By Seth DonnellyJuly I5, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" -
- "Counterpunch"
Today, the people of Haiti are facing
down the US-backed dictatorship of the
ruling Haitian Tet Kale Party (PHTK) that
came to power through
the fraudulent election of Michel
Martelly in 2010 and maintained its grip on
power through the
fraudulent election of
Jovenel Moise in 2016, what Haitian
activists refer to as electoral coup d’etats.
Both elections were held under UN occupation
and sponsored by the US government. As
Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton detoured
from her trip to the Middle East at the
height of the Arab Spring uprising in Egypt
and personally
intervened to put Martelly into power.
Similarly, the US State Department
immediately heralded the 2016 elections as
legitimate and subsequent US
administrations, first Trump then Biden,
continued to prop up the Moise regime
diplomatically and financially.
The July 7 assassination of Jovenel Moise
by a professional kill squad does not alter
US support for the PHTK regime. Unless there
is massive opposition by the US public and
members of Congress, expect the Biden
Administration to continue to support the
current PHTK regime led by Prime Minister
Claude Joseph or whoever else emerges within
this regime to assume power during this
transition. Expect the Biden Administration
to provide ongoing funding for its brutal
security forces. These central points should
not be obscured by escalating media
speculation regarding “who did it”,
particularly in the aftermath of
arrests of ex-Colombian soldiers and
several Haitians with US ties such as
Christian Emmanuel Sanon.
What Are the Characteristics that
Define the PHTK Regime Under Both Martelly
And Moise?
The PHTK regime is a puppet dictatorship
installed and maintained by the US
government and UN occupation forces, in
coordination with members of the Haitian
upper class, operating against the interests
of the impoverished majority of the Haitian
people. The following are central
characteristics of the regime:
1. Engaging in pervasive corruption and
the massive
looting of public funds.
2. Facilitating
land grabs and
the dispossession of Haitian farmers,
including by Moise himself to enlarge his
personal
banana republic, as well as the plunder
of Haiti’s
vast natural resources (gold, petroleum,
bauxite and more) by domestic oligarchs and
foreign corporations. The “open” investment
climate supported by the PHTK regime is
noted in this 2018 US State Department
Report on
“doing business in Haiti”.
3. Waging a war on the poor majority and
the popular, grassroots Lavalas movement
through horrific massacres in poor
neighborhoods such as
Lasalin and
Bel Air,
violent gentrification, and targeted
assassinations and rapes of human rights
activists. These gross human rights
violations perpetrated by the regime are
also documented by the International Human
Rights Clinic of the Harvard Law School in
its April 2021 report
Killing with Impunity: State-Sanctioned
Massacres in Haiti.
What Were the Limits of Moise’s
Effectiveness as a Puppet Ruler?
1. Moise proved incapable of containing
the massive, grassroots uprising to
establish a truly popular, democratic
government. Since Moise took power, the
Haitian people have taken to the streets by
the hundreds of thousands, again and again,
facing live ammunition, tear gas, arbitrary
arrest, torture, rape, and extrajudicial
killings by the Haitian National Police (HNP)–
trained by UN occupation officials in Haiti
and by the US police, including the NYPD.
The HNP have likewise been
funded by the US government to the tune
of millions of dollars per year, with US
funding increasing under the Trump
Administration, a move correlating with
increasing human rights violations by the
HNP. The Biden Administration has likewise
continued this support for the police force
clearly implicated in massacres and gross
human rights violations. Despite such US
training and funding of the HNP, Moise has
been unable to keep “law and order”. Huge
protests continue to erupt. At the same
time, regime-backed paramilitaries (“gangs”)
like the G9 death squad, led by former
policeman
Jimmy “Barbecue” Cherizier, continue to
terrorize the poor people of all ages in
Port-au-Prince through a reign of
kidnappings, torture, rape, and killings. G9
and paramilitary violence have displaced
thousands of people who have been forced
from their neighborhoods after their homes
have been burned down and their relatives
and neighbors have been massacred.
2. Moise recently clashed with members of
the small, powerful Haitain upper class,
such as
Reginald Boulos and other oligarchs.
This clash reflected intra-elite squabbles,
as Moise was using his political power to
consolidate his hold in ways reminiscent of
the Duvalier dictatorships.
3. There was growing opposition inside of
the US Congress to the Biden
Administration’s ongoing support of the
Moise regime, as reflected by this April
26th
letter from 68 members of the US House
of Representatives to the Biden
Administration, noting that the Moise regime
“lacks the credibility and legitimacy to
oversee a constitutional referendum… or to
administer elections that are free and
fair.” In the aftermath of this letter,
Secretary of State Antony Blinken
announced, as reported on June 9, that
the US would no longer support the plan by
the Moise regime to augment its power
through holding a bogus “referendum” this
summer to weaken the Haitian Constitution.
Despite this policy reversal, the Biden
Administration nonetheless
continued to support the regime to
illegally stay in power and manipulate
elections scheduled for this next September.
The US has allocated extensive funding for
these sham elections which will include the
referendum, in violation of the wishes of
the Haitian majority. Moreover, the Biden
Administration called for more US funding
for the Haitian police, despite the clear
record of gross human rights violations
linked to the police. Yet this support by
the Biden Administration for Moise was
facing mounting political opposition in
Congress.
What Drives US Foreign Policy
Towards Haiti?
In his speech “Beyond Vietnam: a Time to
Break the Silence” given in the Riverside
Church on April 4, 1967, Rev. Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr. stated: “All over the globe
men are revolting against old systems of
exploitation and oppression, and out of the
wounds of a frail world, new systems of
justice and equality are being born. The
shirtless and barefoot people of the land
are rising up as never before.” He protested
the fact that the US government stood on the
wrong side of this revolution, in Vietnam
and elsewhere. Nowhere is this more
graphically illustrated than in Haiti.
US policy towards Haiti, as elsewhere
through the “Third World”, has been
remarkably consistent over the 19th, 20th,
now 21st centuries, based on three pillars:
1) a white supremacist opposition to genuine
decolonization and national liberation by
Black and colonized peoples; 2) the
Monroe-doctrine mindset of the US as the
police officer of the western hemisphere in
particular and the world in general; and 3)
the elevation of US business and local upper
class interests above the basic human rights
of the poor majority, along with the
elevation of capitalist exploitation over
popular democracy.
In 1804, Haitians waged a successful
revolution against one of the most powerful
European empires of the time, emancipating
themselves from slavery and colonialism,
becoming the world’s first Black republic
and the first nation to permanently ban
slavery. It can be said that the
Haitian Revolution was the most radical
assertion of the right to have rights in
human history. Fueling hope, resistance and
rebellion among enslaved people throughout
the Caribbean and the United States, the
newly independent Haitian government offered
asylum and citizenship to any African who
escaped slavery. The independent Haitian
government invited people of African and
Indigenous origins who were fleeing
oppression to come and live in Haiti.
Freedom fighters such as Simon Bolívar and
liberation movements throughout the Americas
were given material support by the Haitian
government on the condition that they
abolish slavery if they came to power. Haiti
stands at the very center of the world
struggle to end slavery.
Haiti’s freedom posed a great threat to
the system of slavery in the US and the
Americas. The white supremacist leaders of
the United States attempted to strangle the
new nation at its birth by instituting a
worldwide boycott against Haiti. France took
similar action, forcing Haiti to pay
reparations to French slave owners for the
property they lost when slavery ended. This
“property” was the human beings who had been
enslaved. The debt was not paid off until
the 1940s, by which time banks in the United
States had taken over the collection
process. Over time Haiti paid France $21.7
billion, an extortion that has been aptly
called the
greatest heist in history.
In the 20th century, Haiti became a
virtual colony of the United States,
beginning in 1915, when the U.S. Marines
were sent by President Woodrow Wilson to
occupy the country. More than 20,000 people
were killed by the marines. During 19 years
of occupation Haitians put up fierce and
protracted resistance, and Black activists
in the United States were in the forefront
of solidarity with the Haitian struggle. The
NAACP denounced the invasion, as did the
Garvey Movement. NAACP leader James Weldon
Johnson detailed the crimes committed by US
occupying forces in
“The Truth About Haiti: An NAACP Report”
(1920) published in The Crisis. The
marines finally left Haiti in 1934, leaving
in their place the notorious Haitian Armed
Forces to violently protect foreign
corporations and the Haitian elite by
smashing all opposition.
From the 1950s through the 1980s, the US
government supported the brutal
dictatorships of “Papa Doc” and “Baby Doc”
Duvalier, who tortured and killed thousands
of Haitians. The popular mass movement that
came to be known as Lavalas (The “flash
flood” of the people), succeeded in toppling
the Duvalier dictatorship and electing
Jean-Bertrand Aristide as President of
Haiti. Twice, the United States supported
coups to overthrow the elected government,
in 1991 and 2004. Ever since this last coup,
Haiti has been occupied by the United
Nations, as authorized by the UN Security
Council, at the behest primarily of the US,
France, and Canada. Under this occupation,
the people of Haiti have been engaged in a
fierce struggle against a series of puppet
dictatorships installed by the US. What is
important to recognize now is that the
current PHTK regime is the institutional
manifestation of the 2004 coup, an attempt
to make the coup permanent, with or without
Jovenel Moise.
Solidarity Is Needed Now More
Than Ever
Today, the people of Haiti are struggling
courageously to establish their own
transition government of
Sali Piblik (public safety) drawing on
dedicated professionals and activists from
all sectors of Haitian society, a government
capable of stabilizing society and attending
to people’s most pressing needs, while
organizing truly fair and free elections. In
this struggle, Fanmi Lavalas, the party of
the Lavalas movement, remains a vital force,
based on speaking to the needs of the poor
majority. The Haitian people have not
forgotten what Lavalas could accomplish
during the brief period of real democracy
before the US coup of 2004 hurled the
country back into misery. During this brief
period of real democracy, more schools were
built than in the previous 150 years of
Haitian history, healthcare was expanded,
affordable housing was constructed,
cooperatives were formed, the dreaded army
was disbanded, women’s rights were expanded,
along with so many more
achievements. And all of this was done
with a tiny national budget while the US
attempted to economically strangle Haiti by
cutting off aid and loans. In contrast, the
PHTK regime has been fully backed by the US
and had a budget 14 times greater, yet it
can only show deepening
poverty and misery for the masses of
people, including a doubling of acute severe
childhood malnutrition, along with
widespread massacres and gross human rights
violations– all made possible by the USA. As
Fanmi Lavalas put it in a statement on March
2nd, 2021:
“Indeed, today’s reality clearly lays
bare the truth. If there had not been a
February 29, 2004 kidnapping coup d’etat,
today we would not have a government of
kidnappers that causes each and every
Haitian citizen to go about with his or her
own coffin. Yes, ever since the 2004 coup
d’etat, the masses have never ceased to
experience more and more suffering.
Massacres, repression, misery, starvation,
unemployment, bullets, tear gas, kidnapping…
and more. The criminals have not stopped
stealing the lands of the peasants. If we
can’t go to school, can’t eat, can’t have
decent housing, if we don’t have potable
water to drink, if we don’t have security,
if they are kidnapping us, it is a direct
consequence of the 2004 kidnapping coup
d’etat.”
All progressive-minded people in the US
need to make the struggle of the Haitian
people central to our own
struggles. We need to organize
solidarity protests everywhere we can and
pressure our members of Congress to do the
following:
1. Cut off all US aid for the Haitian
police once and for all.
2. Stop the Biden Administration’s
support for the PHTK regime regardless of
who the new figurehead becomes.
3. End US support for sham elections and
the Constitutional referendum organized by
the PHTK regime.
4. Support the right of the Haitian
people to form, through their own popular
movement, their own transition government
free from US interference. No US military
intervention in Haiti.
For more information, go to
www.haitisolidarity.net