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Haiti: Thousands march in Port-au-Prince against US-backed
coup
By Keith Jones
6 March 2004
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A crowd, estimated by Reuters at more than 10,000, marched
on the US embassy in Port-au-Prince Friday to denounce the US-orchestrated
coup against Haitis elected president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
and demand the withdrawal of US and French troops from the Caribbean
island country.
The demonstrators chanted Bush terrorist, urged
that Aristide, who is now in exile in the Central African Republic,
be allowed to complete his five-year presidential term, and charged
that the ex-Haitian army personnel, death squad leaders and criminal
gang members that Washington used to oust Aristidethe so-called
rebelsare inflicting terror on the slums of Port-au-Prince.
According to Reuters, one demonstrator shouted, The bourgeoisie
joined with the international community to occupy Haiti and get
rid of President Aristide. The bourgeoisie never did anything
for us, the masses. Now they took away our president.
The demonstration erupted one day after the disappearance of
gun-toting rebel commandos from the downtown streets of Port-au-Prince.
From Sunday through Wednesday, the rebels had run amuck in Haitis
capital, terrorizing and killing Aristide supporters, under the
watchful eyes of the US Marines, who had begun arriving in force
on Sunday once Aristide had been hustled out of the country.
Only when the rebels and their supporters marched on the house
of Prime Minister Yvon Neptune did the Marines intervene. Washington
will soon dispense with Neptune figuratively, if not literallyall
his fellow cabinet ministers have either fled the country or been
driven underground. But under conditions where he nominally remained
Haitis prime minister, US authorities deemed it politic
to keep him out of the hands of a lynch mob.
If by mid-week, Bush administration officials were issuing
ever-sharper warnings to the rebels, urging them toin the
words of Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriegamake
themselves scarce, it was because they were disrupting
Washingtons efforts to hide a bloody coup behind a ramshackle
democratic façade.
It wasnt the killings so much. A pliant international
press could be counted upon to explain them away as a settling
of accounts with the chimères, the armed gangs on
whose support Aristide had increasingly relied. What disturbed
Washington was the rebels swaggering before the international
press. Rebel commander Guy Philippe had gone before the worlds
cameras, the notorious FRAPH death-squad leader Louis-Jodel Chamblain
at his side, to proclaim himself in charge of security in Haiti
and for all intents and purposes the countrys next political
strongman. When asked if he would disarm, Philippe refused to
recognize the authority of the US-led expeditionary force.
Bush administration officials thus found themselves compelled
to repeatedly castigate Philippe and his commandos as thugs and
criminals. But all this shouting cannot drown out the truth: Washington
invited these elements into Port-au-Prince so as to realize its
longstanding goal of regime change in Haiti
Only last week, the Weekly Standard, a standard-bearer
for the Republican right, was exalting, Both France and
the United States now appear to see that only those with guns
were capable of rising against the Aristide thugocracy.
Rewriting history
So blatant was the USs support for the rebelsculminating
in their entering into Haitis capital simultaneously with
US and French troopsthat the Bush administration is now
frantically trying to rewrite history. According to the latest
version, the US never demanded Aristide resignation.
Washington only demanded that Aristide reconsider his
position while it blocked the dispatch of an international
security force to Haiti to put down the armed coup. US officials
told Aristide that if he did not flee the country he would be
killed and that the US would not intervene to spare his life,
and blocked the Haitian presidents efforts to enhance his
security.
According to a report by Juan O. Tamayo of the Miami Herald,
Aristide had requested that an extra contingent of bodyguards
be dispatched from the US security firm that had been contracted
to provide him with protection. US officials blocked a last-minute
bid by Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to bolster his
bodyguardmostly former US Special Forces members,
Tamayo reported, citing knowledgeable sources. Washington,
he said, forced a small group of extra bodyguards from the
San Francisco-based Steele Foundation to delay their flight from
the United States to Haiti until it was too late to prevent
Aristides ouster.
The governments of the impoverished Caribbean island states
hardly have a history of challenging Washington. But the readiness
of the regions principal powersthe US and Franceto
conspire against a constitutional and democratically-elected government
has given them pause. CARICOM, their inter-state organization,
is demanding an investigation into the role played by Washington
and Paris in Aristides ouster, warning that the manner in
which Aristide lost power sets a dangerous precedent for
democratically elected governments everywhere.
Referring to the UN Security Council decision to sanction the
dispatch of troops to Haiti, Jamaican Prime Minister P.J. Patterson
said, We could not fail to observe what was impossible on
Thursday [February 26] could be accomplished in an emergency meeting
on Sunday [February 29] once Aristide had been deposed.
We are disappointed in the extreme at the failure to act.
The Bush administration has dismissed CARICOMs concerns.
There is nothing to investigate, declared State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher. We did not advocate Aristides
stepping down.
No less spurious is the Bush administrations pretence
that the rebels and the self-proclaimed political opposition to
Aristide and his Lavalas Partythe Democratic Platformare
discrete forces, one tainted by past associations with murderous
repression, the other speaking for civil society. The same venal
economic and political establishment that supported the Duvalier,
Avril and Cédras dictatorships leads the Democratic Platform.
It was quick to embrace the rebels, its enthusiasm mounting as
the rebels swept the north of Haiti and then threatened to march
on the capital.
On Monday, Democratic Platform leaders like Evans Paul, former
mayor of Port-au-Prince, fawned over rebel commander Guy Philippe.
According to Michel Gaillard, another Democratic Platform spokesman,
the meeting went very well. He added, We have
established that the Army of the North is free, powerful and has
great popular support. We are in no way antagonistic toward it.
On Friday, the rebels and politicians met again. The day before,
Evans Paul told Frances LCI television, We will need
to work with Mr. Philippe and other sectors of the country that
played an important role in the great insurrection that swept
Mr. Aristide from power.
While trumpeting their readiness to work with the rebels, the
Democratic Platform is braying for the blood of their Lavalas
Party opponents, demanding the arrest of Neptune and scores of
other Lavalas leaders.
The fraud of disarmament
The Bush administrations rhetoric about the rebels
future role may at present differ in tone from that of the leaders
of the Democratic Platform, but there is every reason to believe
that not only will the rebels not be called to account for their
crimes against the Haitian people, they will continue to be held
in reserve to terrorize the Haitian masses.
Bowing to US demands, Philippe has said the rebels will disarm.
But the US military has made clear that it has no intention of
ensuring this takes place. We are not disarming, Army
Major Richard Crusan, spokesman for the US-led international force
in Haiti, told reporters. That is a job for the Haitian
police. We dont even want to touch [the rebels] guns.
Much of the National Police, of which Guy Philippe is himself
a former commander, is openly sympathetic to the rebels. When
the rebels entered Port-au-Prince last Sunday, the National Police
immediately joined them in united sorties against Aristide supporters.
The rebels political spokesman, Paul Arcelin,
a former Haitian ambassador to the neighbouring Dominican Republic,
has publicly boasted that the rebels will not disarm. Asked what
they are doing with their weapons, he said, We hide them.
With the connivance of Washington, Haitis elite has for
decades ruled all but exclusively through dictatorship and terror.
This is the only means to suppress the popular anger that is born
of social inequality and mass poverty unequalled in the Americas.
Although Aristides popular support had crumbled because
of his imposition of IMF austerity measures and increasing reliance
on racial demagogy and violence to remain in power, the Bush administration
and the sweatshop owners and retail merchants represented by Democratic
Platform had ultimately to resort to the rebel thugs to oust Aristide,
because they could generate no mass popular support.
That said, it must be recognized that it was the petty-bourgeois
nationalist politics of Aristide that paved the way for the resurgence
of reaction in Haiti and the reaffirmation of the rule of Haitis
traditional elite, in alliance with Washington.
Aristide was brought to power as the result of the popular
social upheaval that toppled the Duvalier dictatorship and convulsed
Haiti for the ensuing five years. For that he never lost the enmity
of either Wall Street and the Republican Party establishment or
the dominant wing of the Haitian bourgeoisie. But when ousted
from power in a US-backed coup in 1991, he instructed his supporters
not to resist. Rendered by his class outlook incapable of appealing
to the international working class to oppose imperialism and its
Haitian clients, Aristide threw himself at the feet of Washington,
arguing that because of his popular support he would be better
able to contain the social ferment in Haiti than the generals.
Once returned to power in 1994, he abandoned his program of
minimal reforms, and over the next decade, whether formally in
office or the power behind the throne, applied the socially-incendiary
economic policies of the IMF. In so far as Aristide opposed Haitis
traditional elite, it was based on securing the support of Washington,
which historically has played the principal role in maintaining
Haiti in economic and national bondage. And when that patronage
was decisively withdrawn, his regime proved powerless in the face
of what was a well-financed and well-armed, but nonetheless tiny
band of rebels.
Among the most politically advanced layers of the Haitian working
people, there must be a critical evaluation of this bitter strategic
experience and its fundamental lesson: imperialist oppression
cannot be overcome on a nationalist basis. It requires a unified
struggle by the working class and impoverished masses of Haiti,
the Caribbean and the United States itself against the global
capitalist order.
See Also:
The division of labor behind the US-made
coup in Haiti
[5 March 2004]
As Marines occupy Port-au-Prince: Reign
of terror follows US-backed coup in Haiti
[3 March 2004]
US Marines occupy Haitian capital amid
charges Aristide was kidnapped
[2 March 2004]
The overthrow of Haitis Aristide:
a coup made in the USA
[1 March 2004]
US and France target Haiti's
elected president for removal
[28 February 2004]
Does Haitis non-violent
opposition want a bloodbath in Port-au-Prince?
[26 February 2004]
Washington utilizes rightist
terror to effect regime change in Haiti
[25 February 2004]
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