-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the July 17, 2003
issue of Workers World newspaper
-------------------------

AT 200TH ANNIVERSARY NEARS: HAITI NEEDS REPARATIONS, NOT SANCTIONS

By Pat Chin

The Republic of Haiti will mark the 200th anniversary of its
independence on Jan. 1, 2004. Preparations for celebrating the
bicentennial are being made against the backdrop of a deepening economic
crisis in that oppressed country, exacerbated by economic sanctions.

"For over two years," reported the May 23 Inter Press Service, "the
United States, the European Union, and multilateral lenders have been
holding up some $500 million in aid and loans because they say
Aristide's government and Lavalas Family party have failed to reach a
compromise with opposition parties, which boycotted the 2000
Presidential race after protesting allegedly fraudulent parliamentary
contests in 2000."

The Washington-backed "Democratic Convergence" is made up of 15 tiny
bourgeois opposition parties, ranging from hard-core Duvalierists to
Social Democrats, with no real support in the popular masses. The group
is similar to the imperialist-backed "Democratic Coordination" in
Venezuela that has unsuccessfully tried to oust progressive Venezuelan
President Hugo Chavez. The Convergence has reportedly received some $120
million from the U.S.-based right-wing National Endowment for Democracy.

In response to the imperialist maneuver to force a "regime change" by
tightening the economic squeeze, Haitian President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide has called on France--the original colonial power--to make
restitution for an indemnity Haiti was forced to pay after militarily
defeating the French, forcing slavery's end and declaring independence.

The French government in 1825 had demanded 90 million gold francs to
"compensate" white planters for property loss due to the revolutionary
war. It was decades later that Haitian independence was recognized and
crippling sanctions lifted. The Aristide administration cal culates the
sum owed Haiti by France, including interest, to be well over
$21 billion.

The indemnity insured that Haiti would remain in debt to French
financiers for most of the 1800s.

Reparations for hundreds of years of forced labor are also being
demanded. This call is supported by African-Amer ican organizations that
have launched a movement for reparations in the U.S.

Aristide first sounded the call on April 7 at a massive gathering in
front of the National Palace marking the 200th anniversary of the death,
in a French prison, of revolutionary leader Toussaint L'Ouverture.
Almost two months later, at a June 3 press conference during the G-8
summit of capitalist vultures in Evian, France, French Foreign Ministry
spokesperson François Rivasseau arrogantly rejected the demand. The
summit was protested by thousands of anti-war and anti-globalization
demonstrators. Rivasseau cited loans made to the Haitian government,
while blaming alleged corruption and mismanagement by the Aristide
administration for Haiti's economic problems.

At a May 23 "Flag Day" celebration attended by thousands of students and
other supporters, Aristide also condemned global poverty and the Third
World debt. "Two hundred years after the victorious revolution," he
said, "the bull that turns the mill doesnget to drink the sugar syrup.
We refuse to be slaves to sub-human misery." (Inter Press Service, May
23).

WHY IS HAITI SO POOR?

The main political point made by the bourgeois "National Convergence"--
like that of the racist white colonizers and imperialists--is that Haiti
is wrenchingly poor because the slaves killed all their white masters to
gain independence and liberty. Haiti has consequently remained poor and
dependent and in need of U.S. resources and technology. Government
corruption is also a fundamental part of the problem, they say.

But this grossly distorts reality. Haiti's poverty lies mainly in the
centuries-long crime of slavery, which produced enormous wealth for
France, followed by 200 years of economic, political and military
aggression waged by the European and U.S. bourgeoisies against the first
free Black republic. The only country in the world where slaves had
liberated themselves by overthrowing their masters, Haiti was a powerful
symbol of resistance and had to be punished.

The country's liberation was a beacon of hope for an end to slavery
everywhere. It sent shock waves through the Americas and European
capitals growing fabulously rich from the brutal trade in human Black
cargo. Fearing the implications for their own slave-based economies,
France joined forces with the U.S. and other European powers.

In fact, after the first rebellion in Haiti, U.S. President George
Washington--a slave owner himself--directed his secretary of state,
Thomas Jefferson--another slave owner--to give the white planters in
Haiti $400,000 for arms and food to resist the uprising. The U.S. did
not recognize Haitian independence until after its own Civil War ended
slavery some 60 years later.

On Jan. 1, 1804, Haitian revolutionary hero Gen. Jean-Jacques Dessalines
had declared the country's independence. His proclamation was the
culmination of years of a national liberation struggle enacted by
African slaves, who had freed themselves in a revolutionary upsurge that
started at a Voodoo ceremony in 1791. Voodoo, as a result, has been
turned into a pejorative term.

The twisted, sadistic form of colonial logic--where the white oppressors
get compensated for their loss of the ability to cruelly exploit, while
the Black victims are condemned to punishing poverty--was also applied
in Jamaica under the British colonialists, and in the U.S. after slavery
ended.

The foreign imperialists and their collaborators among Haiti's
bourgeoisie have a daunting task ahead. It is one that will surely fail
as the people--supported by a solidarity movement abroad--continue to
draw on their long history of struggle and resistance against racist
demonization, neo-liberal capitalist exploitation and imperialist
plunder.

- END -

(Copyright Workers World Service: Everyone is permitted to copy and
distribute verbatim copies of this document, but changing it is not
allowed. For more information contact Workers World, 55 W. 17 St., NY,
NY 10011; via e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subscribe wwnews-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] Unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] Support the
voice of resistance http://www.workers.org/orders/donate.php)




------------------ This message is sent to you by Workers World News Service. To subscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, E-mail to: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To switch to the DIGEST mode, E-mail to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Send administrative queries to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



Reply via email to