Canadian Prime Minister tries to shore up Haitian government
born of coup
By Keith Jones
24 November 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin visited Haiti November
14 in a show of support for the interim government that was born
of the bloody coup that ousted the countrys elected president,
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, last February 29.
Viewed as illegitimate and incompetent by the mass of Haitians,
criticized by international human rights organizations for mounting
human rights violations, and denied recognition by the Community
of Caribbean nations (CARICOM), Gérard Latortues
beleaguered government is desperate for financial, political,
and military-security assistance. Hence, Martin, the first Canadian
prime minister to make an official Haitian visit, was accorded
a grand reception.
Martin, for his part, was eager to embrace Latortue, because
Canadas rulers came to view Aristides populist regime
as an impediment to their economic and geo-political interests
and because bolstering Haitis shaky interim regime will
find favor with the Bush administration.
The highlight of Martins one-day visit was a meeting
with Haitian political leaders at the National Palace at which
he gave a sermon on the need for democracy and national reconciliation.
If truth be told, however, Martins Liberal government
is among those responsible for subverting democracy in Haiti and
imposing on the Haitian people a regime completely beholden to
Haitis traditional venal economic and political establishment
and to Washington.
The Martin-Chrétien Liberal government worked hand-in-glove
with the Bush administration in mounting a four-year aid embargo
against Haiti, so as to force Aristide, who was viewed as insufficiently
pliant to IMF dictates, to integrate members of the right-wing
opposition in his government.
Then, this past February, Ottawa joined with Paris and Washington
in encouraging the self-styled democratic opposition
to use an armed rebellion, led by leaders of Haitis disbanded
armed forces and the FRAPH death squad, to chase Aristide from
power.
Only after US security personnel had bundled Aristide onto
a plane to take him into exile did US, French and Canadian troops
begin to deploy in the environs of Port-au-Prince so as to prevent
the rebelswhom Colin Powell had himself termed thugsfrom
capturing the National Palace and seizing power.
US, French and Canadian troops did not intervene, however,
to stop the rebels from exacting bloody reprisals against Aristide
supportersreprisals in which scores, possibly hundreds,
were massacred.
Nine months after Aristides ouster, the rebels, who have
been reinforced by thousands of other army veterans, still control
much of the country. According to a recent report by the Western
government-sponsored International Crisis Group, The transitional
government has failed to establish its authority in most of the
provinces where former military are acting unlawfully as security
providers.
Latortue periodically issues calls for the rebels to disband.
But he has no intention of challenging them or their bourgeois
patrons, for they constitute the most significant domestic support
of his government. Soon after taking power, Latortue proclaimed
the rebels freedom fighters. He has brushed aside
criticisms of a daylong trial in August that struck down a murder
conviction of one of the principal rebel leaders and has repeatedly
sought to negotiate with the rebels over their demands for financial
compensation, integration into the national police and reconstitution
of the army.
On the other hand, his government has struck out repeatedly
against the supporters of Aristides party, the Lavalas Family.
This repression has reached a new pitch since police opened fire
on a September 30 demonstration in Port-au-Prince demanding Aristides
return from exile in South Africa.
In October, several senior Lavalas leaders were arrested on
claims that they were instigating anti-government violence. Also,
the Latortue regime now routinely refers to the chimères,
the Port-au-Prince slum gangs that support Aristide, as terroristsa
designation that in the current international climate bears the
threat of a campaign of extermination. Indeed, a recent Amnesty
International delegation to Haiti found evidence of summary executions
of slum-dwellers by members of the Haitian National Police.
The new wave of repression against Aristides supporters
has three causes. First, the government is aware of its ever-increasing
unpopularity. Twice in the past six months Haiti has been ravaged
by tropical storms, which left thousands dead and showed the government
to be woefully inept. An estimated 70 percent of the population
is unemployed, and pledges of aid money from Canada and other
countries have failed either to materialize or to translate into
any improvement in living conditions. Second, there is increasing
dissatisfaction among sections of the elite over Latortures
failure to deliver a crushing blow to Lavalas. Lastly, the government
is concerned that Brazil, which leads the UN force that took charge
of stabilizing Haiti after US troops withdrew in June, appears
willing to include Aristide in its attempts to negotiate a political
settlement.
If Martin used his meeting with Haitian political leaders to
call on the government to include Lavalas in the elections promised
for next year, it is because Ottawa recognizes the vulnerability
of the Latortue government and fears that economic collapse and
mounting political violence could plunge the country into chaos.
Ottawas hope is that a weakened Lavalas, or important elements
of it, can be re-incorporated into the official politics of the
Haitian elite, so that Lavalas can continue its traditional role
as a populist party that deflects the masses from a genuine challenge
to the capitalist order and imperialist domination.
Speaking to a gathering described as the most representative
since Aristides ouster,
Martin urged leaders of the government, Lavalas and 13 other
(anti-Aristide) parties to put aside their grudges.
Later he told a press conference, I think it is absolutely
necessary that the opposition party Lavalas participate in the
elections. You cannot have democratic elections if, really, a
substantial portion of the population boycotts it.
The Latortue government will probably ignore Martins
advice, however, and continue its persecution of Lavalas. It is
aware that the Bush administration is ferociously hostile to Aristide,
never having forgotten the defrocked priests association
with the popular upsurge that followed the overthrow of the Duvalier
dictatorship.
When Louis Gérard Gilles, the Lavalas representative
at the meeting with Martin, raised the question of the thousand
of Lavalas members and supporters who have been detained, Latortue
tartly dismissed him with the claim there are no political prisoners
in Haiti. His government, moreover, continues to insist that it
will soon obtain an international warrant for Aristides
arrest.
See Also:
Why US troops are occupying
Haiti
[5 April 2004]
The overthrow of Haitis
Aristide: a coup made in the USA: Statement of the World Socialist
Web Site Editorial Board
[1 March 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |