The truth about Haiti's suffering 
 
  By Finian Cunningham, 
 Friday, January 15, 2010 
 
 
Even in its hour of utter devastation, Haiti, the western
hemisphere's poorest country, teaches the rest of the world some
valuable truths.


This Caribbean island nation of nine million people has right now
a third of its population cut off from basic supplies of food, water,
medicine or shelter. In the blink of an eye, the earthquake that hit
the country has buried a capital city of three million people under
rubble for which the eventual death toll may be between 100,000 and
500,000. Just like that.


Like shutting the proverbial stable door after the horse has
bolted, the US and other world powers are promising to send emergency
aid to Haiti. Well-intentioned no doubt. But where was the aid and
economic development assistance to Haiti - over half the population
live on $1 a day and 80 per cent are classed as poor - in the years
before this calamity?


Haiti's poverty - as for other poor countries hit by natural
disasters - leaves its people wide open to the kind of devastation that
has befallen them. And make no mistake, Haiti's poverty is not just bad
luck or something inherently faulty about its natural resources and
people. The
country has been kept under-developed by decades of political and
economic interference from Washington to ensure that this former slave
colony continues to serve as a cheap source of agricultural exports to
the US and as a labour sweatshop for American corporations making
textiles and other consumer goods.


While
Washington spends $1,000 billion on wars allegedly to combat the threat
of terrorism, Haiti's poor - whose country's economy is valued at $7
billion - show us a sobering perspective on what a
real threat to life looks like. We live in a physical world where
floods, tsunamis, earthquakes happen. These disasters claim multiple
more lives than the threats that the US is fixated on and spends
multiples more money on.

 Can
you imagine how many lives could have been saved in Haiti's earthquake
if a fraction of the money squandered on futile wars had been directed
to economic and social development of that country?


Of
course, the moral and sensible logic of that idea does not apply in a
world dictated by Washington's foreign policy. This is because of the
imperatives and logic of US-led capitalism, which requires countries
like Haiti to be kept in a state of poverty for the sake of corporate
profit and which requires the fixation on illusionary threats to cover
up its need to control geopolitical resources (mainly energy). This is
the true face of the economic system that Washington and its allies
impose on the world. And Haiti has pulled the mask of this ugly face.


The harrowing anguish and suffering of Haiti teaches us something
else. Heart-rending reports of streets filled with corpses and blood
running from under rubble, children crying for parents, parents digging
with their fingers for children, the sound of dying voices pervading
the darkness of night. This is the horror of hundreds of thousands of
people suddenly engulfed by suffering. Some observers have compared
what has happened in Haiti to the aftermath of an atom bomb being
dropped. So the next time, Washington spokespeople airily
float plans on Sunday morning chat shows to obliterate Iran - that
other "serious threat" (meaning not serious threat) - we should
remember: this is what human suffering on a massive scale looks like.
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--- On Fri, 1/15/10, John Churchilly <meso...@yahoo.com> wrote:


 

 




      
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