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Haiti: Washington gives greenlight to right-wing coup
By Richard Dufour
23 February 2004
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Former military and death-squad leaders are attempting an armed
overthrow of the elected president of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
with the connivance of an elite-controlled political opposition
and under the complacent eyes of Western governments. This is
the bitter truth revealed by last weekends events in the
impoverished Caribbean island-nation. The poorest country in the
Western hemisphere, Haiti is on the verge of civil war and a possible
humanitarian catastrophe.
Yesterday, Cap-Haïtien, the countrys second largest
city, reportedly fell to a rebel army that is led by former officers
of the disbanded Haitian army and leaders of FRAPH, a death squad
responsible for innumerable atrocities during the three-year military
dictatorship that deposed Aristide in 1991.The heavily-armed rebels
seized control of Cap-Haïtiens airport and main police
stations, quickly overwhelming Aristide loyalists who had erected
flaming barricades on the city outskirts.
Earlier last week, the rebels, whose initial base was in the
north-western city of Gonaïves, overran Hinche, the most
important city in the north-eastern plains. With the fall of Cap-Haïtien,
much, if not most, of the north of the country is now beyond the
control of the government. Buoyed by the lack of resistance from
the national police, the rebels are now boasting about a possible
march on Port-au-Prince.
The rebel advance into Cap-Haitïen came the day after
the apparent collapse of an attempt by the US, France and Canada
to broker a power-sharing agreement between Aristide and leaders
of the political opposition. Led by the top American diplomat
for the Western Hemisphere, Roger F. Noriega, a high-level international
delegation met separately Saturday with Aristide and leaders of
the political opposition, the Convergence Démocratique
and Group 184. Aristide quickly agreed to the demands of the regions
major powers and the Caribbean inter-state organization, CARICOM,
that he cede many of his executive powers, including control over
the national police force and the electoral commission, to a new
prime minister to be appointed in consultation with the opposition.
But the opposition flatly refused to accept any agreement that
would leave Aristide, whose mandate as president runs until February
2006, with a measure of power. If we accept this plan without
the departure of Aristide, we will disappear as an opposition,
said Rosemond Pradel of the opposition group Konakom.
The deadline for the opposition to give its final answer to
the international mediation effort has been extended to late Monday
afternoon Haitian time, but it is generally conceded that there
is next to no chance the opposition will reverse its stand. We
expect the international community to understand our position
... which will not change, maintained Gérard Pierre-Charles,
a leading opposition member. Meanwhile the oppositions main
spokesman, sweatshop owner André Apaid, insisted that the
population must continue its mobilization against the current
Haitian government
The oppositionwhich is comprised of the political representatives
of Haitis traditional business and political elite, including
prominent supporters of the former Duvalier and Cédras
dictatorships, and former supporters of Aristideclaim not
to support, nor have any connection, with the armed rebellion.
Yet many initially justified it. And clearly the opposition is
banking on the rebellion to ultimately cause Aristide to bow to
their demands and resign. How else to explain their refusal to
accept a power-sharing agreement that was not only proposed by
their long-time patrons in Washington, but which would have given
the US a key role in policing, through the deployment of a so-called
international security force?
A second no less pivotal opposition calculation was that the
Republican rightwhich supported Aristides ouster in
1991, opposed his being restored to power through the deployment
of the US military in 1994, and continue to view him as a dangerous
socialist, although he has applied the policy prescriptions of
the IMFwould, when push came to shove, not take Aristides
side against them.
Indeed, Washington effectively handed the opposition a trump
card announcing beforehand that any positive response to the Aristide
governments request for international assistance to put
down the rebellion was dependent on it first obtaining an agreement
with the opposition. That the US envoy to Port-au-Prince was Noriega,
a rabid anti-communist associated with the far-right of the Republican
Party, could not but have given further comfort to the opposition.
Throughout the current crisis the US has assumed an ambivalent
and ambiguous attitude toward Aristide, whom it nonetheless has
had to acknowledge is the legitimately elected president of Haiti.
Preoccupied with its neo-colonial wars of plunder against Afghanistan
and Iraq, the Bush administration said virtually nothing and did
even less about Haiti as the oppositionsensing Aristides
growing unpopularity because of his right-wing economic policies
and increasingly autocratic methods of rulewent beyond the
role Washington had hitherto prescribed for itto serve as
a check on Aristideand began pressing for his immediate
ouster.
Then, when the armed rebellion erupted on February 5, State
Department officials deplored the violence, but indicated they
would not be unhappy to see Aristide forced from power. Ultimately,
Secretary of State Colin Powell was forced to issue what constituted
a correction, saying the US was not seeking regime change
in Haiti. But US officials have repeatedly said that if a formula
could be found to make Aristides exit constitutional
they would not object. Said Powell, after affirming Washingtons
support for Aristide serving out his presidential term, You
know, if an agreement is reached that moves that in another direction,
thats fine.
Only after Haitis former colonial power France floated
the possibility of sending troops to Haiti to end the spreading
violence, did Washington begin to take a more active role in Haitian
affairs. The Bush administration was not going to allow any incursion
by a rival imperialist power into Americas traditional backyard.
Another factor that has spurred Washington into a more direct
involvement is pressure from leading political figures in Florida,
a state which could see a mass influx of Haitian refugees if the
situation in the impoverished island to the south takes a turn
for the worst. If we can send military forces to Liberia3,000
miles awaywe certainly can act to protect our interests
in our own backyard, said Sen. Bob Graham, D-Florida. Inaction
can no longer be our policy.
It is unclear at this point whether the Bush administration
will continue to sit by as the forces of reaction plunge Haiti
into civil war. A military intervention cannot be excluded. But
if it were to take place, it would be no progressive solution
to the tragic plight of the Haitian peopleno more than the
previous 1994 US intervention that restored Aristide to power
under orders to impose socially incendiary, IMF-dictated economic
policies, thus setting the stage for the current crisis.
See Also:
An exchange on Haiti: Jean-Bertrand Aristide
and the dead end of left nationalist politics
[18 February 2004]
Right wing-led rebellion convulses Haiti
[12 February 2004]
Haiti: Aristide regime shaken by mass
protests
[6 February 2004]
As US isolates Aristide,
Haitis wealthy pin hopes on Bush
[9 January 2001]
US occupation force
evacuates Haiti, leaving a country in ruins
[17 February 2000]
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