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Why Desperate Haitians Want to Kick Out UN Troops
The crisis in Haiti follows decades of economic exploitation and gifts with chains attached – no wonder its citizens are angry
You may have heard about the civil unrest in Haiti over recent days, on the heels of a hurricane that thwarted efforts to contain a cholera epidemic that is now a national emergency. All this may fit the image often painted of this much-maligned country: crushing poverty, endemic corruption, the threat of violence so constant that international peacekeepers are required to stop Haitians tearing each other apart.
Well, the poverty and the corruption may be true. But on Thursday, demonstrations calling for the departure of the UN troops, known as Minustah, will be held throughout Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince, by students, grassroots organisations, opposition groups excluded from the elections, and – most importantly – citizens united by a common cause: that Haiti's escalating nightmares must end now.
As deaths from the cholera outbreak soar past 1,000, fear is taking hold in neighbourhoods that have been so deprived of any civic investment that sanitation infrastructure often amounts to little more than open sewers filled with rubbish and human excrement.
Despite the billions of dollars in international aid that flowed into this country before the earthquake, these neighbourhoods can be found in any town or city across Haiti. Ten months and more billions later, things are much worse, and after suffering in relative silence, with elections just a fortnight away, many here, it seems, have now had enough.
Chants such as "We refuse to vote while living under tarps", have been replaced with "UN peacekeepers and cholera are brothers". The difference now is that in some parts of the country the songs are accompanied by burned-out cars, flaming tyres, broken glass and the coffins of cholera victims blocking movement, forcing aid workers to suspend operations and leaving people to die in the street.
Many accuse the Nepalese UN troops of dumping cholera-infected fecal matter into the Artibonite river, and are now demanding the departure of all UN forces. Officials claim the protests are a politically motivated attempt to disrupt an election timetable they continue to cling to in the face of disaster. If the vote is ultimately postponed, as it surely should be, the international media will no doubt dismiss Haitians as unfit for democracy, still in the grips of Duvalierest dictatorship or too deeply entrenched in anarchy to organise and manifest their popular will.
It's a familiar pattern – in the 1980s, when Aids first came to the world's attention, Haitians were stigmatised as one of the four Hs – homosexuals, hemophiliacs, heroin users and Haitian – having brought the disease to the US. But, like cholera, Aids was not indigenous to Haiti and is only now ravaging the country because somebody else brought it in. And, while Haitians face stigmatisation from their neighbours once again, the world must take its share of the blame.
The real question is: why? Why is there crippling poverty? Why no water, sanitation or medical infrastructure?
A decade ago, money was in place to address the country's failing water system. In 2000, a $54m (£34m) loan from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) should have given the Haitian government means to rehabilitate its urban and rural water systems, but US foreign policy objectives of destabilising the democratically elected Aristide government got in the way. Sources have suggested the US government asked the IDB to block the loan, as well as others totalling $146m for investment in health, education and sanitation infrastructure, while electoral disputes were worked out, yet the aid freeze continued after they were resolved. A UK study from 2002 still rated Haiti's water as the worst in the world.
An independent investigation should be carried out on the Minustah latrines, but ultimately it could have been anyone – conditions were ripe for cholera because international policy towards Haiti hasn't changed in decades. Economic exploitation, political intervention, NGO gifts with chains attached, media misrepresentation, the same mistakes have been made over and over again. Sadly, even an earthquake doesn't seem to have changed that. It's little wonder Haitians are manifesting their anger in increasingly heated protests.
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13 Comments so far
Show AllUN is not the virtuous organization as it likes to portray itself in slick PSAs. Graham Hanock wrote a book called 'Lords of Poverty' on this fantastically corrupt boondoggle more than 20 years ago and it's main points are still valid:
http://www.amazon.com/Lords-Poverty-Prestige-Corruption-International/dp/0871134691
Peter Hallward's work is indispensible for understanding what's been going on in Haiti:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Nykhj4oeH8
No. Please remove the U.S. from the U.N.
The United States has ruined Haiti long before the earthquake. Starting in the early 1900's the US has manipulated the country and put all the Doc's both Papa and baby in place. The US loves dictators!
It escorted the last elected president Arestide out of the country in a coup. The US has single handedly impoverished Haiti and killed off its agriculture and they have Bill Clinton to tahnk for that and now he does a mea culpa and pretends to be aiding the country after he destroyed it.
Isn't it intersecting...by design... how the US has a way of making a bad situation worse.
The UN and the NGOs have done little to make it a better place for Haitians.
Having visited Haiti many times it used to be a very safe place to visit as a tourist....not anymore!
Your story in incomplete without inclusion of the British and the French.
Foreign troops almost always do more bad than good. Haitians need to pack up the UN misfits and send them home to abuse their own families.
"Are you going to do your homework, or will you join the military when you grow up?"
--My dad
The Haitians are just realizing that the last vestiges of independence have been eliminated by western donors.
65% of the population were small farmers - they cannot compete with "free" food aid.
Reconstruction has ground to a halt along with necessary jobs to support the Haitian economy.
Why bother with education if there is no future for the educated?
Next - put a blockade around Haiti and a wall with the DR to keep the masses in.
There was no contingency planning - no understanding of what needed to be done to keep the emergency under control.
Haiti was almost forgotten as we manouvre to take over Pakistan.
Haitians have been marginalized - they must not let us forget it. Bring on the barricades.
S'easy duckie:
Off the Abos, put the "survivors"
on a Rez (sound familiar?), and...
Take the OIL.
Nepalese troops& the UN are the foil.
Big Oil.... The Criminals of the past, and the new Century.
BP's Gulf Blow-Out, Tar Sands, Fracking, Oil Shale, poisoned
ground water,Biafra(remember?.
Multi-Nationals don't let ethics,ecology, opposing
science or human rights get in the way of your
dividend check.
So... What's your problem?
You: Having your cake&eating it too.
The suffering of the Haitian people is unspeakable. As a citizen of the US, I feel deep shame.
If I were writing a novel about resistance to foreign occupation, I'd have my freedom fighters capture one or two of the invaders here and there, cut off their "peni", and a piece of their ears and feed them to dogs in their presence, then release them.
They would be "earmarked" so that anyone who sees them would know that their "peni" was fed to the dogs. I would have the people post a few videos of the operation on youtube, to discourage more young people from joining the invading army.
Whenever possible, after removing the "peni", they would cut a brand new vagina for the captured invaders.
UN is the most corrupt organization a total failure and a sham. Castro could have sent the Cuban docs but Obama will not allow the poor people of Haiti any relief.
Not only UN troops - all Western nations as well. Bring in Latin American countries - at least there would not be racial discrimination or false pretenses.
Haiti is a tragic case, but blaming the UN for everything sounds like Sarah palin watching the Ruskies from her front Porch.
Cholera Crisis Deepens in Haiti
In Haiti, the deathtoll from the cholera epidemic has now reached 917. More than 14,000 others are infected. The country's political leaders have turned to the religious leaders for help, as the country's population flocks to church during the crisis. http://www.newslook.com/videos/266216-cholera-crisis-deepens-in-haiti?autoplay=true