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Haiti Needs Water, Not Occupation
The US has never wanted Haitian self-rule, and its focus on 'security concerns' has hampered the earthquake aid response
On Monday, six days after the earthquake in Haiti, the US Southern Command finally began to drop bottled water and food from an air force C-17. US defence secretary Robert Gates had previously rejected such a method because of "security concerns".
If people do not get clean water, there could be epidemics of water-borne diseases that could greatly increase the death toll. But the US is now sending 10,000 troops and seems to be prioritising "security" over much more urgent, life-and-death needs. This in addition to the increase of 3,500 UN troops scheduled to arrive.
On Sunday morning the world-renowned humanitarian group Doctors Without Borders complained that a plane carrying its portable hospital unit was re-routed by the US military through the Dominican Republic. This would cost a crucial 48 hours and an unknown number of lives.
On Sunday, Jarry Emmanuel, air logistics officer for the UN's World Food Programme, said: "There are 200 flights going in and out every day, which is an incredible amount for a country like Haiti ... But most flights are for the US military."
Yet Lieutenant General PK Keen, deputy commander of the US Southern Command, reports that there is less violence in Haiti now than there was before the earthquake hit. Dr Evan Lyon, of Partners in Health, a medical aid group famous for its heroic efforts in Haiti, referred to "misinformation and rumours ... and racism" concerning security issues.
We've been circulating throughout the city until 2:00 and 3:00 in the morning every night, evacuating patients, moving materials. There's no UN guards. There's no US military presence. There's no Haitian police presence. And there's also no violence. There is no insecurity.
To understand the US government's obsession with "security concerns," we must look at the recent history of Washington's involvement there.
Long before the earthquake, Haiti's plight has been comparable to that of many homeless people on city streets in the US: too poor and too black to have the same effective constitutional and legal rights as other citizens. In 2002, when a US-backed military coup temporarily toppled the elected government of Venezuela, most governments in the hemisphere responded quickly and helped force the return of democratic rule. But two years later, when Haiti's democratically elected president Jean-Bertrand Aristide was kidnapped by the US and flown to exile in Africa, the response was muted.
Unlike the two centuries of looting and pillage of Haiti since its founding by a slave revolt in 1804, the brutal occupation by US marines from 1915 to 1934, the countless atrocities under dictatorships aided and abetted by Washington, the 2004 coup cannot be dismissed as "ancient history." It was just six years ago, and it is directly relevant to what is happening there now.
The US, together with Canada and France, conspired openly for four years to topple Haiti's elected government, cutting off almost all international aid in order to destroy the economy and make the country ungovernable. They succeeded. For those who wonder why there are no Haitian government institutions to help with the earthquake relief efforts, this is a big reason. Or why there are 3 million people crowded into the area where the earthquake hit. US policy over the years also helped destroy Haitian agriculture, for example, by forcing the import of subsidised US rice and wiping out thousands of Haitian rice farmers.
Aristide, the country's first democratically elected president, was overthrown after just seven months in 1991, by military officers and death squads later discovered to be in the pay of the CIA. Now Aristide wants to return to his country, something that the majority of Haitians have demanded since his overthrow. But the US does not want him there. And the René Préval government, which is completely beholden to Washington, has decided that Aristide's party - the largest in Haiti - will not be allowed to compete in the next elections (originally scheduled for next month).
Washington's fear of democracy in Haiti may explain why the US is now sending 10,000 troops and prioritising "security" over other needs.
This military occupation by US troops will raise other concerns in the hemisphere, depending on how long they stay - just as the recent expansion of the US military presence in Colombia has been met with considerable discontent and distrust in the region. And non-governmental organisations have raised other issues about the proposed reconstruction: understandably they want Haiti's remaining debt cancelled, and grants rather than loans (the IMF has proposed a $100m dollar loan). Reconstruction needs will be in the billions of dollars: will Washington encourage the establishment of a functioning government? Or will it prevent that, channelling aid through NGOs and taking over various functions itself, because it of its long-standing opposition to Haitian self-rule?
But most urgently, there is a need for rapid delivery of water. The US air force has the capability to deliver enough water for everyone who needs it in Haiti, until ground supply chains can be established. The more water is available, the less likely there is to be fighting or rioting over this scarce resource. Food and medical supplies could also be supplied through air drops. These operations should be ramped up, immediately. There is no time to lose.
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34 Comments so far
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If our Empire allows President Aristide to return, what most Haitians want to happen immediately, then all things will turn toward the good.
Otherwise its sweatshops for the Haitians and luxury resorts for the intelligent ruling classes of Canada, France and Empire USA.
Get this understood- the only reason why anyone wants Aristide back in Haiti is to stand trial.
If he is so popular there, why is there a mass grave on the beach North of Port-au-Prince where over two thousand of his opposition are buried? Why is it that his rallies always end in a death.
Look this one up oh internet expert- Look up the murder of reverend Sylvio Claude. He was murdered on Aristide's orders, as he presented a threat to Aristide in the elections.
On September 29, 1991- Aristide supporters crowded around his Church, dragged him to the streets, slashed his lower arms and legs off with machetes, put a kerosene soaked tire over his torso, set it on fire, and dragged him through the streets shouting, "Vive Aristide, Vote Titide!!" shaking cans of gas and machetes in the face of onlookers.
Don't believe me?? I filmed it, and have plenty of photos. I smelled the flesh of a friend burning. I felt the fear instilled by Aristide's frenzied mob. I felt the heat of their fire. I recall the polling houses empty.
And you claim to know what you talk about? White American?
Aristide claims to be an orphan, yet his mother runs a second hand business and lives in a very opulent home in Miami. He claims to be many things, but is an omnipotent greedy liar and psychopath.
One thing he is not, and that is anything close to elected in any way.
The Haitians I've meet are calm and kind and incredibly hard-working. After everything America (and France) has put them through they are still patient, Yes there have been some kidnappings and violence by the more frustrated Haitians but if it wasn't relatively safe the cruise ships wouldn't dock there.
So why the panic about riots? Weisbrot did n't exactly spell out what may be the overriding concern. Haitians are black folk. And you know about them.
Meanwhile the dying goes on...
American Friends Service Committee http://www.afsc.org/
American Red Cross: http://www.redcross.org/
Artists for Peace and Justice: http://www.artistsforpeaceandjustice.com/
NetHope: http://www.nethope.org/
Lambi Fund for Haiti: http://www.lambifund.org/
Save the Children: http://www.savethechildren.org/
World Vision International: http://wvi.org/wvi/wviweb.nsf
Care: http://www.care.org/index.asp
MercyCorps: http://www.mercycorps.org/
Partners in Health: http://twitter.com/PIH_org
Unicef: http://www.unicef.org/
Doctors Without Borders: http://doctorswithoutborders.org/
Parners in Health: http://www.standwithhaiti.org/haiti
Ofram: http://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressrelease/2010-01-13/large-earthquake-haiti
RN Response Network: https://secure.ga1.org/05/rnrn_relief_fund
National Nurses United has launched a relief effort to send over 7,000 registered nurses to Haiti. There's just one problem: the cost of sending them. Please donate today at www.SendaNurse.org. Every dollar you donate goes toward the resources nurses need to care for the survivors of this tragedy.
Pass it on.
Gary
Our answer for every problem on the face of the earth...send more troops.
And tax cuts and exemptions for the rich here at home.
Joe
Aid is going to Haiti from many parts of the world, and as is so typical, all the U.S. government sends is death.
If the purpose of this world is to prove the harm in a white dominated society, especially our most satanic society, then native Americans will get all their land back, and Haitians will be their biggest tourist industry.
I agree with many comments here - Gary, John Ellis et al. I live in Brooklyn which has a large and accomplished Haitian community. The ridiculous stereotypes of AIDS ridden practitioners of voodoo do not match anything we experience here. Those stereotypes help support our continual incursions against Haitian self-determination.
I would like to thank Democracy Now for taking us to Haiti where we can see the situation for ourselves. As Haitians organize and help each other, Partners in Health and others deliver care, they do not experience street violence, even after midnight. Only on DN will you see historians like Randall Robinson or long time health and freedom activists.
On other news shows we see armed, booted and camo clad US soldiers with guns giving bottles of water to kids. 16,000 American soldiers, accustomed to their three squares, use up a lot of scarce transit and nutritional resources. Dammit - leave the soldiers at home unless there are specific construction tasks that they can do. Send the rations and water they would consume to Haiti. And instead of tanks, how about loading transports with backhoes and cranes? How about sending nannys and cash to care for the lost children while we search for surviving family members and friends rather than ignoring the kids or hijacking them to the US?
And I'll trade your 16,000 soldiers for one Aristide.
Joe
Yes, and the question is, why does not Aristide just get a 100 body guards and come on home?
It might be trickier than that with the US controlling the airport and with a military occupation. But I hope people are figuring out ways.
Joe
Aristide was on a flight that was coming from South Africa on the 12th, where he is hiding- It stopped in France, and he was told that an arrest party was waiting for him-
You see, he is wanted in a number of criminal cases, and the statute of limitations has not yet expired. He is a wanted criminal in Haiti.
Drugs, money theft (aid money from hurricanes of past), murder, election fraud, telecom fraud, and embezzlement, to list a few.
Educate yourselves.
http://haitian-truth.org
Joe
While I agree with you about the silly suggestion of Voodoo, aids, etc. I believe I read that 36% of Haitians in New York are Doctors. Thats half the problem though, their best get out of Haiti.
Lets not believe that there was no criminal activity in Haiti before the earthquake. According to Australian reports and others from the area that I read, there was. Weak government and police force combined with poverty is not conducive to good order.
And that weak government that was wrecked by the earthquake is still in charge. Both the UN and US are under their authority.
I'd also suggest that If I were one of the Haitians I believe I'd choose the US or the UN to keep order and help me rather than one Aristide. Its not an easy thing to do that they are doing, how about we reserve judgement on how well they are doing for the moment?
Aristide had 2,500 former Haitian soldiers put to death after he disbanded the military.
He is worse than anything that you can imagine.
Tell your congressional reps to pressure Obama to let the aid through.
http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1439/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=2065
My "congressional reps" are paid actors hired by the rich, hand picked and selected not elected by the rich.
Please give us the names of you congressional reps?
You type this about your US reps being picked, not elected, yet you say that Aristide was elected???? All the while, you have NEVER been to Haiti?????
http://www.haitian-truth.org This is a very interesting news site on Haiti-
Read there. I guess the folks that made the site also put in some commentary with the news articles, and there is a Daily Reports section that is pretty interesting, and is written from a well informed insider's whistle blower's perspective.
In the daily reports section, there are reports on why news reporting on Gov was skewed.
There is also a crime and corruption section, and in it is a lot of very interesting stuff about a big telecom scandal, and the huge house Preval bought his (now wife) former mistress in Florida, complete with address and purchase info. Great photo gallery too.
Anyhow, all of the news groups have good info in there somewhere, but if Haiti is the topic, that site has a lot of good information. I should know- I am Haitian, and half of my Family is still there- some entombed forever in mass graves.
Ellis, if you don't stop referring to us as slaves, you will be offending the 8.5 million of my Brothers and Sisters.
Disaster Opportunism 101
There are always tremendous opportunities to benefit from catastrophic events because the victims are typically so weakened and disorganized and desperate that they will accept almost any precondition to getting lifesaving assistance.
Under the cover of the word "aid", almost all sins are possible. First of all, there is the question of who gets the aid. You can channel it to groups and individuals that you want to empower, and keep it away from those you want to weaken--blaming the discrepancy on logistical or technical difficulties.
Then there is the issue of control of social and political organizations. In a broken community, guns and money will yield a lot of influence. And this influence will allow you to position yourself to take advantage of the lucrative business opportunities to come both in reconstruction and market penetration.
To try to counter these self-interested forces, individuals can donate to truly altruistic organizations, such as Doctors Without Borders and others, and support indigenous efforts to (a) build a new political infrastructure that will support democratic self-government; (b) make sure that local labor and materials and management are used for for reconstruction efforts; and (c) support the demilitarization of U.S. foreign policy.
It's time to help Haitians build the society they want.
Good article. Democracy Now's Amy Goodman interviewed the head physician at a Port au Prince hospital and he said the same thing - there is no security problem. However, he did say that they US media and military are blowing that line up and failing to deliver needed medical supplies.
The Doctor that Amy interviewed was staying in destruction wrought Port au Prince every night and said 'it was so quiet at night you could hear a pin drop'.
God help those that America 'helps'.
The imperial US government has been interfering in Haiti for over one hundred years now. I am a progressive on the left and I strongly protest the US military re-occupying Haiti for the Nth time...
The Cubans sent doctors and medical support teams to Haiti. The Israelis did likewise, as did the Canadians, the Brazilians. The Americans sent in thousands of armed troops. Now Pres. Obama is occupying three countries: Afghanistan, Iraq and Haiti. Add to that the corporatization of the so-called health care reform, high unemployment and kowtowing to the banking ruling class, and you can see why the Massachusetts voters dumped the Democratic candidate...
The nine million people of Haiti have only two (2) fire stations in the whole country. Imagine that... After a century of French colonialim and a century of American colonialism, it is a wonder that anything is left at all...
Haiti does need WATER and FOOD and Medical Supplies, And Help, etc. I hope they get all they need, those poor people.
But unfortunately, HAITI also received an American Occupation. Those soldiers, are NOT going anywhere. This was Obamas chance to "Take Advantage of a Crisis" and he did not let it go.
Soldiers are there in HAITI - they are NOT Going to go anywhere.
This is occupation without the need for an assault.
Thats the way the BIG Central Imperialist Government works.
Thats why we need NO MORE STATE.
I wish Americans had the same faith in themselves and each other as they do with those liars who call themselves Democrats and Republicans.
But eventually, maybe when it's too late, everyone will see that Government is NO Good.
I still have hopes that you are wrong about this. I am thinking that the US has only one response to anything, and that is miltary force. I am hoping that there is no second agenda here. It remains to be seen how long the military stay. If they leave in a few months, then I would say that you were wrong (and breathe a sigh of relief). If they are still here in January 2011 then sadly, you were correct all along.
New Orleans was totally militarized also after hurricane Katrina, but the military did leave eventually. There was no reasonable justification for the Blackwater/military response in New Orleans, but no-one would have described it as an occupation. Please dont interpret my comment as condoning previous meddling in Haiti, but I think that the military are here to help, but sadly they are helping in the only way they know how.
US and UN OUT OF HAITI Now!
The US government hates the poor people of Haiti. They simply are not there to help them out, and neither is the US Pentagon controlled UN soldiers either. It reminds one of Katrina and New Orleans all over again. Except thousands of times worse.
http://www.margueritelaurent.com/pressclips/oil_sites.html#5_oil_sites_in_Haiti
Commentary on the Mineral and hydrocarbon wealth of Haiti and the aborted plans of Aristide and Lavalas to exploit it on the behalf of the people of haiti
There is no security problem. Last night CBC showed a reporter wandering over a brush covered area that is being cleared by Haitian backhoes to make mass graves.
Canadian troops made a beach landing near Jacmel from HMCS Halifax and C-130 Hercules are using the tiny airstrip. Jacmel is a normal 3 hours by road from Port-au-Prince and now 9 hours. It might have been chosen as our Governor-General's former home or merely to keep out of the way of the congested US controlled airport.
Medical and food was the first priority. A shipment of vehicles should arrive next week including armoured personnel carriers with blades on the front for demolition and road repair.
The troops being sent are French speaking army units from Quebec, some of whom speak Creole. Apparently our troop strength will soon reach 2/3 of that in Afghanistan, which is a much better use of resources. They are expected to remain a few months.
"The current situation in Haiti, for which the Canadian government bears much responsibility, is characterized by political assasinations and imprisonments, the murder of peaceful protesters by police, the destruction of limited social programs and health care, and the repression of democratic activity.
The evidence shows that at every turn, Canada has declined every opportunity to uphold democracy in Haiti, while taking the lead in overthrowing the country's democratically elected government and legitimating a power grab by Haiti's wealthy elite.
Consequently, Canada finds itself in league with a grim roster of alumni from Reagan's murderous interventions in central America such as Roger Noriega, John Negroponte and Jesse Helms and on the wrong side of a war against Haiti's poor majority.
Behind the mask of humanitarianism, Canada is carrying out a murderous and destructive foreign policy in Haiti."
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The above is from:
"Canada out of Haiti":
http://outofhaiti.ca/index.html
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Haiti is Canada’s Iraq:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=1726
What is Canada Doing in Haiti?
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13280
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That the USA is the worst offender in cases like Haiti is well known. However, as in Iraq and elsewhere, it's never the US alone.
God's wrath will come down on those who caused this crisis by continually overthrowing elected governments,dumping surplus food to destroy the haitian people's food self-sufficiency and then trying to turn haiti into a colonial sweatshop. We are a small world we have to care for one another. I am saddened to see so many young people destitute. I hope that instead of giving corrupt officials and organizations money, we give the haitian people the tools to grow their on food and a restored leadership to build their own economy. Amen
MSM now announces up to twenty thousand troops are in route.(cnn i believe)
amazing we could respond somewhat rapidly. anyone remember New Orleans??
in light of our past foreign policy behavior regarding Haiti,I sure hope the Haitians don't suffer again from our involvement. We don't always need to play world police. This is one effort when it's easier to see images of a pentagon response.
Dept. of Peace, anyone???
>>HungLeft wrote: amazing we could respond somewhat rapidly.
Here's an interesting article:
"A Haiti Disaster Relief Scenario Was Envisaged by the US Military One Day Before the Earthquake"
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=17122
From the above story:
"A Haiti disaster relief scenario had been envisaged at the headquarters of US Southern Command (SOUTHCOM) in Miami one day prior to the earthquake.
The holding of pre-disaster simulations pertained to the impacts of a hurricane in Haiti. They were held on January 11.
...The Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA), which is under the jurisdiction of the Department of Defense (DoD), was involved in organizing these scenarios on behalf of US Southern Command.(SOUTHCOM).
...The Transnational Information Sharing Cooperation project (TISC) is a communications-information tool which "links non-government organizations with the United States [government and military] and other nations for tracking, coordinating and organizing relief efforts".(Government IT Scrambles To Help Haiti, TECHWEB January 15, 2010).
The TISC is an essential component of the militarization of emergency relief. The US military through DISA oversees the information - communications system used by participating aid agencies. Essentially, it is a communications sharing system controlled by the US military, which is made available to approved non-governmental partner organizations. The Defense Information Systems Agency also "provides bandwidth to aid organizations involved in Haiti relief efforts."
There are no details on the nature of the tests conducted on January 11 at SOUTHCOM headquarters."
Haiti should have sufficient water by now without bombing them with plastic water bottles. The Carl Vinson, alone, can produce 400,000 gallons per day, and there are other ships and some is being trucked in from the mountains.
The degree to which a foreign military presence is useful depends on what they are doing. That many organized, disciplined people could help greatly but if they are just standing around with guns their presence can be sand in the bearings.
One major problem is the news and its focus on piles of rubble and individuals, rather than the bigger picture of what is actually being done and/or what should be done, but that would require intelligent thought and, heaven forbid!, investigation.
The obsession with security is related to the arguments for capitalism and is racist. It's just assumed that these animals will tear each other apart to take what they can.
http:/www.haitian-truth.org
I was digging around in the web this evening and found this headline-
Collapsed CARIBBEAN MARKET Sat On Huge Cache of COCAINE and DRUG MONEY. Owners Block Rescue Attempts. Many Died In Direct Result.
http://www.haitian-truth.org/
I looked a bit more into the site, and there is a TON of information there that you all will find a very interesting read.