Globalization and terror - Murder Inc. and Haiti
by toni solo
"Evidence is mounting that United
Nations peacekeepers shot and killed
unarmed civilians, including children, during a recent raid in Haiti...Independent witnesses say up to 23 people were killed during
the raid
and that many were shot in the head. "(1)
"Two women and two children were
killed in an air strike called in by
British forces in Afghanistan, the Ministry of Defence said."(2)
"Operations by U.S. and multinational
forces and Iraqi police are
killing twice as many Iraqis - most of them civilians - as attacks by
insurgents, according to statistics compiled by the Iraqi Health
Ministry." (3)
"Yesterday in Quito's Military
Hospital, Mexican student Lucía
Morett gave her first formal statement to Ecuador's public prosecutor
William Pesantez, testifying that Colombian soldiers... murdered people
who
were wounded or who had surrendered." (4)
Corporate globalization depends on governmental readiness to
murder. Peoples and organizations in countries that defend their right
to self
determination can expect no mercy. The Bush regime and its allies may
squabble occasionally over ways and means, but their behaviour towards
peoples like those of Haiti and Palestine leaves no room for doubt -
the US and allied governments operate a system of murderous global
gangsterism to get what they want. The UN Security Council now
functions pretty much as a diplomatic version of Murder Inc.
Haiti's prolonged destruction by foreign powers is just one more
example of rich
country elites' determination to seize what they want by denying
fundamental rights to peoples around the world. Four years on, the coup
against President Aristide organized by the United States, Canada and
France fits imperialism's familiar historical pattern. All the fake,
elegant-suited blather about bringing democracy and prosperity to Haiti
has boiled down to murderous military occupation by the United Nations
defending a corrupt North American and European backed elite, while
starving people survive by eating cakes made of dirt.
Immediately after the coup, George W. Bush said, "This government
believes it
essential that Haiti have a hopeful future. This is the beginning of a
new chapter in the country's history." Then US ambassador to the United
Nations, John Negroponte said, "Haiti
has turned a new page in its history." (5) What, now, does this brave
new world for Haiti, as prepared by George Bush, John Negroponte and
their corporate gangster cronies look like?
The statistics of misery
Associated Press writer Jonathan Katz reported on January 29th this
year "...in places like Cite Soleil, the oceanside slum where Charlene
shares a two-room house with her baby, five siblings and two unemployed
parents, cookies made of dirt, salt and vegetable shortening have
become a regular meal..."When my mother does not cook anything, I have
to eat them three times a day," Charlene said. Her baby, named Woodson,
lay still across her lap, looking even thinner than the slim 6 pounds 3
ounces he weighed at birth."
The World Bank reckons Haiti's population is just under 9 million.
Gross national income per capita in 2006 was about US$480. After two
and a half years of foreign intervention, in September 2006, the IMF
reckoned (6) that over 70% of people still lived on less than US$2 a
day
with 55% of people living on a per capita income of just US$0.44 per
day. Four years after the coup, Katz's report shows nothing has
improved. So if we say Haiti's population is now around 8.8 million-
that means
that just an hour's flying time from Miami, nearly 5 million people are
effectively starving.
That 2006 IMF report - an Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper
- noted real per capita gross domestic product then equalled just 70%
of Haiti's GDP in 1980.
Also, "Access to basic public services (health, education, running
water, sanitation) is very unreliable and social indicators are
alarming. Infant mortality is estimated at 76/1,000 or two times the
regional average, and life expectancy is about 18 years short of the
regional average. Moreover, less than half of the population has access
to drinking water in both rural and urban areas, compared to regional
averages of 71 percent and 93 percent, respectively. Access to improved
sanitary facilities is available to a very small portion of Haiti’s
population: 16 percent in rural areas and 50 percent in urban areas,
whereas in Central America and the Caribbean, these percentages average
49 percent and 86 percent, respectively."
Another report, this one by the Council on Hemispheric Affairs, also
appeared in September 2006. "Haiti’s Dirty Little Secret: the Problem
of Child Slavery", reported on the "restavec" system of forced child
labour, "According to the Haitian government, there are about
90,000 to 120,000 children in bondage, but UNICEF estimates
significantly larger numbers, ranging from 250,000 to 300,000." This,
remember, from a population of just under 9 million.
Right now, the sustainability of Haiti's economy is doubtful. Haiti has
suffered the same imperialist policy pressures as all the other
countries in
Central America and the Caribbean that have led to a decline of their
rural economies along with concomitant environmental destruction. Those
neoliberal policies were deliberately designed by rich country
"development" planners to create a large pool of vulnerable easily
exploited migrant labour all too ready to seek work either as illegal
immigrants to the US or in local super-exploitative maquila industries
serving luxury brands in North America and Europe.
The resulting agricultural collapse has been disastrous for Haiti's
rural economy and for the poor majority's ability to get enough to eat.
"Student activists in Haiti are calling for an overhaul of the nation's
agriculture policies, which they say have resulted in Haiti importing
more than half of its food while local farmers are mired in poverty."
(7)The misery and suffering endured by Haiti's people four years after
the coup against President Aristide prevails despite what passes for
support from the "international community".
Return to colonialism
Looking at Iraq or Palestine or Afghanistan, one can see quite clearly
that anywhere the US government and its allies have intervened people
are at least as badly off and usually worse off than they were before
that intervention. Haiti's case follows the pattern. The US government
and its Murder Inc. allies on the UN Security Council decide it
is time for "regime-change". They impose economic sanctions. They
deliberately attempt to provoke internal crisis and conflict. Their
propaganda media mount a relentless campaign to prepare public opinion
among the Murder Inc. countries' domestic audience. Finally they resort
to military force to install the regime they want. Invariably, it is a
puppet government facing fierce, resentful opposition from the people
on whom it has been imposed, able to survive only via enforcement by
foreign troops.
This is readily apparent if one reviews quotes from the time of the
coup. Colin Powell , then US Secretary of State, said in the coup
aftermath "...we felt by the end of last week that the only real answer
was if President Aristide would take a hard look at the situation and
decide to step down, which is what he did. And we said that under those
circumstances we would come in, and we came in immediately." Or, "...it
became very clear to all of us and to the Canadians and the French that
he [Aristide] had pretty much used up whatever political authority and
credibility he had." (see note 5)
"We felt". "It became pretty clear to all of us." But who are these
"we", these "all of us" except the most reactionary elements among the
elites of the former colonial powers? Effectively nothing has changed
since the days of the US military occupation of Haiti from 1915 to
1934. The only superficial difference is that the occupying forces are
now UN mercenaries, most shamefully from Latin American countries like
Brazil, Bolivia and Chile. The supreme, revolting irony is that United
Nations member countries are themselves effectively trashing the UN
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN Charter. One
wonders if Evo Morales does not see that something similar to President
Aristide's fate could just as plausibly befall him once John Negroponte
and hit-men like US ambassador Philip Goldberg have created the right
conditions in Bolivia.
Human rights in post-coup Haiti
Corporate media coverage of hunger and poverty in Haiti fits snugly
into the long standing racist stereotype Haiti shares with impoverished
African countries. They are viewed as "basket cases" whom their former
colonial owners, unfortunately and regrettably, can do hardly anything
to help. To
indifferent rich country public opinion, such cliches are sufficient to
explain away the "international community's" abject failure to help
promote
sustainable economic progress in Haiti.
But it is much harder for the UN occupation forces and the
"international community" to justify the persistence of gross human
rights abuses which is what the 2004 coup was supposedly intended to
stop. To cover up the shocking reality, Murder Inc. governments enlist
media
obfuscation and oblivion to tread softly around gross abuses. These
include the
thousands of people killed during and after the coup, the political
prisoners held without due process for years, the hundreds of people
unjustly convicted, mass victimization of members of Fanmi Lavalas,
impunity for
US-trained murderers, UN massacres and blatant attempts to rig
electoral processes.
Constant advocacy for human rights in Haiti by respected, authoritative
organizations like the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti
(http://www.ijdh.org) have been backed up by various studies since the
2004 coup describing and documenting abuse and violation of human
rights in the country. The Center for the Study of Human Rights of
Miami University's Law School published a report of an investigation by
Thomas Griffin in November 2004. Griffin and his team documented the
truly sickening security breakdown in Port-au-Prince with the police
dominated by former Haitian army soldiers and gang warfare fomented by
sinister US-supported figures like coup-instigator Andy Apaid.
Griffin gives important context in his report by explaining the role of
US government not-so-non-governmental organizations like the
International Foundation for Electoral Systems - funded directly by
USAID on a no-competing-bid basis - in the coup against Aristide. The
report's account of an interview with Pierre Vixamar, a stooge of the
US and Canadian governments, is a classic portrait of the mentality of
a colonialist catspaw. After documenting the nightmarish conditions in
the Haitian capital's hospitals and morgue, Griffin concluded "Life for
the impoverished majority is becoming more violent and more inhuman as
the months pass since the elected government’s removal on February 29,
2004."
A July 19th 2004 report by IJDH, also covering the post coup period,
documented hundreds of violent deaths. Anthony Fenton (8) makes two
important observations about that report. Firstly, he notes that like
all the other reports on the post-coup human rights situation it was
only able to cover the Port au Prince/Central Plateau area - implying
rightly that the full extent of abuses and violent death throughout
Haiti following the coup is certainly many times higher. Secondly, he
focuses on the report's assertion that “With the exception of four
victims and for those whom it has not been possible to obtain their
identity, interviewees have reported that the victims were supporters
of Aristide or Haiti’s former constitutional government.”
Corporate media silence on the post coup massacres in Haiti is in stark
contrast to mainstream media coverage of government repression of the
2007 uprising in Burma or of the post-election inter-communal violence
in Kenya. One is entitled to assume that since most of the victims of
Haiti's violence seem to have been impoverished supporters of President
Aristide, their suffering was and is unimportant as far as the Western
Bloc propaganda media are concerned. At the time of the coup only a
handful of journalists like Kevin Pina and Jean Ristil were faithfully
reporting matters at grass roots - their reports were ignored by the
major corporate media.
One can draw a similar conclusion with regard to the The Lancet article
"Human rights abuse and other criminal violations in Port-au-Prince,
Haiti: a random survey of households". (9) One of the report's authors,
Athena Kolbe, wrote more graphically in at least one other article (as
Lyn Duff) about the horrific use of rape and sexual abuse to destroy
pro-Aristide families. (10) The Lancet article reported, "Our findings
suggested that 8000 individuals were murdered in the greater
Port-au-Prince area during the 22-month period assessed. Almost half of
the identified perpetrators were government forces or outside political
actors. Sexual assault of women and girls was common, with findings
suggesting that 35,000 women were victimised in the area; more than
half of all female victims were younger than 18 years."
The article's authors interpreted these findings as follows, "crime and
systematic abuse of human rights were common in Port-au-Prince.
Although criminals were the most identified perpetrators of violations,
political actors and UN soldiers were also frequently identified. These
findings suggest the need for a systematic response from the newly
elected Haitian government, the UN, and social service organisations to
address the legal, medical, psychological, and economic consequences of
widespread human rights abuses and crime."
Given the Haitian government's meagre resources and the intimidating
political context in which they are working, the promotion and defence
of human rights in Haiti are likely to remain in the balance. The case
of human rights activist Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine, still missing after
seven months is emblematic of the the government's failure to impose
whatever limited authority it may have. Amnesty International has
issued repeated alerts lately documenting death threats to human rights
activists, among them Wilson Mesilien, Franztco Joseph and Yveson
Piton. (11)
Historical continuities : regional projections
Most of these these reports of systematic human rights abuses have been
either ignored or when they are impossible to ignore, like the Lancet
article, they have been rubbished, the integrity of their authors
challenged, their methodology questioned. That pattern follows the same
pattern of perception management deployed by the US government and its
allies against any steadfast opposition in Latin America, from
Sandino's pequeño ejercito
loco in 1930s Nicaragua to the FARC in Colombia for over forty
years, from Guatemala's Arbenz to Allende's Chile, from the Cuban
revolution to the Sandinista revolution to the Bolivarian revolution in
Venezuela and the indigenous resurgence under Evo Morales in Bolivia.
During the Nicaraguan war the historic 1986 judgement by the
International Court of Human Rights against the United States
government for instigating the Contra terrorist campaign against
Nicaragua's elected government was buried by the media. Numerous
reports detailing systematic and widespread contra atrocities were
discounted while Nicaraguan government measures to combat US government
directed terrorism were demonized. Against current adversaries,
the US government - run by many of the same people who connived in
trafficking arms and drugs to fund the Nicaraguan Contra - continues
implementing with its allies what in the 1980s, against Nicaragua,
Mozambique and Angola, they called "total war at grass roots level".
Just as in those former conflicts, they openly fund non-governmental
organizations opposed to target governments under the guise of
"strengthening democracy and human rights". At the same time they
covertly organize paramilitary organizations and murder campaigns.
Having deliberately provoked conflict and instability, they then accuse
the target government of being incapable of meeting its people's needs.
Then it is time for "regime change" via whatever puppet quisling
opportunists they can muster, imposed by some cynically engineered
"coalition of the willing" with or without a UN Murder Inc. permit.
The United States and allies like Canada or member countries of the
European Union maintain the same colonialist mentality they have always
had. Their priority is the maintenance of their own power and influence
via local proxies and enfeebled governments. To achieve that outcome
they will relentlessly and deliberately arrange wholesale murder so as
to repress democratic popular movements. They represent an ancien
regime whose overwhelming advantage - derived from slavery and genocide
in countries they colonised - is slipping away. The horrific deliberate
destruction of Haiti and the wholesale murder and imprisonment of
supporters of former President Aristide has a double aspect.
On the one hand it is a reprise of imperialist policy as applied
throughout the 20th century against peoples that insist on their right
to self-determination. On the other it is the latest precursor in Latin
America of renewed US and allied readiness to destroy progressive
movements in Venezuela, Bolivia and Ecuador. The recent Colombian
government massacre of FARC members and visiting Mexican research
students in Ecuador was a trial run for what is likely to be a series
of such provocations through 2008. After their success in Haiti, the US
government and its Murder Inc. allies are moving on to bigger,
oil-and-gas-rich prey.
Notes
1. "Women and children killed in Afghanistan by British air
strike", John Bingham, Independent, March 13th 2008
2. "Peacekeepers accused after killings in Haiti ", Andrew Buncombe,
Independent, July 29th 2005
3. "More Iraqi Civilians Killed by US Forces Than By Insurgents, Data
Shows", Nancy A. Youssef, Knight-Ridder, September 25th 2004
4. "La estudiante superviviente mexicana revela que los soldados
colombianos remataron a gente herida o que se había rendido."
Blanche Petrich, La Jornada, Rebelion, March 17th 2008
5.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/news/2004/03/mil-040301-usia01.htm
6. "A Window of Opportunity for Haiti" -
www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/scr/2006/cr06411.pdf
7. "HAITI: Once-Vibrant Farming Sector in Dire Straits", Nazaire
St. Fort, IPS March 4th 2008
8. "Human Rights Horrors in Haiti" Anthony Fenton,
www.dissidentvoice.org, July 27, 2004
9.
http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140673606692118/fulltext
10. "Haiti rapes" Lyn Duff, Haiti Action, March 10th 2005.
11. "Human rights activists under fire in Haiti" Haiti Information
Project, Haiti Action, January 13th 2008