Subscribe to Common Dreams News Updates
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Profiting from Haiti’s Crisis: Disaster Capitalism in Washington’s Backyard
US corporations, private mercenaries, Washington and the International Monetary Fund are using the crisis in Haiti to make a profit, promote unpopular neoliberal policies, and extend military and economic control over the Haitian people.
In the aftermath of the earthquake, with much of the infrastructure and government services destroyed, Haitians have relied on each other for the relief efforts, working together to pull their neighbors, friends and loved ones from the rubble. One report from IPS News in Haiti explained, "In the day following the quake, there was no widespread violence. Guns, knives and theft weren't seen on the streets, lined only with family after family carrying their belongings. They voiced their anger and frustration with sad songs that echoed throughout the night, not their fists."
Bob Moliere, an organizer within the popular political party Fanmi Lavalas was killed in the earthquake. His wife, Marianne Moliere, told IPS News after burying her husband, "There is no life for me because Bob was everything to me. I lost everything. Everything is destroyed," she said. "I'm sleeping in the street now because I'm homeless. But when I get some water, I share with others. Or if someone gives some spaghetti, I share with my family and others."
It is not this type of solidarity that has emerged in the wake of the crisis - and the delayed and muddled response from the international community - that most corporate media in the US have focused on. Instead, echoing the coverage and calls for militarization of New Orleans in the wake of Katrina, major media outlets talk about the looting, and need for security to protect private property.
One request from Erwin Berthold, the owner of Big Star Market in Petionville, Haiti, reflects this concern for profit over people. Berthold told the Washington Post about his supermarket, "We have everything cleaned up inside. We are ready to open. We just need some security. So send in the Marines, okay?"
That militarization is already underway. This week the US is sending thousands of troops and soldiers to the country. The Haitian government has signed over control of its capital airport to the US. Brazil and France have already lodged complaints that US military planes are now being given priority over other flights at the international airport.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez responded to the US troop deployment. "I read that 3,000 soldiers are arriving, Marines armed as if they were going to war. There is not a shortage of guns there, my God. Doctors, medicine, fuel, field hospitals, that's what the United States should send," Chavez said. "They are occupying Haiti undercover." The Venezuelan President pledged to send any necessary amount of gasoline needed to the country to aid with electricity and transport.
A Heroic History in Washington's Backyard
There is also little mention in the major news outlets' coverage of how the US government and corporations helped impoverish Haiti in the first place, creating the economic poverty that makes disasters like this so extensive. Nor is there mention of the country's heroic struggle against imperialism and slavery. Fidel Castro pointed out in a recent column, "Haiti was the first country in which 400,000 Africans, enslaved and trafficked by Europeans, rose up against 30,000 white slave masters on the sugar and coffee plantations, thus undertaking the first great social revolution in our hemisphere. ... Napoleon's most eminent general was defeated there. Haiti is the net product of colonialism and imperialism, of more than one century of the employment of its human resources in the toughest forms of work, of military interventions and the extraction of its natural resources."
University professor Peter Hallward, writing in the Guardian Unlimited, criticized Washington for its responsibility in creating the suffering it is now pledging to alleviate in Haiti. "Ever since the US invaded and occupied the country in 1915, every serious political attempt to allow Haiti's people to move (in former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide's phrase) ‘from absolute misery to a dignified poverty' has been violently and deliberately blocked by the US government and some of its allies. Aristide's own government (elected by some 75% of the electorate) was the latest victim of such interference, when it was overthrown by an internationally sponsored coup in 2004 that killed several thousand people and left much of the population smoldering in resentment. The UN has subsequently maintained a large and enormously expensive stabilization and pacification force in the country."
Brian Concannon, the director of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti told Hallward of the root causes for the overpopulation of neighborhoods in the city of Port-au-Prince that were hit so hard by the earthquake. "Those people got there because they or their parents were intentionally pushed out of the countryside by aid and trade policies specifically designed to create a large captive and therefore exploitable labor force in the cities; by definition they are people who would not be able to afford to build earthquake resistant houses." Unnatural crises such as this made the earthquake much more devastating.
Disaster Capitalism Comes to Haiti
As Noami Klein thoroughly proved in her book The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, throughout history, "while people were reeling from natural disasters, wars and economic upheavals, savvy politicians and industry leaders nefariously implemented policies that would never have passed during less muddled times." This push to apply unpopular neoliberal policies began almost immediately after the earthquake in Haiti.
In a talk recorded by Democracy Now!, Klein explained that the disaster in Haiti is created on the one hand by nature, and on the other hand "is worsened by the poverty that our governments have been so complicit in deepening. Crises-natural disasters are so much worse in countries like Haiti, because you have soil erosion because the poverty means people are building in very, very precarious ways, so houses just slide down because they are built in places where they shouldn't be built. All of this is interconnected. But we have to be absolutely clear that this tragedy, which is part natural, part unnatural, must, under no circumstances, be used to, one, further indebt Haiti, and, two, to push through unpopular corporatist policies in the interests of our corporations."
Following the disaster in Haiti, Klein pointed out that the Heritage Foundation, "one of the leading advocates of exploiting disasters to push through their unpopular pro-corporate policies," issued a statement on its website after the earthquake hit: "In addition to providing immediate humanitarian assistance, the U.S. response to the tragic earthquake in Haiti earthquake offers opportunities to re-shape Haiti's long-dysfunctional government and economy as well as to improve the public image of the United States in the region."
The
mercenary trade group International Peace Operations Association (IPOA)
immediately offered their services to provide "security" in
Kathy Robison, a Fortune 500 executive, formerly with Goldman Sachs Companies, wrote of the earthquake disaster in Haiti. "The business leaders I have been meeting with have seen enough disappointment and suffering," she wrote. "What Haiti needs is economic development and the building of a true middle class. ... There is much we are planning as far as creating new and innovative ways of using international aid and government support to promote private investment."
On January 14, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced a $100 million loan to Haiti to help with relief efforts. However, Richard Kim at The Nation wrote that this loan was added onto $165 million in debt made up of loans with conditions "including raising prices for electricity, refusing pay increases to all public employees except those making minimum wage and keeping inflation low." This new $100 million loan has the same conditions. Kim writes, "in the face of this latest tragedy, the IMF is still using crisis and debt as leverage to compel neoliberal reforms."
The last thing Haiti needs at this point is more debt; what it needs is grants. As Kim wrote, according to a report from the The Center for International Policy, in 2003 "Haiti spent $57.4 million to service its debt, while total foreign assistance for education, health care and other services was a mere $39.21 million."
In the midst of the suffering and anguish following the earthquake, many Haitians came together to console and help each other. Journalist David Wilson, in Haiti during the time of the earthquake, wrote of the singing that followed the disaster. "Several hundred people had gathered to sing, clap, and pray in an intersection here by 9 o'clock last night, a little more than four hours after an earthquake had devastated much of the Haitian capital." A young Haitian American commented to Wilson on the singing, "Haitians are different," he said. "People in other countries wouldn't do this. It's a sense of community."
If these elements of the "relief" efforts continue in this exploitative vein, it is this community that will likely be crushed even further by disaster capitalism and imperialism.
While international leaders and institutions are speaking about how many soldiers and dollars they are committing to Haiti, it is important to note that what Haiti needs is doctors not soldiers, grants not loans, a stronger public sector rather than a wholesale privatization, and critical solidarity with grassroots organizations and people to support the self-determination of the country.
"We don't need soldiers," Patrick Elie, the former Defense Minister under the Aristide government told Al Jazeera. "There is no war here." In addition to critiquing the presence of the soldiers, he commented on the US-control of the main airport. "The choice of what lands and what doesn't land, the priorities of the flight[s], should be determined by the Haitians. Otherwise, it's a takeover and what might happen is that the needs of Haitians are not taken into account, but only either the way a foreign country defines the need of Haiti, or try to push its own agenda."
***
For more information and suggestions on acting in solidarity with the Haitian people, read this article.




14 Comments so far
Show Allfrom Jeremy Scahill on Truthout:...After Katrina, the number of private security companies registered (and unregistered) multiplied overnight. Banks, wealthy individuals, the US government all hired private security. I even encountered Israeli mercenaries operating an armed check-point outside of an elite gated community in New Orleans. They worked for a company called Instinctive Shooting International. (That is not a joke).
Now, it is kicking into full gear in Haiti. As we know, the member companies of the Orwellian-named mercenary trade association, the International Peace Operations Association, are offering their services in Haiti...
...Among the services offered are: “High Threat terminations,” dealing with “worker unrest,” armed guards and “Armed Cargo Escorts.” Oh, and apparently they are currently hiring.
Is there such a thing as "non-disaster" capitalism?
FDR's New Deal regulated capitalism from 1935 to 1980 to the extent that the disaster capitalism model that existed prior to 1932 was kept under control.
From 1776 until 1932 the US financial industry created bubbles that collapsed at least once every decade (they called them panics) and devastated many US businesses and citizens. Most assets were thereby controlled by the robber barons who created the bubbles. The robber barons' wealth kept growing while most citizens lived in poverty. While Teddy Roosevelt's turn of the century trustbusting impeded the growth of disaster capitalism, it took FDR's New Deal to actually bring it under control.
Financial industry deregulation that Ronny Raygun accelerated and his successors enabled to continue has restored the disaster capitalism model on a more global scale than the robber barons could have imagined.
How so very predictable.
CBC TV interviewed the CEO of Global Rescue yesterday. He said they are in Haiti. They got their planes in apparently ahead of medical equipment & personnel from various countries. I guess they have an in with the US military. The CEO did say their personnel did include former military types. Made me sick, & definitely tells you a lot about US motivation. Be nice to know who is paying the bill. Ron.
Can anybody see the hypocrisy? The only jobs left in town is killing and spreading disaster. The US may have lost the edge on industrial manufacturing but despite a dying national economy it dominates the world in one industry above all, the industry of war and misery.
Despite the facts of the matter, I have been called a “conspiracy theorist” (its a stupid expression that does not bother me) because I pointed out somewhere that the US through projects such as HAARP using tax payers’ funds for researching how earthquakes and other natural disasters such as extreme weather could be triggered artificially for military or strategic purposes (the ultimate weapon) and that the technology already exists to remotely trigger from as far as 150 K distance or probably much further, an earthquake such as that in Haiti, where the stresses on tectonic plates are already a known factor. In short the US “could” have triggered the earthquake in Haiti if they had put their minds to it.
Why they would is another question, but as a country America has invested into developing plans to do such things somewhere in the world at sometime when it might be convenient to them. Of course no one will ever prove that this time in Haiti or on 26th Dec 2004 off the coast of Indonesia some agency covertly experimented with this technology and caused major predictable catastrophic disasters.
But that is not as important as the ghouls that sit in the Heritage Society and count all the ways any disaster, man made or natural, can meet America’s “free market interests”:
http://www.democracynow.org/2010/1/14/
naomi_klein_issues_haiti_disaster_capitalism
Sometimes causing the disaster is far less of a crime than how the disaster is eventually put to the use of proffiteers. As an example of one disaster leading to unlimited return on expenditure take 9-11, which killed only about 3500 plus, and which is still not independently investigated to answer the ever rising number of factual anomalies apparent in the official Al Qaeda conspiracy theory as proposed as the cause in the 9/11 Commission report.
This original and comparatively minor event led to the endless “War on Terror” which, helped by propaganda and apparently many “errors” in judgment, continues under successive names, to take lives daily and spread suffering even after the estimated 1.3 million killed in Iraq, the untold numbers in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Somalia and Yemen plus many more millions of injured displaced and homeless; this endless man made disaster, justifying kidnapping, murder and torture, suspension of habeas corpus, enacting the patriot act which denies other constitutional rights etc… but all together, it provides the framework and underpins the base for global “disaster capitalism” on an unprecedented scale causing trillions of government funds to be allocated to that private sector dedicated to the killing business while expanding the economic and strategic full spectrum dominance.
The system with its lack of any humanitarian underpinning provides unlimited opportunities for a military needing to justify expanding expenditure in defence, even though it already surpasses the rest of the world combined, and which in turn feeds a host of privatised arms manufacturers, service companies and mercenaries, all with their consultants on K Street. Together they provide comprehensive solutions to guarantee their own continuing and expanded profits.
Spin is the cheap answer to human suffering; a photo-op of Bill Clinton handling water bottles out of a US military cargo jet on the tarmac in Porto-au-Prince, his aircraft and entourage of body guards blocking essential movement at the time, while the total dollar amount pledged by the USA equals one day of the Afghan offensive and the brainwashed masses are convinced that all that can be done is being done for the biggest single earthquake disaster ever witnessed, never mind that most of the lives lost and the suffering there and the in the other disasters in which America is involved could have all been prevented at little cost.
Everyone has forgotten that of the 320 million which was pledged to Haiti after the Hurricanes in 2009 by major developed economies, not even 10% was actually forthcoming and of that almost nothing trickled down to Haitian people in real terms. Somehow, in this virtual reality environment of disaster capitalism, sustained by a hot air atmosphere pumped in by media propaganda, there is fostered, not only group plausible deniability, but all culpability can evaporate, and those sociopathic elites of the international community that breath in this air can totally avoid being connected to a history of supporting exploitation through despicable local tyrants and frame themselves as saints coming to the rescue.
JoannafromCanada
Hey Lucitanian:
Micheal Ruppert considers himself a 'conspiracy realist.' You are in good company.
Capitalism thrives on disaster, as Naomi Klein has brilliantly argued and many have known around the world for lo these many years. And now Dangl shows how the disaster in Haiti is just another OPPORTUNITY for corporatist leeches to suck even more blood from impoverished Haiti. How much of this will surface in MSM? Even if it should, they'll spin it so it seems the Haitians are either grateful to the IMF, IPOA and assorted "relief" organizations, or they lack the requisite gratitude and thereby deserve only more lecturing and threats from the US about how they must get their act together to please the hemisphere's godfather. The Marines are already there, making sure they're willing to accept offers they can't refuse.
Thousands more are dying long after the quake due to untreated injuries and infections.
After the quake struck the fact that the Haitian government was nothing more than a paper tiger puppet of the US and of the international corporations was exposed more than before. This government was the enemy of the poor prior to the quake, which means it was the enemy of the great majority of the population.
So is it any wonder that the Haitian government is unable to coordinate assistance for the poor after the earthquake? Short of waving a magic wand and creating agencies and public capabilities that have real capabilities out of thin air, there was no way the far right Haitian government was ever going to be able to coordinate much of anything other than police brutality.
He who lives by the sword dies by the sword.
I read there are (or will be shortly) 11,000 marines in Haiti, either on ships or ground.
Cynical point (is there such a thing as being to cynical when it comes to U.S. and global corporate powers): Look at the Map and see how close Haiti is to Cuba's east side flank. Looks to me that on a good day and expert long distance ocean swimmer could make it.
So, say where in Haiti a year or so "cleaning up things" especially the airport and then there could be some sniveling incident with Cuba and bingo, there goes Cuba's socialistic experiment. Of course the U.S. military would just be there as humanitarians and advisors.
Hope it doesn't happen but if it does, and this includes attacking Iran either by U.S. or Israel, I/we will be looking for a new address.
I think it's important to bear in mind that "disaster capitalism" is not some new, threatening mutation of a somewhat more benign capitalism. Disaster capitalism is really plain, old-school laissez-faire capitalism in modern clothes, as fictional and deadly as any dogmatic ideology. The difference is that, rather than colonizing and plundering land masses of their natural resources, capitalists now colonize governments in crisis and plunder their national resources (i.e., the wealth of the people of the state, collectivized in public works, infrastructure and services). Same game, same rules, new arena.
It would be interesting to see the reaction if Chavez and Castro sent armed troops in to keep order (in addition to medical teams) or is that an exclusive U.S. franchise?
I have screamed by e-mail at my Congresswoman and the President about getting these unnecessary armed apparitions of death out of Haiti, but know that as a plain old citizen, my words will have little effect. Besides withholding the portion of our taxes spent on 'security', 'defense', and overthrowing governments the US doesn't like, what else can we do?
We don't need to worry about an Independence Day movie scenario; it's already here, being perpetrated by America & friends, not by extra-terrestrials. It won't be long before you and I are among the victimized.
Trusting Award Winning Investigative Journalist Jeremy Scahill to accurate about IPOA is a little like trusting Bernie Madoff to be careful with your money.
Scahill has no idea what IPOA is about. He refuses to learn about the organization or talk to anyone here despite our attempts to contact him when he was writing his book. He obviously doesn't want to know. Not sure how anyone could actually win an investigative aware without actually doing any investigation, but Mr. Scahill shows us it can be done!
Modern journalism at its best. Sigh.
Doug Brooks
IPOA