Can freedom wear jackboots?

John Maxwell
Sunday, January 30, 2005
(www.jamaicaobserver.com)
Elie Weisel, a survivor of the Nazi Holocaust against the Jews, said
eloquently: "In those times, those who were in the death camps felt not
only tortured and murdered by the enemy, but also tortured and murdered
by what they considered to be the world's silence and indifference."

Now, 60 years later, at the United Nations commemoration of the
Holocaust, the world at least was trying to listen and to remember.
"Those who committed the crimes were not vulgar, underworld thugs, but
men with high positions in government, academia, industry and
medicine."

The world is remembering Auschwitz and the Holocaust. It is not paying
any notice to the 200-year Holocaust still under way in Haiti.

There, too, the people in hazard must feel tortured and murdered by the
indifference of a world conned into believing that the high-minded
leaders of the United States, France, Canada and Brazil have the
interest of the Haitian people at heart when their agents torture,
murder, maim and rape Haitians for no better reason than that they
support their democratically elected and unconstitutionally removed
president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

At the UN Holocaust commemoration, Archbishop Cilistino Migliore, the
Pope's representative, welcomed the Holocaust commemoration "so that
humanity would not forget the terror of which man was capable, the
evils of arrogant political extremism and social engineering, and the
need to build a safer, saner world for every man, woman and child".
CHAMBLAIN. freed of multiple convictions for serious crimes against
humanity

He beseeched all men and women of goodwill to seize that solemn occasion
to say "never again" to such crimes, no matter their political
inspiration, so that all nations, as well as the United Nations, might
truly respect the life, liberty and dignity of every human being.

The life, liberty and dignity of the Haitian people do not seem to
matter to anyone in the ruling circles of the world. On their way to
forced exile in the Central African Republic 11 months ago, the
president of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, and his family, aboard an
American airplane, were described by their kidnappers to the Antiguan
Government as "cargo".

'Men without conscience.'
LATORTUE. accused of murder in relation to the deaths of three men

At the Holocaust memorial, the vice-president of the United States of
America declared ".these great evils of history were perpetuated not in
some remote, uncivilised part of the world, but in the very heart of the
civilised world. .

Men without conscience are capable of any cruelty the human mind can
imagine. Therefore, we must teach every generation the values of
tolerance and decency and moral courage. And in every generation, free
nations must maintain the will, the foresight and the strength to fight
tyranny and spread the freedom that leads to peace".

In his reference to remote, uncivilised corners of the world, Mr Cheney
was obviously referring to the image conjured up by President Bush in
his 2002 speech to the West Point graduating class: "Our security will
require transforming the military you will lead, a military that must
be ready to strike at a moment's notice in any dark corner of the
world."

And, referring to Iraq - ".if war is forced upon us, we will fight with
the full force and might of the United States army".
Mr Bush did not need the full might of the US army to strike against
Haiti; a platoon of Marines was enough to blackmail the president to
leave. They thought they had persuaded him to resign, a mistake which
has cost them dearly in legitimacy.

But this legitimacy does not matter to the keepers of the flame of
civilisation. Their agents are busy instructing the agents of death and
destruction whom to arrest and shoot in Haiti - as if those depraved
killers needed any guidance.

Shortly after the thugs took power, a Canadian diplomat attached to the
OAS was a member of the party of official gangsters who were flown to
Gonaives in American helicopters to congratulate and celebrate the
'Cannibal Army' whom they credited with overthrowing President
Aristide.

This sinister association caused no concern to either the Canadians or
the OAS until I commented on it in my column some time later. He was
then removed. He is gone, but other Canadians have taken his place.

Meanwhile, in the United States, a self-confessed agent of the CIA and
known terrorist, one "Toto" Constant, enjoyed apparent immunity from
prosecution for the crimes he had committed in an earlier overthrow of
Aristide.

A group of Haitian women has now charged him with rape. Within Haiti,
his fellow gangster, Louis Jodel Chamblain, was freed of multiple
convictions for serious crimes against humanity - in a judicial charade
intended to legitimise him.

Despite the attentions of international and Haitian human rights groups,
the world has turned a deaf ear to Haitian suffering. But some new
developments may make it less easy to ignore the systematic
brutalisation of the Haitian people at the hands of multinational
troops and the home-bred Haitian gangsters.

A report by an American lawyer attached to the University of Miami law
school is one of those developments. Two others are the murder of a
Haitian journalist and the threat against another from the so-called
prime minister of Haiti, Latortue.

Latortue; the Haitian minister of justice, Bernard Gousse; and the UN
military mission have all been formally accused of murder in relation
to the deaths of three men - Lavalas activist Jimmy Charles; Ederson
Joseph, a student; and Abdias Jean, a journalist.

Jimmy Charles was taken into custody by MINUSTAH (the UN force), turned
over to the Haitian 'police' and later found shot to death. Abdias Jean
happened to witness the police killing of three children whom the police
accused of hiding terrorists.

Caribbeannet senior news correspondent, Gus Thomas, has written to
Latortue condemning the murder of Abdias Jean - who happened to be
Thomas' friend - and called on him to safeguard the rights of
journalists.

Thomas also complained about assaults and death threats against other
journalists and about police seizure of journalists' tapes, photographs
and other working material. He is also complaining to the emergency
meeting of the Inter-American Press Association on Monday in
Port-au-Prince.

A third and perhaps even more dangerous threat to Latortue was his
recent outburst against the president of the Haitian Journalists
Association and Reuters correspondent in Haiti, Guy Delva.

Delva was accused in an official statement by the PM's office of
providing 'disinformation' about Haiti and of preaching to his own
political clique. Latortue has made the terminal mistake of many
dictators: he has attacked the Press. You can kill any number of
civilians, but don't touch the Press.

Delva's crime was to report that Latortue was thinking of sending a
delegate to South Africa to talk to President Aristide. According to
Latortue, Delva's report was based on a "hypothetical" interview the PM
was supposed to have given Delva.

More dangerous to Latortue than all of these, however, is a 61-page
report by Thomas M Griffin, an American lawyer who led a team to Haiti
in November. The report is published on the website of the University
of Miami Law School.

Streets abandoned to cadavers

The report begins: 'After 10 months under an interim government backed
by the United States, Canada, and France and buttressed by a United
Nations force, Haiti's people churn inside a hurricane of violence.

Gunfire crackles, once bustling streets are abandoned to cadavers, and
whole neighbourhoods are cut off from the outside world. Nightmarish
fear now accompanies Haiti's poorest in their struggle to survive in
destitution. Gangs, police, irregular soldiers, and even UN
peacekeepers bring fear. There has been no investment in dialogue to
end the violence.

"Haiti's security and justice institutions fuel the cycle of violence.
Summary executions are a police tactic, and even well-meaning officers
treat poor neighbourhoods seeking a democratic voice as enemy territory
where they must kill or be killed.

"As voices for non-violent change are silenced by arrest, assassination
or fear, violent defence becomes a credible option. Mounting evidence
suggests that members of Haiti's elite. pay gangs to kill Lavalas
supporters and finance the illegal army."

Among the factors working for the overthrow of Aristide were a number of
US-funded non-governmental organisations, including a consultancy called
the International Federation for Electoral Systems (IFES) funded by
USAID.

The report details how this group organised opposition to Aristide,
systematically subverted the Haitian bureaucracy and eventually
succeeded in precipitating the putsch against him. Bernard Gousse was
among those on their payroll.

The IFES administrators told the Griffin team '[that the ouster] of
Aristide "was not the objective of the IFES programme, but it was the
result." They further stated that IFES/USAID workers in Haiti wanted to
take credit for the ouster of Aristide, but cannot "out of respect for
the wishes of the US Government".

IFES is part of a group whose head is a close friend of Vice-President
Cheney. The Griffin team also spoke to Haitian sweatshop millionaire
Andy Apaid, the main civil society leader of the coup.

Apaid, the leader of the Group of 184, admitted to the investigators
that he had directed the Haitian police not to arrest one particular
gang leader - Thomas Robinson, aka "Labanye" - but to work with him.
The Haitian slum-dwellers have a slightly different story.

According to them, Labanye is the leader of a well-armed, well-financed
group which continually attacks people in Cite Soleil, the slum city.
Many witnesses told the investigators that Labanye received financial
aid, firearms and political support from Andy Apaid.

On Thursday, at the swearing-in of Condoleezza Rice at the State
Department in Washington, President G W Bush said "Freedom is on the
march, and the world is better for it".

No nation, he asserted, can build a safer and better world alone,
although he made it clear in his inaugural speech that he was not about
to turn back from his doctrine of pre-emptive action. "The survival of
liberty in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in
other lands."

In Haiti, where the whole business of universal human rights began, they
will no doubt be pleased to hear that, and also Mr Bush quoting Abraham
Lincoln: "Those who deny freedom to others deserve it not themselves;
and, under the rule of a just God, cannot long retain it."

If I may paraphrase Shylock, a victim of anti-semitism:
Hath a Haitian not eyes? hath not a Haitian hands, organs, dimensions,
senses, affections, passions?
If you prick us, do we not bleed. and if you wrong us, shall we not
revenge?

Copyright 2005 John Maxwell
[EMAIL PROTECTED]


_______________________________________________
Ugandanet mailing list
[email protected]
http://kym.net/mailman/listinfo/ugandanet
% UGANDANET is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/

Reply via email to