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Council On Hemispheric Affairs
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Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the
Western Hemisphere
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Memorandum to the Press 04.11
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Tuesday, February
24, 2004
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Unique
form of French Compensation for Past Injustices Could Make Amends to Haiti, if
Action is Immediately Taken
- Opposition refutes to
dialogue, time running out on Powell’s flawed policy towards the island.
- Let France take the lead to rescue Haiti before it falls over a precipice.
- If U.S. Haiti policy remains
paralyzed, or if it is seen as secretly wanting Aristide to be overthrown,
France should act unilaterally, if need be, but preferably in conjunction
with Canadian and CARICOM forces.
- Time is running out for
Chirac to make a down payment on debt owed to Port-au-Prince, with Haiti about to go into convulsions.
- The Security Council
should act decisively
Haiti’s political opposition decided this afternoon to turn
down Secretary of State Powell’s peace plan solution. If nothing is done, Haiti’s current reality can only change for the worse in the
next few hours and days, as forces of the violent opposition tighten the noose around
the nation’s capitol. Meanwhile, the benighted country continues to suffer from
its historical scourges of repression, violence, and unforgiving poverty. Even before the current devastating crisis, Haiti was one of the most hapless human habitats on the globe,
ranking 146th on the UN’s Human Development Indicator scale, out of
a total of 173 countries. It was far behind its Caribbean
neighbors: Bahamas (41), Cuba (55), Jamaica (86), and Dominican Republic (94). Haiti’s social profile very closely parallels that
of the most impoverished Central African nations, with almost 50 % of its adult
population being illiterate, and 65% of islanders living below the poverty
line.
In addition, Haiti’s political system has been accompanied by unrelieved
venality, with the annual Corruption Perception Index placing Haiti on the bottom of the 133-country list in 2003. As city
after city is being seized by a well-armed force led by former members of the
Haitian military and their even more blood-stained paramilitary force, the FRAPH
(together responsible for the murder of over 5,000 innocent civilians during
the period of military rule), Haiti as an organized polity will cease to exist
if decisive action isn’t taken immediately.
Powell’s Flawed
Haiti Policy
With the opposition now having
rejected the U.S. proposed peace plan, and continuing to insist upon not
dialoguing with President Aristide, France would do well to move into the vacuum caused by Powell’s
inaction irrespective of U.S. action. Powell’s
strategy can be faulted on several fronts. He irresponsibly dallied while Haiti’s security situation continued to worsen over recent
months.
In the persons of Otto Reich and
Roger Noriega, he allowed incompetent extremists to take over key Latin America
posts, where they almost immediately began to insult regional leaders. Except for his grudging acknowledgement that
Aristide was the legal president of the country, he did nothing to shore up the
Haitian leader’s stature or enable him to project his authority to the entire
nation either symbolically, or in terms of being able to obtain vitally needed
supplies like tear gas and protective devices for the police force from the U.S.
Nor did Powell even hint that the almost four-year aid embargo against Haiti would be lifted, whereby almost $500 million in critical
development funds that had been pledged by international donors to Haiti would at long last be released. Powell did not take any action even after
Aristide had agreed to every recommendation made by Washington and other donor countries and institutions participating
in the boycott. Inevitably, Aristide’s isolation and fall in popularity and
esteem was their self-fulfilling prophecy which came true.
Now that the opposition has
refused to cooperate, only hours remain for a solution to be had before Haiti goes up in flames.
Already, Powell has given away the store to an opposition that has been
invalidated at the polls, has put forth no national program to discuss, or has
even established its primacy over the thugs and renegades who are members of
the “violent opposition,” and who now reach out to the armed opposition as its
cadres head for Port-au-Prince to sack the city as they did Cap-Haiten and
Gonaives.
If Powell continues to be
indecisive and if the group of international donors remains as faithless to
lawful government as the League
of Nations was to Ethiopia’s Haile Selassie in the 1930’s, we will shortly be witnessing
the death of democratic society in Haiti. As of now, a decisive voice is needed with a firm
action plan that will save lives. The
time has come for France to play the role that Powell has been unwilling or
unable to assume.
France
Even though a growing percentage
of the Haitian population who have been demanding more economic development,
more personal freedom, more transparency in government with many calling for
Aristide to step down, hundreds of thousands more maintain a fierce loyalty to
Aristide even though he has failed to fulfill his pledge of more food, housing,
health service and jobs for his people, due to a lack of access to resources.
As a result of such tensions,
including a huge risk of civil war and of a resulting human catastrophe, Haiti has moved into a new sphere of danger as the island becomes
increasingly dominated by violent anti-Aristide activists with disreputable
pasts. These reprobates plan to seize
control by force, driving the country’s constitutional president out of office.
Clearly, in order to spare Haiti the colossal human and physical costs of unremitting
class and ideology- based warfare, an outside police/military force must be
introduced on the island. For the last
several weeks, as the security situation deteriorated, increased attention
turned to the possibility that some combination of U.S., CARICOM, French and
Canadian security forces be introduced to the island to serve as a buffer to
the spread of violence. Almost all of
these potential contributors have accepted the illogical scenario put forth by Secretary
of State Powell that a political solution must come first with the peacekeepers
being sent after (rather than before) a settlement is achieved.
The island which Columbus named Hispanola was first discovered in 1492, in what
was the explorer’s first voyage to the Caribbean. At the time, he described the island as
having “the greatest softness of the world”.
By the middle of the 17th century, Haiti (which the French named Saint-Domingue) fell under
French control and soon became a hot spot in the world economy. During the colonial period, the island
produced cacao, cotton, sugar, coffee, and leather; as a result of this it was
famed for its wealth. Today, Haiti is in near desperate circumstances, with President
Aristide blaming France’s historical “plundering” as one of the factors
contributing to its dire circumstances.
France has long been connected to Haiti and has had a much greater historical and cultural
impact on the island than the U.S.’s one that goes well beyond the influence of the French
language on the country’s native Creole dialect. Between 1664 and 1804, Haiti was a French colony. During this time, French interests
on the island prospered, but at the price of slavery. While the island was
relatively rich, its enslaved population led lives of utter destitution. France imported raw materials from Haiti at an artificial low price, and gave little thought to
share some of the resulting huge profits with those who actually produced the
goods and crops.
The
island finally won its independence in 1804, after a long slave uprising
against Napoleon’s armies, which was followed by an imposed financial settlement
negotiated in 1825, in which the former French colonists were paid 90 million
in gold-francs by bribed Haitian authorities as compensation for “their” sequestered
properties.
Reparations
The
above amount has been calculated by at least one source as being the equivalent
to $21 billion today, and is the total cited last year by President Aristide that
his country should receive from France in reparations. He called it the “price of independence,”
because according to his April 7, 2003
speech, the enormity of the amount of money demanded by French landholders guaranteed
the island’s subsequent economic failure which soon became almost
institutionalized. Aristide denounced France for building its own economy by exploiting Haiti’s and that the island never should have had to pay such
a huge sum. In the course of his speech, Aristide recited several examples of
restitutions in history to support his argument, like the Jewish gold stolen by
the Nazis between 1938 and 1945, which Germany paid for in 1946.
To
quote Aristide, some Haitian “experts” have converted the original indemnity
into its current value of money, and came up with the figure of
$21,685,135,571.48. Their conversion method remains somewhat of a mystery, though
the Haitian Foreign Minister attributed the calculation to a group of
economists. While these economists failed to share the methodology they used to
convert gold-francs of 1825 into the current value of the American dollar, nor the
rates of inflation, and the interest levels they selected to base their
calculations, the sum corresponds to what would be almost 50 years of the
current annual budget of Haiti!
The French Prepare their Response
But a
determined Aristide, who now must have more pressing matters on his mind,
announced he was ready to take the issue to the International Court of Justice if
France refused to pay what he insists is due Haiti. Jean-Pierre Rivasseau, the spokesman of the
French Foreign Minister, claimed that France has already given more than 200
million euros of the 2 billions euros allocated by the International Community
to Haiti in recent years, and that the island has not been able to take
advantage of these funds due to political conflicts and a lack of security.
As for
French public opinion, it is almost unanimous in rejecting any reparations,
even though much of the population agrees that France has a duty to help the island. However, prevailing
French sentiment is that it is almost impossible to aid the Haitian people due
to the current corruption and political instability which grip the island.
Upon
Aristide making this call for compensation, the French intellectual and Latin
Americanist Régis Debray was appointed by French Foreign Minister Dominique de
Villepin to head up a “Committee of Reflection on Haiti.” His report was delivered
to the government on January 28 and confirmed France’s initial position rejecting such a claim. According to
the Commission’s findings, Aristide’s demands are said to have no juridical
base, because all the laws prejudicial to the French position were enacted afterwards
and are not retroactive. Debray wrote that he is in favor of what he calls “the
duty of memory,” and not of “re-sifting.” He advises the French government to help
Haitians into building up a “solid nation” and not to only hand out money.
France will not pay any compensation, and Aristide is highly
unlikely to sue for what he believes is due his country. Some critics ask, how can France be asked to pay for something that happened two
centuries ago? How to calculate the “real” conversion impact of 90 million in
gold-francs? Even if it were possible, it establishes a perplexing formula if
states had to pay for what their predecessors did centuries before. For
example, Peru, Mexico and Bolivia could sue Spain for plundering the Incas and the Aztecs.
African-Americans would ask for compensation from Europe
and the U.S. for a slave trade that dated back to the 16th
century, which they themselves have never personally suffered.
About
a week ago, French Foreign Minister Dominique de Villepin set off a bombshell
when he proposed that France would be willing to contribute some of its 4000 troops
now stationed in France’s Caribbean possessions of Guadeloupe and Martinique
to peacekeeping efforts in Haiti. At first, France tried to harmonize its position with Secretary Powell’s
formula stressing that a political solution must be achieved in order for
peacekeepers to be sent in. The French
government then seemed to veer away from this earlier position as the Haitian
situation worsened and U.S. inaction became more and more evident. The qualifier was that such French action
would have to have the consent of the UN Security Council. Now that the Haitian opposition turned down
the U.S. request for a political solution, Washington has briefly indicated that it will go to the UN Security
Council for authorization concerning what will be its next step. But what Haiti needs is action now, in order to save lives.
While
Aristide’s compensation demand briefly distracted Haitian public opinion from
the country’s present perilous current strife, reality soon returned. But the declaration of the French Minister in
favor of some form of military help for Haiti in order to halt the violence that
is presently tearing the island apart could be a symbolic down payment on the
symbolic debt owed by France to Haiti.
The Chirac government had a “crisis cell” formed which included relevant
French officials to find a solution to Haiti’s explosive situation, and that
participating or leading an international military force would be a possibility.
The
French proposal was initially harmonized to agree with the Powell position of
first facilitating a political solution on the island before sending in a peace
force. This formula was challenged by
the more logical thesis that the peace force should be introduced now, while
there is still a government to protect, rather than after such a hypothetical solution
which, by its very nature, would reduce the need to have such a force in large
numbers, in place. Dominique de Villepin
appeared to be sympathetic to this position by stating that the outside world
shouldn’t be “letting things degenerate.” This “peace-force” idea at first did not generate
enthusiasm in other countries; especially in those potential contributors to
such a body, including a particularly soft position taken by Canada. Washington wasted precious time by insisting that Aristide must
first come to an agreement with the opposition and that such a solution would
be based on power-sharing with the opposition. This would be facilitated with the help of the
OAS or Caricom, conceivably making moot the need to send in military forces
into the country. The UN was also initially somewhat cool to the French initiative,
and it is unlikely France will act alone in Haiti. But if Haiti’s situation continues to worsen, concerned countries
will have to react more aggressively. In
this explosive context and with the lack of an energetic policy in place, France may have to, at the last moment, move up to the plate,
even if Canada lacks the spirit to do the same.
This analysis was prepared by Jill Shelly, Christie Sheiry, and Nadege
Touzé, Research Associates.
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