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New date set for Haitian vote as crisis mounts
By Jonathan Keane
18 January 2006
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For the fourth time in the last five months, the date has been
reset for elections to replace Haitis interim government
installed in a US-backed coup in February 2004. The new dateFebruary
7has been announced after Washington, the United Nations
and the Organization of American States placed significant pressure
upon the regime. The US is desperate to cloak the government it
has installed in Haiti with some form of institutional legitimacy.
As of January 7, the last date set for the vote, 1.9 million
out of 3.4 million voters still had not received their required
ID cards. The election is supposed to select a president as well
as 110 legislators. The February 7 vote could be followed by a
second round on March 19. Patrick Fequiere, a member of Haitis
Provisional Electoral Council, stated, It is clear that
this new date is in response to increasing international pressure.
Haitis constitution requires an interim government to
hold elections in 90 days. It has now been a full two years since
Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the countrys last democratically
elected president, was ousted and forced into exile in South Africa.
The reason given for the latest delay is a rash of kidnappings
attributed to armed gangs of Aristide supporters.
The UN special envoy to Haiti, Juan Gabriel Valdes, said, We
are not going to allow [kidnappers] any attempt to derail the
electoral process.
The UN occupation troops have locked down Port-au-Prince, establishing
checkpoints at the major intersections as armored personnel carriers
patrol the streets. Cité Soleil, an impoverished shantytown
of 500,000 that largely supports Aristides Fanmi Lavalas
party, has been made into a virtual prison according to Jean-Joseph
Joel, the secretary-general of the local Lavalas branch.
Heeding the demands of Haitis business leaders and the
coup government, Valdes suggested that another UN military raid
on the neighborhood could be imminent. Many Cité Soleil
residents fear a repeat of the massacre on July 6, 2005 that killed
50 people. The massacre resulted from a UN military operation
to assassinate Emmanuel Dread Wilme, a popular community
leader labeled as a bandit by UN forces (a monument
has since been erected in Wilmes honor by Cité Soleil
residents).
Demonstrations erupted in Cité Soleil on Thursday, January
12 against the UN occupation and its collusion with the coup government
that has jailed political opponents. One person was confirmed
killed and 17 were injured in clashes with UN troops as of Wednesday
last week. One of the wounded was a 12-year-old girl. Every
day, we are counting dead bodies, said Joel.
A 30-year-old woman named Edline Pierre-Louis, who lost her
unborn baby when she was shot by UN troops on July 6, protested
the UNs denial of the massacre. The blue helmets [UN
troops] are lying, she told the Haitian Information Project.
They killed so many people, and I praise God that I am alive
to call them liars.
As witnessed by independent Canadian reporters Leslie Bagg
and Aaron Lakoff, multiple killings of civilians have been
committed by UN forces. In Cité Soleil they interviewed
a resident named Dieunord Edme, who spoke of his wife, Annette
Moleron, being shot and killed by UN troops on January 7 in an
incident that also claimed the lives of four other women in a
marketplace. The reporters witnessed a bloated corpse by a roadside
that residents couldnt retrieve because the UN military
in Haiti (MINUSTAH) would fire on anyone that approached it. The
reporters claim the corpse was left out in order to intimidate
the neighborhood.
On Monday, January 9, Reginald Boulos, the president of the
Haitian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, and Andy Apaid, the
Haitian-American who owns Haitis oldest and largest sweatshop
empireboth members of the Canadian and US-backed Group 184called
for a strike allegedly to protest the wave of kidnappings.
Group 184, which played a prominent role in destabilizing Aristides
government, has been funded by the International Republican Institute,
a constituent part of the National Endowment for Democracy, the
US agency established to carry out political operations formerly
orchestrated by the CIA.
The New York Times reported, The Haitian Chamber
of Commerce and Industry called a strike to pressure UN peacekeepers
to move against gangsallegedly loyal to ousted President
Jean-Bertrand Aristidewho have carried out many of the kidnappings.
The gangs are the code word for Haitis poor,
who largely support Aristide, and would most likely vote for René
Préval, who served as Haitis president from 1996
to 2001. It is apparent that most of Port-au-Prince regarded the
strike, in the words of one angry street vendor who closed his
stall due to lack of business, as a rich persons strike.
Announcements aired over Radio Metropole threatened that anyone
leaving their house takes their life into their own hands.
While many former Lavalas members have been murdered, jailed
or exiled by the coup government, Préval has been allowed
to run unimpeded and leads in the polls, despite the support given
by some sections of the Lavalas party to Marc Bazin. Bazin was
a former minister of finance under the Duvalier dictatorship,
and has also served as an official for the World Bank. Running
for president in the 1990 elections, Bazin received only 14 percent
of the vote, losing decisively to Aristide, who had gained popularity
by denouncing the Duvalier regime.
Préval is not running on the Lavalas ticket but rather
as an independent. His previous administration enacted a pro-business
agenda, including the privatization of state-owned enterprises
as well as the downsizing of the civil service. He brought Haitis
economic policy into line with the demands of the IMF and World
Bank for trade and tariff liberalization. Préval also largely
dropped his promised agrarian reform. In spite of his conservative
policies, the right-wing sections of the Haitian elite that installed
the current interim government oppose his return to power. Préval
has vowed to allow Aristides return to Haiti and would likely
replace current officials with veterans of his own administration.
This Haitian regimes latest kidnapping excuse
for postponing the electionechoed by the UN occupiers and
the mediaamounts to a smear against, and an imminent threat
to the poor in Haitis urban slums. Contrary to the propaganda
that the kidnappings are the work of Lavalas supporters to destabilize
the elections, the New York Times reported that the kidnappings
have targeted people from all walks of life. Michael Lucius,
chief of the Haitian Judiciary Police, stated that the kidnappings
are a purely criminal activity and have no political
connection. He believes that the kidnappers are merely looking
for cash ransoms.
In addition, the Haiti Information Project affirms that corrupt
Haitian police are implicated in the kidnappings. Judge Jean Pérs
Paul ordered the release of eight police officers implicated in
kidnappings. Also among those arrested and released was Stanley
Handal, who was accused of running a kidnapping ring. Handal is
a member of one of Haitis wealthy families that supported
the coup against Aristide.
Haitis business elite seized upon the kidnappings to
postpone the elections because of its concern that Préval
would place first out of the 35 candidates running for president.
At the same time, the pretext serves as a means of prodding the
UN occupation forces into moving against the enemies of the coup
government. Jean-Joseph Joel explains that the UN is under intense
pressure from the business elite to use force in order to improve
the odds of their favored presidential candidate, Charles Henri
Bakeranother sweatshop owner and also a Group 184 founder.
There is suspicion that the recent suicide of General Urano
Teixeira da Matta Bacellar, the Brazilian head of MINUSTAH, may
have resulted from his being pressured by the Haitian business
elite and UN officials to crack down on Cité Soleil. Bacellar
had reportedly opposed the plan. The Brazilian government of President
Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva has led a Latin American-dominated
peacekeeping force that replaced the US Marines who
invaded the island nation following the coup that toppled Aristide.
In an ominous development, the late General Bacellar has been
replaced by Chilean General Eduardo Aldunate Herman, who has been
accused of human right abuses from the Pinochet-era.
Two of Haitis best-financed presidential candidatesFRAPH
death squad leader Guy Philippe and the suspected murderer of
an Aristide critic, Dany Toussaint (who served as senator and
also as the chief of police under Aristide before turning against
him)have long been connected to cocaine trafficking, according
to US Drug Enforcement Administration officials. Youri Latortue,
a senate candidate who is a nephew to Haitis interim Prime
Minister Gerard Latortue, has close links to drug smuggling gangs.
Since the arrival of the UN peacekeepers the flow
of cocaine is essentially unimpeded, according to
the US State Department.
While drug traffickers and former death squad leaders like
Philippe and Jodel Chamblain go untouched after playing leading
roles in the 2004 coup, UN troops have concentrated their fire
on the poor in Haitis shantytowns, who have resisted this
government of gangsters and sweatshop owners.
Underlying the intractable political crisis in Haiti are the
desperate economic conditions for the vast majority of the people,
the result of imperialisms relentless oppression of the
country. In July 2003, Haiti was sending more than 90 percent
of all its foreign reserves to Washington to pay off over a billion
dollars in debt, the bulk of which was accumulated from loans
under the brutal US-backed Duvalier dictatorship. (When Baby
Doc Duvalier was finally overthrown in 1986, the US flew
him into exile to the French Rivera along with millions stolen
from the Haitian treasury.)
Thus, most Haitians live on one meal and less than a dollar
a day. Many have risked death attempting to flee, as evidenced
by the deaths of 24 migrants who suffocated last week in a truck
while being smuggled into the Dominican Republic. The deaths sparked
angry demonstrations on the border, in which workers and youth
burned tires, chanted slogans and threw rocks at UN troops deployed
in armored cars. Last Thursday, two people were killed and several
wounded in these clashes.
See Also:
Pre-election terror
and repression in Haiti
[30 December 2005]
Haiti: the forgotten
milestone in Bushs crusade for freedom
[12 March 2005]
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