FIST statement   Beyond the catastrophe  How imperialism undermined
Haiti
Published Jan 14, 2010  5:18 PM

A grave tragedy has befallen the people of Haiti. Fight Imperialism
Stand Together extends its solidarity to the island nation, its people
and the peoples’ movements.

The 7.3 earthquake that struck near Port-au-Prince on Jan. 12 left many
around the world waiting, shocked, hoping for the best but anticipating
the worst. As night came and communications with the island remained
tenuous, there was nothing left to do but wait for news of the damage
and the toll of human suffering.

A 7.3 earthquake is a major catastrophe anywhere, but in a nation like
Haiti -- the poorest country in the western hemisphere, with little
infrastructure capable of withstanding such an occurrence -- it was
bound to lead to major loss of life. It is expected that tens of
thousands have been killed. The conditions of Haiti, where there are few
hospitals, little medical personnel, barely passable national highways
and no emergency response teams, will lead to the needless deaths of
thousands more.

Haiti is a highly-exploited, poor nation. Eighty percent of the
population lives on less than $2 a day and more than 50 percent on less
than $1 a day. Unemployment exceeds 70 percent. Many people survive by
subsistence farming, and within the last couple of years poverty and
hunger has increased because of four consecutive tropical cyclones--Fay,
Gustav, Hanna, and Ike--in August and September.

Natural occurrences have indeed caused a great harm, but they are not
the chief cause of the misery that faces Haitian people.

Haiti has to be put in a context that best illuminates why the small
nation is in a precarious situation.

Haiti was the western hemisphere’s first Black republic. It was
the only slave colony to win freedom through armed struggle when the
Haitian people defeated a military power that was the scourge of Europe
-- the military of Napoleon Bonaparte.

George Washington and Thomas Jefferson gave the first foreign aid from
the United States to the French slave owners, for fear that a successful
revolution would lead to uprisings of enslaved Africans in North
America.

At the time of the Haitian revolution, Saint Domingue, as Haiti was then
known, was one the richest colony of the French, known as the
“pearl of the Antilles.”

Because of the overthrow of the colonial slave masters, France sent an
armada of 14 ships to extort 150 million francs from the country in
payment for the loss of property (the people of Haiti, their free labor
and the fruits of their labor).

That 1825 extortion began a series of western world attempts to assert
its will on the free people of Haiti.

The U.S. occupation of 1915-1934 destroyed the Haitian constitution and
established the armed forces that would later be dismantled by the first
democratically elected president of Haiti in 1990, President Aristide,
because of its ties to the Haitian ruling elite. The ruling elite, for
most of Haiti’s history, has been mainly white or light-skinned
due to the long legacy of colonialism.

Thousands were massacred by the invading U.S. forces.

The U.S. supported the brutal regimes of Francois “Papa
Doc” Duvalier and his son Jean-Claude “Baby Doc”
Duvalier. Tens of thousands were killed under the twin repressive
regimes, mostly by the paramilitary Tonton Macoutes.

When the people of Haiti were able to force out Baby Doc through a mass
struggle, another repressive military regime took over from 1987 until
the election, by two-thirds of the electorate, of preacher and mass
leader Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

Aristide was overthrown in September 1991, seven months after having
been sworn in, by military and police officers.

Though Aristide returned in 1994, he was forced into accepting
neoliberal austerity measures. The country was forced to import staples
and rely more heavily on loans from the International Monetary Fund and
World Bank, turning it from a nation that was in some respects able to
produce its own food to one that now relies on the importation of more
than 50 percent of its food.

Aristide was elected again in 2000 with 92 percent of the vote. He was
kidnapped in 2004 by private security forces and the U.S. military and
flown out of the country. Some of the same military leaders who started
the coup were also leaders of the Tonton Macoutes death squad.

The U.S., France and Canada all occupied Haiti until a U.N. mission,
named MINUSTAH, took over. MINUSTAH has been accused of carrying out
massacres against the popular movement to restore President Aristide,
leading to the killing of peoples’ leader Dred Wilme.

The peculiar history of slavery and genocide, colonization and support
of brutal dictatorships by the U.S. and France has led to Haiti being in
the condition it is in today.

Not only is there a meager infrastructure, but the country has been
deforested. The deforestation leads to floods during the rainy season,
mudslides and more severe hurricanes.

The U.S. has mobilized the Coast Guard to intercept Haitians trying to
make it to the U.S. and the administration is deploying 2,000 Marines.
Haiti does not need more occupying troops.

Already 9,000 U.N. troops are on the ground, have been there for more
than five years and have not contributed to developing the country but
in containing the people’s struggle and assuring a government
that has denied the largest party, Fanmi Lavalas, from running in this
year’s elections.

FIST calls for: the removal of all U.N. combat troops; reparations to be
paid to the Haitian people for the years of slavery by the French, the
U.S. occupations and support for rightist regimes; removal of all
deportation orders that currently hang over the heads of the more than
30,000 Haitians in the U.S.; amnesty for any Haitians attempting to make
it to U.S. shores; all bonuses from executives of financial institutions
that received bailout money to be donated to Haiti; the creation of work
brigades of U.S. workers and students to go to Haiti and help rebuild
the country at U.S. union-scale wages; and cancellation of all of
Haiti’s debt.

If the U.S were even remotely serious about assisting Haiti and
acknowledging its part in the systemic underdevelopment and
destabilization of Haiti, the government could easily call for the
implementation of all the above measures.

Return President Aristide! Reparations Now for the Haitian People!

Fight Imperialism Stand Together

Jan. 14, 2010

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