more of potential loans from the
Inter-American Development Bank to Haiti. Funds which were dedicated
to improve education, public health and roads.

For much of 2001-2004, the U.S. insisted that any international funds
sent to Haiti had to go through non-governmental organizations. Funds
that would have provided government services were re-routed thus
shrinking the ability of the government to provide aid.

For years the U.S. has helped ruin small farmers in Haiti by dumping
heavily subsidized U.S. rice on their market making it extremely
difficult for small farmers to survive. This was done to help U.S.
farmers. Haitian farmers? They don't vote in the U.S.

Those who visit Haiti will confirm that the biggest SUVs in Port au
Prince are plastered with decals of non-governmental organizations.
The biggest offices are for private groups doing the basic work of
government - healthcare, education, disaster response. And all are
guarded not by police but by private heavily-militarized security.

The government was systematically starved of funds. The public sector
shrank away. Poor people streamed to the cities.

Thus there are no rescue units. Little public healthcare is available.

So when disaster struck, the people of Haiti were on their own. We can
see them pitching in. We can see them trying. They are courageous and
generous and innovative, but volunteers cannot replace government. So
people suffer and die in greater numbers than necessary.

The results are on display for all to see. Tragically, much of the
suffering after the earthquake is "Made in the USA."
-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
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