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WikiLeaks Haiti: Cable Depicts Fraudulent Haiti Election
The United States, the European Union and the United Nations decided to support Haiti’s recent presidential and parliamentary elections despite believing that the country’s electoral body, “almost certainly in conjunction with President Preval,” had “emasculated the opposition” by unwisely and unjustly excluding the country’s largest party, according to a secret US Embassy cable.
United Nations troops from India put on protective gear near posters of presidential candidate Michel 'Sweet Micky' Martelly near the headquarters of the Provision Electoral Council April 4, 2011 in Petionville, Haiti. (Lee Celano/Getty Images) At a December 1, 2009, meeting, a group of international election donors, including ambassadors from Brazil, Canada, Spain and the United States, concluded that “the international community has too much invested in Haiti’s democracy to walk away from the upcoming elections, despite its imperfections,” in the words of the EU representative, according to US Ambassador Kenneth Merten’s December 2009 cable.
Haiti’s electoral body, the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP), banned the Fanmi Lavalas (FL) from participating in the polls on a technicality. The FL is the party of then-exiled former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who was overthrown on February 29, 2004, and flown to Africa as part of a coup d’état that was supported by France, Canada, and the United States.
This history made Canadian Ambassador Gilles Rivard worry at the December donor meeting that “support for the elections as they now stand would be interpreted by many in Haiti as support for Preval and the CEP’s decision against Lavalas.” He said that the CEP had reneged on a pledge to “reconsider their exclusion of Lavalas.”
“If this is the kind of partnership we have with the CEP going into the elections, what kind of transparency can we expect from them as the process unfolds?” Rivard asked.
Despite the Lavalas exclusion, the European Union and Canada proposed that donors “help level the playing field”—they could, for instance, “purchase radio air time for opposition politicians to plug their candidacies.” They were presumably referring to “opposition candidates” who would come from parties other than the FL.
That plan was nixed by the United Nations, but when the elections finally did take place on November 28, 2010, followed by a runoff on March 20, 2011, Washington and the international donor community played an influential role in determining their outcome.
When the first-round results were disputed, international donors arranged for an evaluation by the Organization of American States, which pronounced that pro-coup candidate Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly, 50, a former konpa musician, should face another neo-Duvalierist candidate, Mirlande Manigat, in the final round. Martelly emerged as the victor in the runoff.
Less than 23 percent of Haiti’s registered voters had their vote counted in either of the two presidential rounds, the lowest electoral participation rate in the hemisphere since 1945, according to the Washington-based Center for Economic and Policy Research.
Furthermore, the second round was illegal because the eight-member CEP could never muster the five votes necessary to ratify the first-round results.
The December 2009 election donor meeting took place just over a month before the January 12, 2010, earthquake, which derailed the elections originally planned for February 28, 2010.
When the polling was rescheduled, there was even more at stake, primarily how billions of dollars in pledged earthquake aid would be spent and the future of the 11,500-strong UN military force that has occupied Haiti since the 2004 coup d’etat.
According to the December 4, 2009, cable, US officials pushed hard for the election.
Ambassador Merten urged a minimal donor reaction to the FL’s exclusion, saying they should just “hold a joint press conference to announce donor support for the elections and to call publicly for transparency,” because “without donor support, the electoral timetable risks slipping dangerously, threatening a timely presidential succession.”
His cable was classified “Confidential” and “NOFORN,” meaning “Not for release to foreign nationals.”
The US State Department declined to comment on the disclosures in this article, citing a policy against commenting on releases of documents that purport to contain classified information.
Merten explained in the cable that he had opposed FL’s exclusion because the party would come out looking “like a martyr and Haitians will believe (correctly) that Preval is manipulating the election.”
The election’s low turnout has been ascribed to Haitians’ sense of futility in the choice between two unappealing candidates, to a grassroots boycott campaign and, primarily, to popular dismay over the FL’s exclusion, the very issue that gave rise to the December 2009 meeting.
Former President Aristide, who returned to Haiti from exile on March 18, two days before the second round, drove the point home when he declared on his arrival: “The problem is exclusion, the solution is inclusion.”
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Show AllWhen the western countries "Invest" in the Governments of the worlds poorest nations they obviously expect a "return on that investment" . This return is to be paid to the Corporations based in those nations and in those third world countries surrendering their wealth and resources to those Corporations.
This is all that it is about. Forget their speeches UN and their crocodile tears over the poor people of Haiti. They are a lot of thieves, stealing from the poorest to fatten their own wallets.
Greed has become a virtue and apparently the ONLY virtue they embrace.
The UN "peacekeeping" force has been cooperating with the Haitian police in raiding and killing Aristide supporters since our US/CIA coup forced him out.
When Aristide was elected he began building good housing for Haiti's poor, to get them out of the shanty towns. He also increased the minimum wage to one that a Haitian could live on. When we threw him out, the first thing the new regime did was throw out that minimum wage and return wages to the pittance they had been. I'm sure our corporations were thrilled as Haitian sweatshops are a large part of their bread-and-butter.
We are vile, most vile.
minitrue,
Right you are. The people of Peru understand. they just gave the oil and mining corporate cartels (otherwise known as US corporations in Peru) a swift kick in the family jewels by electing Humala.
I'm sure the US ambassador to Peru (otherwise known as gopher for corporate pollution producing profit scams and front man for the CIA) had to take some extra tums for his tummy.
Decent election results always give empire tools heartburn.
It was a close vote in Peru, so..... I've never been there and know very little about Peru, but it seems to me that Peru may be like the USA, pretty much divided 50-50 on how the country should be governed. Just saying.....
Well read.
The ambassador to Haiti from the USA acts like the Haitian elected officials are his employees. This a modern day Roman provincial governor all over again.
On another thread someone mentioned proposing a maximim wage in the USA. Well, our politicians certainly believe in a maximum minimum wage. Our "diplomats" in Haiti prevented the government there from raising the minimum wage from $3.00 A DAY to $5.00 a day. Yep, our corporations doing business in Haiti sweat shops couldn't handle the increase. The same thing happened in Honduras. The US government overthrew the Honduras government to protect oil and US corporate banana plantation profits.
And for the likeitornots or chameleons that think this is okay and "real-politik" among nations, just remember that now they want to do to people here in the USA what they've been doing abroad for at least a hundred years.
Our leaders are crooks. They want us poor and destitute. They are traitors. People should start flying the flag upside down as a message to the crooks that our country is in total distress and we know who the culprits are.
As I understand it, most Haitians earn about 37 cents a day. Haiti's "minimum wage" - which applies only to workers in certain industrial and commercial sectors - is $3.60 to $4.80 a day (eight hours), as of October 2010.
So, workers in Haiti's textile plants (what you call "sweat shops") earn ten to thirteen times MORE than most Haitians.
http://www.haitilibre.com/en/news-2714-haiti-social-human-rights-situation-in-haiti.html
What's the source for your claim that U.S. diplomats "prevented" Haiti from raising the minimum wage to $5.00? Since it's already at $4.80, your claim seems to be false.
According to the report at Al Jazeera, the US embassy and US clothing giants like Levi Strauss and Hanes signalled displeasure at Haiti’s initiative to raise the minimum wage for factory workers. US officials advised the Haitian government that a 5 dollar minimum wage “did not take economic reality into account” suggesting 3 dollars per day instead.
http://english.aljazeera.net/video/americas/2011/06/2011696515225206.html
Please remember these names the next time you go shopping.
I like wearing a certain type of shirt - good quality cotton, with two buttoned front pockets (comes in handy for my work and lifestyle). I began wearing this type of shirt in the mid-1980's. When I first began buying those shirts, I expected to pay a minimum of $30 for each shirt. The shirts were American made. Now, I can usually find them on special somewhere and pay maybe $10-$15 per shirt. Now the shirts are made in Third World countries. I make a lot more money now than 25 years ago, I can afford to pay more.
When I explain to people that Americans live a good life because our corporations exploit poor people, I am told that I am stupid. Maybe I am stupid...????
Thanks Dizi, you got it.
Perhaps they should have written above the entrance to the factory in Haiti:
"Arbeit Macht Frei" = "work sets you free" or "work liberates."
What is Haiti if not a work concentration camp for American corporations???
John Anderson is the President and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Levi Strauss & Co.
Levi Strauss & Co. Joins United Nations Global Compact
Levi Strauss 03 Nov 2006
Levi’s suspended by ethical group in living wage row
Sarah Butler, Times [UK] 20 Jan 2007
Levi Strauss...has been suspended from the Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI) for a year in a row over the concept of a living wage. The ETI insists that all its members, ranging from Primark and Tesco to Marks & Spencer, sign up to a list of basic principles...Levi’s, which had been a member of the ETI since 1999, refused to sign, insisting that the concept of a living wage is not properly defined...A Levi’s spokesman said: “Our company code of conduct is completely actionable and we don’t want to include something we can’t really deliver. We support further work on defining what is a living wage, but at the moment we don’t want to include something aspirational in our code.”...Some sources suggested that Levi’s was afraid of potential legal action in the United States if it signed up to the charter, because of the woolly definition of a living wage.
Hanesbrands CEO - Richard A. Noll.
In September 2006, Sara Lee Corporation spun off its branded apparel Americas and Asia business as a separate company called Hanesbrands Inc., which designs, manufactures, sources and sells a broad range of apparel essentials. The company's portfolio of brands include Hanes (its largest brand), Champion (its second largest brand), Playtex (its third largest brand), Bali, Just My Size, Barely There, Wonderbra, L’eggs, C9 by Champion, Duofold, Beefy-T, Outer Banks, Sol y Oro, Rinbros, Zorba and Ritmo.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanes
From: CommonDreams.org
PRESS RELEASE
OCTOBER 24, 2006
CONTACT: National Labor Committee
Charles Kernaghan of National Labor Committee,
212-242-3002
Child Labor Is Back: Children Again Sewing Clothing for Wal-Mart, Hanes and Other U.S. Companies
NEW YORK - October 24 - The following was released today by the National Labor Committee (NLC) on child labor:
An estimated 200 children, some 11 years old or even younger, are sewing clothing for Hanes, Wal-Mart, J.C. Penney and Puma at the Harvest Rich factory in Bangladesh.
The children report being routinely slapped and beaten, sometimes falling down from exhaustion, forced to work 12 to 14 hours a day, even some all-night, 19- to 20-hour shifts, often seven days a week, for wages as low as 6 and a half cents an hour. The wages are so wretchedly low that many of the child workers get up at 5 a.m. each morning to brush their teeth using just their finger and ashes from the fire, since they cannot afford a toothbrush or toothpaste.
The workers say that if they could earn just 36 cents an hour, they could climb out of misery and into poverty, where they could live with a modicum of decency.
In the month of September, the children had just one day off, and before clothing shipments had to leave for the U.S., the workers were often kept at the factory 95 to 110 hours a week. After being forced to work a grueling all-night 19- to 20-hour shift, from 8 a.m. to 3 or 4 a.m. the following day, the children sleep on the factory floor for two or three hours before being woken to start their next shift at 8 a.m. that same morning.
The child workers are beaten for falling behind in their production goal, making mistakes or taking too long in the bathroom (which is filthy, lacking even toilet paper, soap or towels).
http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_3234.cfm
It is important to know what you buy and who you buy it from. It is always up to you. If price is everything then it is important to realise how it got to this. Is it not because "they" control your income as well as the incomes of the Haitians' and "they" control your spending, through advertising, monopoly and price....
Let's all be real stupid and use that little we have to ensure "fair trade" and I don't mean the label that Hanes and Levi just pay for! It really is up to us.
The article you link simply restates the same claim made in The Nation's article. You should read the article I linked. In spite of whatever displeasure some may or may not have signaled, Haiti's minimum wage was raised in October 2010. Read the facts.
Haitian textile workers currently make ten to thirteen times MORE than most Haitians. And the photos show the plants don't look anything like sweatshops: they are clean, well-lit workplaces. Living wage? Ten to thirteen times more than what most Haitians make (in other work which does not come under the minimum wage law) has got to be a lot better than a living wage. Those are some of the best blue-collar jobs in Haiti. I'd love to see a such a minimum wage law in the U.S.
This would be the same fraudulent Haitian government who are presently beating the living crap out of the Haitian earthquake refugees to drive them out of the slums and refugee camps so US based Corporations can walk in and set up 'destination' vacation resorts.
Thank you, US Government for making the world just that little bit shittier...
I suppose it's easier to support a Bush style "election" than it is to put a gun to the winner's head and fly him into exile.
Well said, the Florida/Ohio "selection" model is the most efficient. Now if we can introduce a Hanes/Levi Straus pre-primary vetting process, Haiti will have real USA style demockracy.
The buzz that indicates this excellent expose is only approaching half the awful truth is "international donor community." Donor community is a recognized code term for "colonial powers" operating in a globalized "free market" that requires austerity from mere humans to balance budgets and buy racing yachts to assuage conflicted gentry who sell their souls to immortal corporations committed to faster and faster growth in a competitive race to win infinite pollution rights on a finite planet.
Why is ANY Western nation even bothering with the pretense of archaic 'voting' anyway?
We should all just acknowledge that the Corporations will install their pet psychopaths anyway, and just hang them accordingly.
And what happened to all the money from people all over the world giving to organizations like the Red Cross? I had read before that the money was banked and never given to the Haitians. So governments and corp. are not the only crooks here. Tony
My experience with Red Cross after Katrina (I lived in south Mississippi at that time and had no electricity for over a month, got hit fairly hard), anyway, IMHO, the Red Cross is a lot like the US Government - both do some good, but each has to spend $100 to do a dollar's worth of good.
It's nice to confirm (via WikiLeaks) that there's no honor among thieves, but we already inferred that a fix was in from the former colonial powers (and Canada).
Once again, we see serious corruption taking place at the United Nations. And these crimes are being carried out against one of the poorest nations in the Western hemisphere.