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wyclef jean the rumors need to stop

Wyclef Jean’s ex-manager Lisa Ellis fires back over leaked nude photo: ‘I’m being attacked’

RUSH & MOLLOY

Sunday, April 4th 2010, 4:00 AM

Zakiya Khatou-Chevassus (l.) and Lisa Ellis (r.), both rumored to be romantically linked to rapper Wyclef Jean, are speaking out against recent reports.

Brooke/WireImage; Harrison/Getty; Kohen/WireImage

Zakiya Khatou-Chevassus (l.) and Lisa Ellis (r.), both rumored to be romantically linked to rapper Wyclef Jean, are speaking out against recent reports.

Jean's wife Marie Claudinette (l.) reportedly flipped out when she found nude photos of his ex-manager Ellis on his cell phone.

Allegri/Getty

Jean’s wife Marie Claudinette (l.) reportedly flipped out when she found nude photos of his ex-manager Ellis on his cell phone.

Two women rumored to be linked romantically with Wyclef Jean are fighting back.

The hip-hop star’s former manager, Lisa Ellis, has told the FBI and the Department of Justice that she believes someone atSony Music illegally disseminated a nude photo of her.

We told you last month that the photo in question caused Wyclef  some trouble at home when his wife, Marie Claudinette, found it on his cell phone. According to sources, Claudinette flew into a jealous rage and demanded that her husband fire Ellis.

Ellis insisted her relationship with the former Fugees singer has always been strictly professional. She also maintained that she resigned – because, according to a friend, Wyclef “wasn’t listening to her advice.”

Ellis looks great in the black-and-white portrait, taken by photographer Mark Baptiste for an art book he’s planning, but she’s furious that someone e-mailed it around the music industry.

“It’s a cybercrime,” she tells us. “It’s a felony. It’s a stolen copyrighted [image].”

Ellis suspects that the shot was leaked by a person or persons at Sony Music, where she used to be an executive vice president.

“I don’t have the photo myself,” she says. “Mark did not send the photo out. I am being attacked for no reason.”

A Sony Music rep declined to comment.

Ellis is also shooting down a rumor that, back when they were talking, Wyclef gave her a horse.

“I got my horses on my own,” says the life-long equestrian. “This fantasy drama is [bleeping] b—s—.”

Meanwhile, Zakiya Khatou-Chevassus, the vice president of Clef’s Yele Haiti Foundation, is knocking down allegations that the charity paid her a disproportionate salary because she was his “mistress.”

A tax declaration obtained by TheSmokingGun.com reported that Khatou-Chevassus received $105,000 in 2008. Gawker.com quoted a source who said Khatou-Chevassus’ pay was three times more than that of program director Suzie Sylvain, who was “actually keeping the organization running.”

According to Gawker, five sources claimed Clef was “involved romantically” with Khatou-Chevassus.

Brushing off the report, the Grammy winner tweeted: “Donkeys spread rumors about me I dont Respond cause I’m the master that leads them to the Well to drink the Water.”

A Yele Haiti spokesperson declined to discuss whether or not Wyclef and Zakiya indeed had a thing, but insisted that her salary was justified, especially since Sylvain reported to her.

“We need to stop talking about Zakiya other than to praise her managerial skills,” said the rep for the charity, which reports raising $9,139,324 for relief activities since Haiti‘s January earthquake. “She is immensely proud of her professional collaboration with Wyclef Jean, and with members of his family, including his wife, Claudinette. Let’s get back to work.”

Aid Groups Should Work To Make Haiti Self-Sufficient, Former President Clinton Says

Friday, March 26, 2010

Former President Bill Clinton asked aid groups working in Haiti on Thursday to focus on making the nation more self-sufficient, the Associated Press reports. Clinton, the U.N. special envoy to Haiti, spoke ahead of a U.N. donor conference on rebuilding Haiti next week.

“Every time we spend a dollar in Haiti from now on we have to ask ourselves, ‘Does this have a long-term return? Are we helping them become more self-sufficient? … Are we serious about working ourselves out of a job?’” Clinton said. According to the news service, “Clinton asked the groups to allocate 10 percent of their spending in Haiti for government salaries and employee training, to help the nation’s agencies rebuild their decimated staffs.” He recommended aid groups hire locally and coordinate with local authorities and the government, according to the AP.

“The former president also urged the groups to participate in an online registry and make their expenditures transparent. And he warned that unless they take action to move refugees to higher ground, as many as 40,000 people could be killed if there are heavy rains,” the AP writes (Gross, 3/26).

Meanwhile, Rene Preval, the Haitian President, is expected to “join U.S. and United Nations leaders next week in seeking $3.9 billion to rebuild the nation’s infrastructure,” Bloomberg/BusinessWeek reports. “The U.N., World Bank and Inter-American Development Bank will present a 250-page reconstruction plan at a donors’ conference in New York on March 31, according to Jordan Ryan, director of the U.N. Development Program’s crisis prevention and recovery unit.

Ryan said as many as 60 nations may pledge new funds,” the news service writes. Preval is also expected to submit, on behalf of the government, a 50-page “Vision and Plan” for redevelopment, according to Ryan, who was one of the leaders involved with a recent rebuilding assessment report. He noted that the $3.9 billion will cover about two years of reconstruction. The total price tag has been estimated at $11.5 billion.

“U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and U.N. Secretary- General Ban Ki-moon will join Preval in opening the daylong conference at the U.N. Former U.S. President Bill Clinton, the U.N.’s special envoy for Haiti, also will speak at the conference, which foreign ministers of France and Japan are expected to attend, Ryan said” (Varner, 3/26).

Kristalina Georgieva, the EU’s aid commissioner, said Thursday that the EU is likely to pledge a three-year 1.3 billion euro ($1.73 billion) aid package at the U.N. conference next week, Reuters reports. “We will be there for a long time. We’re not looking at this as a short-term recovery project,” said Georgieva. “The EU, one of Haiti’s largest donors, committed over 300 million euros ($400 million) in initial aid,” according to the news service (3/25).

Media Outlets Report On Health Stories From Haiti

The Boston Globe examines the situation facing “Wings of Hope, a home for youngsters with disabilities high in the hills above Port-au-Prince.” According to the newspaper, “Though the Wings building did not fall, an architect deemed it structurally unsound. … Wings of Hope managed to rent two adjoining houses not far from the old building. But the conditions are difficult. … The dorm rooms are crowded, the tiny bathrooms cramped and dirty. On a chilly morning, most of the children’s feet were bare, and the cold tile floors were slick with muddy footprints.” The home didn’t have running water and had “only intermittent electricity” before the earthquake hit, according to the Boston Globe. “Mostly run by graduates of the St. Joseph’s program for street boys and former child slaves, it had only a few staff members with degrees of any kind, including one full-time nurse” (Wangsness, 3/26).

The Times of London looks at how Haiti’s impending rainy season could pose significant threats to homeless earthquake survivors: ” The rains, when they come, do not fall gently: they are tropical deluges that grow increasingly violent over two or three months. At least 1.3 million people — more than a tenth of the country’s population — are still homeless. They are living in more than 460 makeshift camps, many built on patches of wasteland that were vacant for the good reason that they were prone to mudslides or flash floods, or were dry riverbeds. At least 200,000 Haitians are reckoned to be vulnerable; as many as 37,000 especially so, while many more are at risk of epidemics caused by insanitary conditions. More than 300,000 of the homeless are children.” The article also discusses how aid groups and the U.S. government are dealing with the situation (Fletcher, 3/26).

Flashback: Pillaging Haiti: US plan to turn Haiti into a tran-shipment terminal for oil supertankers

Ezili Dantò
margueritelaurent.com
Fri, 01 May 2009 15:57 EDT

There is evidence that the United States found oil in Haiti decades ago and due to the geopolitical circumstances and big business interests of that era made the decision to keep Haitian oil in reserve for when Middle Eastern oil had dried up. This is detailed by Dr. Georges Michel in an article dated March 27, 2004 outlining the history of oil explorations and oil reserves in Haiti and in the research of Dr. Ginette and Daniel Mathurin.

There is also good evidence that these very same big US oil companies and their inter-related monopolies of engineering and defense contractors made plans, decades ago, to use Haiti’s deep water ports either for oil refineries or to develop oil tank farm sites or depotswhere crude oil could be stored and later transferred to small tankers to serve U.S. and Caribbean ports. This is detailed in a paper about the Dunn Plantation at Fort Liberte in Haiti. Read more

Flashback: Canadian firm Majescor to Acquire Interest in a Strategic Gold-Copper Property in Haiti

MarketWire.com
Thu, 23 Apr 2009 15:47 EDT

Montreal, Quebec – Majescor Resources Inc. (“Majescor” or the “Company”) (TSX VENTURE:MJX) is pleased to report that it has signed an agreement (the “Agreement”) with SIMACT Alliance Copper Gold Inc. (“SIMACT”) and its principal shareholders (the “Principals”) whereby the Company will acquire a 10% interest in SIMACT, as well an option to acquire the remaining 90% interest. SIMACT, through its 66.4%-owned Haitian affiliate mining company, Societe Miniere du Nord-Est S.A. (“SOMINE”), controls a property with both gold and copper potential, (the “SOMINE Property”) located in the North-East mineral district of Haiti. The SOMINE Property lies within a highly prospective volcanic arc environment, host to numerous epithermal gold and porphyry copper occurrences in Haiti, as well as the World-Class Pueblo Viejo gold deposit in the adjacent Dominican Republic. The property holds the historical Blondin and Douvray copper-gold prospects; the historical Faille-B gold prospect; along with a number of recently-discovered copper-gold showings.
Read more

Flashback: Oil in Haiti

Georges Michel
webzinemaker.com
Sat, 27 Mar 2004 15:52 EST

Since time immemorial, it has been no secret that deep in the earthy bowels of the two states that share the island of Haiti and the surrounding waters that there are significant, still untapped deposits of oil. One knows not why they are still untapped.

Since the early twentieth century, the physical and political map of the island of Haiti, erected in 1908 by Messrs. Alexander Poujol and Henry Thomasset, reported a major oil reservoir in Haiti near the source of the Rio Todo El Mondo, Tributary Right Artibonite River, better known today as the River Thomonde. (Perhaps the word Thomonde is derived from de Todo El Mondo?) The deposit of oil in question straddles the boundary between the boroughs of Hinche and Mirebalais in a mountainous area located at the foot of the chain of the Black Mountains, direction due west of Thomond.

The same map indicates an oil reservoir in the Dominican plain of Azua, a short distance north of the Dominican Republic in the town of Azua. According to our information, the latter oil field located in the Dominican Republic had actually been operating in the first half of this century, produced up to 60,000 barrels of oil per day and had closed because it was considered at the time “insufficiently profitable.” Also in the Dominican Republic, there was announced, in 1982, a discovery, in front of the plain of the Azua, of a huge oil field offshore at the coast of Barahona. But this deposit has been left untapped.

Those who have traveled from Port-au-Prince to Santo-Domingo can testify that the plain of the Azua and its coastline very much resembles the area of Vieux Bourg d’Aquin and its related coast. Therefore, reasonable chances are that there is hydrocarbon deposits in the counterpart Haitian region, especially as we are told that in the plains of Cayes there is geological evidence of the presence of oil, as well as at the Bay of Cayes, Les Cayes and between Ile a Vache.

In 1975 we bathed in the waters of Les Cayes and noticed that our feet was covered by a sort of black oil seeping from the seabed. A fisherman from the place explained that this was not uncommon in the area.

He reports similar phenomena in other regions of Haiti – it seems so in the plains of Leogane and at the foothills of Morne-à-Cabrit. It’s also been reported that there is the presence of oil shale in the province of Grand Anse.

There are still many places on our island (Haiti and Dominican Republic) that meet all the geological criteria for the presence of hydrocarbons. In Haiti, include the plains of Cayes, the plain of Leogane, the plain of Cul-de-Sac, the Gonaives plain and the deserted Savannah, the Plaine du Nord. Ile de la Gonave and corresponding coastlines to the off-shore deposits. In this list, do not forget the large sedimentary basin of the Central Plateau of Haiti.

In the course of the 1950s, the Knappen-Tippen-Abbet company (nicknamed by the local people “the company for small bread and butter”) conducted drillings in La Gonave, in the Cul-de-Sac plains, in the Plateau-Central and in the region of Gonaives. All of these drillings had proved extremely promising and the results were beyond expectations. However, the big multinational oil companies operating in Haiti pushed for the discovered deposits not to be exploited. Haiti was neither Saudi Arabia nor Kuwait. At a time when a barrel of crude oil sold for just over a dollar, and the Persian Gulf provided oil galore, there was no reason for these companies to put in production these oil fields deemed much less profitable. Especially while ARAMCO [then known as the Arabian American Oil Company] was, rain or shine in Arabia, at a low price, even to the point of looting the precious oil resources of this kingdom.

[The attitude of these big multinational oil companies was] “We shall keep the Haitian deposits and other such layers of deposits in reserve for the 21st century when the Middle Eastern jackpot are depleted.” This is what happened! The wells of Knappen-Tippen-Abbet were numbered, carefully locked or sealed with cement and forgotten.

The reports of the huge drillings were not, it seems, supposed to be made public to the Haitians. Do you think they would ever hand over to a bunch of backward negroes, information that would allow them to work towards their own economic liberation? This would make them too strong and give too much power to little Haiti.

Haitians had to wait half a century or a century for that. However, the successful countryside of the Knappen-Tibben-Abbet company, allowed for a great deal of opportunity to many Haitian schools, preparing primary school students for their certificate and studying in the geography textbook of Haiti from the Brothers of Christian Instruction, to learn that our land had oil reservoirs in the Central Plateau and La Gonave. This did not fall on deaf ears …

It is generally known, in all circles, that there are petroleum hydrocarbon deposits in the bowels of the island of Haiti. But the petroleum industry/circles are not eager to put into production these so readily available Haiti oil reserves. Other more important areas were already identified as major oil producing regions of the world. [The thinking was] there will always be time to think about the island of Haiti.

However, [these big oil entities and the powerful nations] did think of us during the Gulf crisis when Kuwaiti deposits, the Saudis and other oil reservoirs were threatened by Saddam Hussein. If the Cubans had not made a great effort by themselves to put their own oil in exploitation, nobody would have done it for them. If it were not for the efforts of the Cubans, Cuban oil would still be housed in the bowels of the earth, as it remains for Haitian oil. The ball is in our camp …

If the big oil companies are not interested in our oil, we should ask our Cuban neighbors to come help us exploit it. In their dramatic search for oil, the Cubans have developed technology and know-how that we could, in return for their services, yield to the Cubans part of our domestic oil production and give them a share of profits. A mission of government officials and businessmen in Haiti should leave for Cuba in this direction.

The sad case of the international embargo clearly shows that we must fend for ourselves, and especially that we do not have to wait for the OK from the United States when our vital interests are in peril. The whole of our society is aware and sees well how our big northern neighbor has treated us and shall treat us in the future. Haiti will be saved by Haitians and Haitians only, that is the principle lesson of the embargo.

If our oil was available, we would not have been shamefully forced to capitulate after the oil embargo decided in defiance of international law with their infamous Resolution 841, by the great powers now bearing the pompous and ridiculous name of “international community”.

Our government, our big businessmen, our ultra-liberal economists, our big smugglers, our Chicago-Servant-Boys, our anti-nationalists and others ruffians, prefer to import [everything, even] air, rather than to put to use the resources of Haiti. With a zeal that is hard to understand, they blindly obey the bidding orders of the IMF and World Bank, and are put together with these two organizations to destroy the Haitian economy, especially our valuable agriculture.

Nevertheless, they find themselves caught out with us. And when imperialism, to meet its gruesome intentions, decides to impose an embargo, the last embargo (there will be perhaps more in the future, who knows?) has proven the need to accelerate economic integration with the Dominican Republic.

Both Republics should undertake, by treaty, to provide each other with some oil no matter the decisions of a third party. A trans-island pipeline, Barahona to Port-au-Prince, could be part of this oil integration between the two countries that share the island.

While waiting to be able to consume our own oil, whose surpluses shall also provide the valuable currency we need, we should increase the country’s storage capacity for oil products and consider how to stockpile important strategic reserves on the territory of the Republic. The oil embargo of 1991 is also a strong argument for rebuilding our railways.

A House subcommittee approved a measure on Thursday to press major international financial institutions to completely cancel all debts owed by Haiti, where a major earthquake devastated what little capacity Haiti had to pay the debts back.

The International Monetary Policy and Trade Subcommittee approved the Debt Relief for Earthquake Recovery in Haiti Act, introduced by Rep. Maxine Waters (D-Calif.), which also aims to encourage direct assistance in the form of grants from those institutions, rather than loans.

The bill would require the Secretary of the Treasury to instruct the U.S. Executive Directors at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), and other institutions to use the voice, vote, and influence of the U.S. to accomplish the debt forgiveness. Waters has been a longtime champion of debt-relief for Haiti.

“The moral case for canceling Haiti’s debt is clear,” said Barney Frank (D-Mass.), Chairman of the House Committee on Financial Services, “and the Committee stands prepared to continue to work with the Administration to authorize a swift and substantial U.S. commitment to comprehensive multilateral debt cancellation for Haiti.”

Haiti, the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, owes $828 million to multilateral development institutions, according to the Department of the Treasury, including $447 million to the IDB, $284 million to the IMF, $39 million to the World Bank and $58 million to the International Fund for Agricultural Development.

The idea that Haiti owes anybody for anything is a striking one considering the nation’s history.

“Haiti faces enormous challenges now, and the burden of paying off foreign debt would prevent the nation from taking necessary steps to help its people at this perilous time,” said Waters. “I introduced H.R. 4573 so that Haiti can use its limited resources to make both immediate and long-term investments in essential humanitarian relief, reconstruction and development efforts.”

A network of WiMAX and Wi-Fi in Haiti

 network of WiMAX and Wi-Fi hotspots is to be set up in Haiti to assist in communications services for the ITU following the recent earthquake. Singapore-based smartBridges Solutions will be shipping ten WiMAX base stations and 40 Customer Premises Equipment devices to Haiti, which will be used to set up 100 wireless hotspot locations in Port-au-Prince and other earthquake-stricken towns in Haiti.

The equipment is designed to provide fast wireless phone and Internet connectivity at 100 holding centres for internally displaced people.

The wireless network will help reinforce ongoing efforts to bridge the gap created by the collapse of terrestrial networks, which remain largely non-operational because of earthquake damage. SmartBridges Solutions will also assign specialist engineers who will work alongside ITU experts to help get the network up and running as quickly as possible.

“I am very grateful to smartBridges Solutions for joining ITU in extending a helping hand to Haiti following this devastating disaster,” said Sami Al Basheer Al Morshid, Director of ITU’s Telecommunication Development Bureau. “I look forward to working with smartBridges Solutions, not only to help save human lives during emergencies, but to fully leverage the power of ICTs to drive the ongoing development of Haiti and other developing nations. I call upon like-minded potential partners to join us in this worthy cause.”

Speaking from Haiti, where ITU continues to oversee network restoration efforts, Cosmas Zavazava, ITU Chief, Emergency Telecommunications, praised smartBridges Solutions’ commitment in contributing state-of-the-art wireless technology, which he said is very much needed to support ongoing aid work.

ITU has already contributed 100 satellite terminals to Haiti to help rapidly re-establish basic communication links, as well as installing a Qualcomm Deployable Base Station complete cellular network to provide the reliable wireless communications essential to disaster relief and clean-up efforts.

Haiti and the Ugly Side of Debt Relief

In 1803, the slave rebellion in Haiti defeated Bonaparte and 1804 saw the birth of an independent nation. But just 20 years later, France exacted reparations for the loss of its colony totaling $20 billion in today’s currency.

Between 1957 and 1986, the Duvaliers ruled Haiti with US backing ending in the popular overthrow of Baby Doc, the son. By the time he fled the country, the foreign debt amounted to over $750m. Since then, the debt continued to rise through interest and penalties. Meanwhile the Duvalier family seems to have over $900m in western bank accounts, the subject of a trial currently before the Swiss courts.

But the sheer cost of servicing these debts is crippling. The World Bank estimated that Haiti paid $321m just to service the debt between 1995 and 2001. Recently, the Paris Club announced debt relief for Haiti amounting to $214m. But the debt reduction includes an element for the interest they would otherwise have paid. When it is expressed as Net Present Value, the real figure is $84.9m.

Despite the finance packages being announced for Haiti, they are not gifts, but investments. Haiti will be paying interest on loans it has no choice but to accept. The European Network on Debt and Development estimate that Haiti will pay $16.2m in debt servicing this year. In the next four years to 2013 it will come to $130.4m and over the next 19 years it will amount to $661.5m.

And currently, the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank own 80% of the debt between them in equal measure. And there are rich pickings in a disaster zone because there will be major reconstruction projects. Haiti is forced to accept the loans and then to pay US corporations to carry out the reconstruction.

But it was US business that had such a major negative impact on the Haitian economy. Agricultural product dumping, including rice, meant that the rural economy of Haiti collapsed, sending two million people into the Port-au-Prince slums in the last 20 years. US companies took advantage of the cheap labour to set up clothing sweatshops.

The neo-liberal plan of massive loans and open markets overseen by puppet governments following the coups of 1991 and 2004 has destroyed the infrastructure and the rural economy. If there was any compassion at all in politics, or any sense of responsibility amongst the politicians who pushed such globalisation madness on a desperately poor country, they would cancel all the debts now, without conditions, and would restore sovereignty to Haiti.

But the sad fact is that when a nearby economy is so desperate, there are huge profits to be made. The construction companies will have a field day. We won’t see the necessary infrastructure develop, just those parts needed for foreign companies to export the goods produced by the available pool of cheap labour. We won’t see roads and hospitals, but we’ll see privatisation of anything that has a hint of potential profitability.

Despite all the posturing about Haiti, the hand-wringing and the tearful comments to camera, the hard truth is that Haiti’s parlous state is largely the responsibility of the policies of globalisation and the competitive accumulation of large corporations. And the only proposal on the table to help Haiti is more of the same poison.

source: Author: Bob Lloyd

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Why the U.S. is responsible for poverty and tyranny in Haiti

By Helen Scott, Socialist Worker Online, 16 January 2004, page 8

LAST MONTH, U.S. Ambassador to Haiti James Foley issued a public statement decrying the ongoing political crisis in Haiti, which produced more violent confrontations at the beginning of the year. On the eve of commemoration of the bicentennial of Haiti’s independence, an event which still resounds today as the symbol of victory over oppression, it is regrettable to note the deplorable state of human rights in Haiti, Foley said. What he didn’t say is that U.S. imperialism is now—and has always been—a major obstacle to the Haitians’ struggle for liberation. HELEN SCOTT tells this history.


THE HISTORY of Haiti includes both brutal oppression and heroic resistance. The original Amerindian inhabitants were decimated by the murder, forced labor and disease accompanying European conquest in the 16th century.

By the end of the 17th century, the island—named Espanola by its discoverer Christopher Columbus—had been carved into a French colony in the West (Saint Domingue, now Haiti) and a Spanish one in the East (Santo Domingo, now the Dominican Republic).

Saint Domingue became an immensely profitable part of the global economic plantation system—in the words of socialist author CLR James, a regime of calculated brutality and terrorism based on the exploitation of African slave labor. As they did across the Americas, slaves fought for their freedom. In 1790, escaped slaves (the maroons) and freed blacks (the affranchis) organized a network of rebel cells.

Against impossible odds, the revolutionaries, led by towering figures such as Toussaint L’Ouverture (a figure brought to life in James’ brilliant The Black Jacobins), defeated the combined armies of France, Spain and Britain. On January 4, 1804, Haiti became the world’s first independent Black nation.

The European empires—as well as the newly independent United States—saw the new republic as a threat to their system and so refused to recognize Haiti’s sovereignty, doing everything in their power to undermine it. U.S. President Thomas Jefferson imposed sanctions that remained in place until 1862.

In 1825, France sent troops to demand 150 million francs as compensation for their lost property. Haiti had no choice but to pay, and was saddled with a crippling debt. Haiti remained a besieged nation, its territorial waters invaded by European powers repeatedly throughout the 19th century.

BY THE turn of the 20th century, the U.S. saw Haiti as a crucial part of a regional and global strategy for power. Disastrously for Haitians, their country would be subject for the next century to the shifting needs of U.S. imperialism.

Using Haiti’s constant political instability as an alibi, the U.S. invaded in 1915 and maintained a brutal military occupation for 19 years. In terms eerily similar to those used today about the U.S. military’s control over Iraq, the occupation of Haiti was justified as an exercise in nation building.

But then as now, the reality was of a racist military regime that violated every democratic principle and was driven by American economic and strategic interests. The occupying power installed a puppet president and rewrote Haiti’s constitution to ensure foreigners the right to own property.

The only development was geared towards the needs of American capitalism. Haitian peasants were rounded up, chained and forced to build the roads that connected the sugar mills and ports.

Rebel cacos developed into a mass movement against the occupation, and the U.S. was forced to withdraw in 1934. Haiti by now had a highly centralized state and an extensive military trained by the U.S. in suppressing domestic resistance. American corporations dominated its economy, and the already immense gap between the wealthy elite and the mass of impoverished peasants had grown even wider.

These conditions paved the way for the brutal dictatorship of Francois Papa Doc Duvalier. Duvalier came to power in 1957, using populist black power rhetoric against the predominantly light-skinned Haitian ruling class. As president, he protected the interests of the very class he claimed to oppose and extended a regime of terror to control the impoverished population. He created the infamous tonton macoutes, a plain-clothed army of thugs that terrorized the nation with indiscriminate violent attacks.

Duvalier proved himself a useful Cold War ally to U.S. imperialism, championing corporations and serving as an anti-communist counterweight to Fidel Castro’s Cuba. Similarly, his son and successor Jean-Claude Baby Doc Duvalier carried out Corporate America’s agenda of neoliberalism, opening up the economy and offering up Haiti’s poor as a cheap, heavily repressed labor force for foreign corporations.

Throughout the Duvaliers’ reign, the U.S. government refused to recognize Haitians fleeing state violence as political refugees and maintained a policy of forced repatriation—which meant certain torture and death.

YET DESPITE poverty and repression, Haiti’s peasants and workers again rose up to fight for justice and liberty. In the 1980s, a mass movement known as Lavalas—meaning a cleansing wave or flood in Haitian Creole—toppled the hated Duvalier regime and embarked on a process of dechoukaj (uprooting) of the entrenched power structure.

In 1986, Baby Doc was forced to flee the country. In a telling departure from its usual policy towards genuine refugees, the U.S. government sent a military plane to collect their favorite dictator and take him—along with the money he stole from Haitians—to a safe refuge in France.

In a democratic election in 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide—a priest influenced by liberation theology—was elected president by a massive majority on promises of social reform. But just months later, a military coup—funded by the nation’s richest families and sponsored by the CIA—took down the democratically elected government and signaled a new reign of terror.

Mass arrests, assassinations, torture, beatings, rape and other atrocities became the reality for Haitians for the next three years. In 1991, 38,000 Haitians sought refuge in the U.S. But U.S. policy—under both George Bush Sr. and then Bill Clinton, who reversed his campaign promise on this as so much else—still refused to recognize Haitians as political refugees.

Less than 5 percent received asylum. The rest were repatriated, with hundreds being incarcerated at the detention center at Guant’namo Bay, which now houses victims of the U.S.-led war on terror. U.S. officials even gave names and addresses of returned refugees to the coup authorities, guaranteeing arrest, torture and execution for unknown numbers.

In 1994, U.S. troops again invaded Haiti in Operation Restore Democracy. This was sold as a great humanitarian intervention to remove a tyrannical coup regime and return a democratically elected president to power. Yet the U.S. had always been hostile to Aristide, and even while Clinton was publicly denouncing the coup leaders, the CIA was supporting the paramilitary organization FRAPH that terrorized the population during the coup years.

Many of the coup leaders received funding and support from the U.S., through the National Endowment for Democracy and the U.S. Agency of International Development, as well as the CIA. During the occupation, the U.S. cracked down on peasant and workers’ political organizations, while rehabilitating the thugs of the Duvalier and coup regimes.

The U.S. returned Aristide to power, but on the condition that he abandon his planned reforms, give coup leaders a role in the new regime and accept World Bank and IMF conditions. Aristide’s acceptance of these terms signified his degeneration from a champion of the people to a manager of the same old corrupt and unequal system.

Today, Aristide travels with his own armed thugs and champions export processing zones in the Dominican Republic, where Haitians will be low wage, non-union workers. In the years after the invasion, the U.S. government turned on Aristide, eventually putting an embargo on aid to Haiti when Washington’s handpicked successors were defeated by Lavalas.

Aristide responded by renewing his populist criticisms of U.S. neoliberal policies. Nevertheless, Aristide represents something very different than he once did.

As human rights lawyer Peter Dailey wrote last year, The adult literacy campaigns, rural clinics, public works and land reform that for years Aristide had promised remain slogans rather than programs…[As early as 1999], it seemed to many Haitians that Aristide, who once personified Haitian aspirations for democracy, now represented Haitian democracy’s biggest obstacle.

Organized opposition to Aristide’s Family Lavalas comes from the Democratic Convergence, an unstable alliance of right- and left-wing forces, and the right-wing Group of 184. Independent left formations such as Ben Dupuy’s National Popular Party are few and small, partly as a result of the coup regime’s decimation of the left.

BLEAK THOUGH this situation is, the history of Haiti’s 200-year struggle for independence has many lessons for us. One is that U.S. imperialism always claims to be for democracy and freedom—while violating sovereignty and seeking to install compliant regimes, no matter how brutal, which serve its interests.

Another is that democratic change comes not from foreign powers, but from a nation’s oppressed, which can and do rise up against intolerable conditions. Lastly, in order to assist those struggling in poor nations, we in the U.S. must do everything in our power to challenge the economic and military might exerted internationally by our own government.

http://www.socialistworker.org/2004-1/482/482_08_Haiti.shtml

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