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The West Owes Haiti a Bailout. And It Would Be a Hand-Back, Not a Handout
The Caribbean nation should be reimbursed for centuries of punitive treatment and brutality by the outside world
Last week started with a conference in Montreal, called by a group of governments and international agencies calling themselves Friends of Haiti, to discuss the long and short term needs of the recently devastated Caribbean nation. Even as corpses remained under the earthquake's rubble and the government operated out of a police station, the assembled "friends" would not commit to cancelling Haiti's $1bn debt. Instead they agreed to a 10-year plan with no details, and a commitment to meet again – when the bodies have been buried along with coverage of the country – sometime in the future.
A few days later in Washington, Timothy Geithner, the US treasury secretary, came before the house oversight committee to explain why he paid top dollar for $85bn worth of toxic assets when he bailed out the insurance company AIG. Geithner said he was faced with a "tragic choice". "The moral, fair and just choice is to protect the innocent," he said.
There is no connection between these two events. But in the public imagination maybe there should be. The world cannot yet find $1bn in debt relief for Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere, a country that spent more in 2008 servicing its debt than it did on health, education and the environment combined and that has now been flattened. But, over a weekend, a single country could rustle up $85bn to keep a single company in business. It is an obscene reminder that, in the world of global capital, distressed assets are still more valued than distressed people.
The scale, urgency and determination with which western governments moved to salvage a broken system stands in stark contrast to their laggardly, inadequate and negligent approach when it comes to rescuing a broken society. I refer here not to the emergency aid operations in Haiti, which, given the logistical obstacles of operating in a crushed nation, have been impressive. Nor to the charitable donations from all over the world that prove that people are far more generous than the governments they elect. But to the resources and long-term systemic solutions that Haiti needs and the west could summon – if it so desired.
The recent earthquake was an act of nature. But the magnitude of the devastation, the consequent human toll and the inability of the country to recover unaided are the product of its political and economic marginalisation. Haiti was not so much a disaster waiting to happen as a disaster that kept happening, but that too few cared about. Haiti needs a bailout. And if it does not get one the disasters will never end.
A recent UN study on the impact of 21 natural disasters on heavily indebted poor countries concluded that rebuilding costs leave long-term financial burdens. The UN's trade and development body found that a natural disaster leads to a 24 percentage-point increase in a country's debt-to-GDP ratio.
"Shocks on such a scale can lead to a vicious cycle of economic distress, more external borrowing, burdensome debt servicing and insufficient investment to mitigate future shocks," it said.
Like a moviegoer walking into a thriller halfway through, those unfamiliar with Haitian history could be forgiven for mistaking the villains for the victims and benefactors for malefactors. For it was not simply a mixture of bad governance and even worse luck that got Haiti to this place (though they have played their part). Haiti is not a failed state; it's a state that has been failed since its birth, and precisely because of the nature of its birth.
Haiti gained its independence from France in 1804 through a slave rebellion – the first postcolonial, independent black-led nation in the world. For this audacity they would pay for generations. Napoleon told one of his ministers at the time: "The freedom of the negroes, if recognised in St Domingue [as Haiti was then known] and legalised by France would at all times be a rallying point for freedom-seekers of the New World." The US president Thomas Jefferson was similarly concerned that Haiti would set a bad example.
The US refused to recognise the new country for more than half a century, and would then go on to occupy it for 20 years between the wars. The French burdened it with a punitive debt the country shouldered for over a century.
Both the US and France backed the Duvaliers' brutal dictatorships and when democratic government did arrive it was hogtied by terms imposed by the IMF and the World Bank. Among other things, rigged trade agreements transformed Haiti from a self-sufficient rice producer to importing the bulk of its rice from subsidised growers in the US. When Haiti fined American rice merchants $1.4m in 2000 for allegedly evading customs duties, the US responded by freezing $30m in aid. With friends like these, Haiti does not need enemies.
So Haiti's bailout would not be an act of charity, but reimbursement and reparation. This is not a hand out but a hand back. In terms of Haiti's needs, it would be the beginning not the end. The country needs investment in its social and civic infrastructure so that it can shape its own future. It needs the kind of long-term interest from honest brokers that does not arrive for a coup or disaster and then leave when the cameras are gone.
A few months after President Betrand Aristide was ousted in a coup in 2004, Kofi Annan, the UN secretary general, told the UN forces: "The stakes are high. This time let us get it right." A month later I visited the town of St Marc to find the Red Cross centre had only one (broken) ambulance; the chief inspector of police had no walkie-talkies and one car; the town hall had no phones, and few tables or chairs; and its unelected deputy mayor had not been paid for four months. The stakes were high. But they did not even come close to getting it right.
The west owes Haiti. And yet still it keeps trying to extort more from the misery. The living had not yet been pulled from the debris when the vultures started circling. A day after the earthquake The Street, an investment website, published "An opportunity to heal Haiti", claiming: "Here are some companies that could potentially benefit: General Electric, Caterpillar, Deere, Fluor, Jacobs Engineering."
James Dobbins, a special envoy to Haiti under President Clinton and director of the International Security and Defence Policy Centre at the Rand Corporation, saw other possibilities. "This disaster is an opportunity to accelerate oft-delayed reforms," he argued. The reforms included "breaking up or at least reorganising the government-controlled telephone monopoly", and restructuring the ports. In other words, privatising what little is left of the country's state enterprises.
It is difficult to see what more the west could extract from a country where half the population struggle to eat once a day and people pay to have their children sold to families in the neighbouring Dominican Republic. Tragic choices indeed.
When they believe something to be a priority, western governments can forgive bad loans, pump out money and ease restrictions on credit. They have done it to save the wealthy from themselves; now they must do it to save the poor from the wealthy.
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14 Comments so far
Show AllVenezuela has forgiven Haiti's debt estimated at 295 million (U.S. dollars)
Said President Chavez:
"Haiti has no debt with Venezuela -- on the contrary, it is Venezuela that has a historic debt with Haiti,"...
Chavez was referring to the support that Haiti -- which obtained its independence from France in 1804 -- gave Venezuelan independence leader Simon Bolivar in 1815 and 1816 in his quest to free his country from Spanish colonial rule.
http://www.venezuelanalysis.com/news/5102
Thanks.
What a great man President Chavez is! Thank you for this post!
Cygnus: Thanks for posting the link to the article.
Imagine that -- a real humanitarian (Chavez) doing right by the people of Haiti, while Baptists from the U.S. (Idaho) are trying to kidnap Haitian children so that that the children can be adopted by people in the U.S. What a contrast!
If fairness played any role in the world, it would be tweedle dum and tweedle dummer(Geithner and Summers) at the bottom of that rubble in Haiti, not 150,000 innocent civilians.
Yes, fairness would indicate that the world forgive the debt. After all, the debt started when France, then the US after they assumed the debt, charged Haiti $20 million -
FOR SLAVES!!!!!
Imagine, 'civilized' countries charge Haiti for freeing slaves during the revolution that were kidnapped to work sugar and coffee fields for the rich, because those slaves decided, Hmm - slavery not a good thing - 60 years before the US came up with that idea.
Is this the most ridiculous thing ever?
Forgive Haiti the debt and pay them back for the SLAVES they paid for - that means give Haiti $20 Billion in current dollars.
It is indeed. any time a northern bank tries to squeeze money out of poor countries it's bad enough.
when France demanded that the people of Haiti, who had just freed themselves from France, and from slavery, France told them they would have to pay compensation for the property they had stolen- the "property"in this case being their own bodies which they had taken from their "owners". what's worse, the people did in fact have to pay- France slapped a blockade on them, supported by u.s. slavemaster jefferson
Dear Mr. Younge -
Is it only poverty that accounts for Haiti's lack of sufficient health care professionals? Maybe not.
There is evidence that a grave crime against Haiti was committed by the U.S. Marine Corps in 2006. Mr. Younge (and others), please research this further, and if it turns out to be true, get the word out. A crime of this viciousness and magnitude absolutely must be exposed, and the international criminals responsible for it prosecuted.
Here is an excerpt of an article (and an open letter to Colin Powell) written by Paul Farmer in 2006 . . .
US Invasion of Haiti Deepens Health Crisis
Paul Farmer, M.D., Ph.D. is the Medical Director of Clinique Bon Sauveur in Haiti, a Professor at the Harvard Medical School, and author of The Uses of Haiti
Dear Secretary of Defense Powell:
In recent weeks, a long-simmering conflict in Haiti has erupted to trouble an already troubled world. As an American doctor working in Haiti, I am writing to air my concerns
about the conditions under which health care delivery must now take place.
The teaching hospital of the Universite of Tabarre, shared with Haiti's state university and its leading private medical schools, opened on February 6 in the Delmas area of
Port-au-Prince. Less than 24 hours after the ribbon was cut, babies were being delivered in the safety of a modern medical facility - a rarity in Haiti, where one in every 16
women die in childbirth.
But good news rarely lasts long in Haiti: a few days ago Haiti's newest medical school was turned into a military base for US and other troops, but not until after it was
pillaged and stripped of its teaching materials and books. What has become of its faculty, in large part Cuban public health specialists but also counting Haitian, US, and
European teachers? More to the point, what will become of its 247 medical students? What will happen to the dean of that school, Yves Polynice, a Haitian surgeon trained in
Germany and now forced to flee Haiti at a time when trained medical educators, to say nothing of surgeons, are in such short supply? In summary, what will become of the only
medical school in Haiti whose top priority is developing a cadre of physicians in the service of Haiti's poor and vulnerable?
To obtain the report from the Pan-American Health Organization, please see
www.paho.org/English/DD/PED/haitisituation2004.htm. To learn more about and donate to the
Clinique Bon Saveur, see www.pih.org/. To protest the US military takeover of the medical
school, please contact US elected officials.
Sincerely, AJ Oliver
Emeritus Professor POL SCI
Heidelberg University
Tiffin, Ohio
thank you very much for posting this A.J. Paul Farmer. wow. what a guy!
Anyone see this? OIL!!!
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=17287
The Fateful Geological Prize Called Haiti
By F. William Engdahl
Global Research, January 30, 2010
President becomes UN Special Envoy to earthquake-stricken Haiti.
A born-again neo-conservative US business wheeler-dealer preacher claims Haitians are condemned for making a literal ‘pact with the Devil.’
Venezuelan, Nicaraguan, Bolivian, French and Swiss rescue organizations accuse the US military of refusing landing rights to planes bearing necessary medicines and urgently needed potable water to the millions of Haitians stricken, injured and homeless.
Behind the smoke, rubble and unending drama of human tragedy in the hapless Caribbean country, a drama is in full play for control of what geophysicists believe may be one of the world’s richest zones for hydrocarbons-oil and gas outside the Middle East, possibly orders of magnitude greater than that of nearby Venezuela.
Haiti, and the larger island of Hispaniola of which it is a part, has the geological fate that it straddles one of the world’s most active geological zones, where the deepwater plates of three huge structures relentlessly rub against one anotherthe intersection of the North American, South American and Caribbean tectonic plates. Below the ocean and the waters of the Caribbean, these plates consist of an oceanic crust some 3 to 6 miles thick, floating atop an adjacent mantle. Haiti also lies at the edge of the region known as the Bermuda Triangle, a vast area in the Caribbean subject to bizarre and unexplained disturbances.
This vast mass of underwater plates are in constant motion, rubbing against each other along lines analogous to cracks in a broken porcelain vase that has been reglued. The earth’s tectonic plates typically move at a rate 50 to 100 mm annually in relation to one another, and are the origin of earthquakes and of volcanoes. The regions of convergence of such plates are also areas where vast volumes of oil and gas can be pushed upwards from the Earth’s mantle. The geophysics surrounding the convergence of the three plates that run more or less directly beneath Port-au-Prince make the region prone to earthquakes such as the one that struck Haiti with devastating ferocity on January 12.
A relevant Texas geological project
Leaving aside the relevant question of how well in advance the Pentagon and US scientists knew the quake was about to occur, and what Pentagon plans were being laid before January 12, another issue emerges around the events in Haiti that might help explain the bizarre behavior to date of the major ‘rescue’ playersthe United States, France and Canada. Aside from being prone to violent earthquakes, Haiti also happens to lie in a zone that, due to the unusual geographical intersection of its three tectonic plates, might well be straddling one of the world’s largest unexplored zones of oil and gas, as well as of valuable rare strategic minerals.
The vast oil reserves of the Persian Gulf and of the region from the Red Sea into the Gulf of Aden are at a similar convergence zone of large tectonic plates, as are such oil-rich zones as Indonesia and the waters off the coast of California. In short, in terms of the physics of the earth, precisely such intersections of tectonic masses as run directly beneath Haiti have a remarkable tendency to be the sites of vast treasures of minerals, as well as oil and gas, throughout the world.
[... lots more ...]
Haiti ---- WORST SCHOOLS EVER
Less the 50% of kids in Haiti attend school, only 53% can read or write, and 90% of schools are private and run by charities.
All thanks to the rich nobility of Haiti, Canada and the U.S. for since our U.S. Marines invaded Haiti in 1915, whenever the Haiti rich could not prevent democracy the Canadian rich and U.S. rich sent in their troops.
Venezuela ---- BEST SCHOOLS EVER
Rating by UNESCO on January 19, 2010
Venezuela’s EDI ranks it 59th in a list of 128 countries.
Norway 1st
Japan 2nd
United Kingdom 9th
Cuba 14th
Mexico 55th
China 62nd
Niger 128th
United States not rated. To embarrassing, as half of U.S. students do not finish high school.
Venezuela’s EDI increased by 5.1% between 1999 and 2007.
Venezuela had around 93% enrolment in Primary school in 2007, up from 87% in 1999.
A year after Chavez became president, Venezuelans received an average of 9.1 years of education.
Adult literacy rate in Venezuela is 95%.
In terms of registration in University, the report says that Venezuela ranks 6th in the Latin American and Caribbean region.
I am all for supporting the cancellation of Haiti's debt(along with canceling the embargo on Cuba [among other things])
Haiti needs to be rebuilt from the ground up, with buildings that won't collapse in an earthquake. Enough is enough. If America can do business with China-then we can work with Cuba and help rebuild Haiti.
B. Obama is a disgrace...help Haiti and lift the embargo on Cuba.
great piece by mr. Younge. Haiti has been so cruelly preyed upon by so many capitalist vultures for so long, it's long past time the world bank and imf stopped trying to tell us Haiti owes THEM money!
oh by the way did you notice this is coming from an English newspaper? why can't we get journalists like that?
Hey, the greatest contribution the USA ever made to Haiti was to have them make baseballs. The USA can give criminal Israel millions and completely ignore one of it's poorest neighbours. America really sucks!