Haiti
- Subject: PLEASE SIGN to support Haitian Elections
Date: Fri, 05 Jan 2001 14:41:56 -0500
From: Haiti Reborn
Forwarded by Carolyn Scarr. I have complete confidence in Pierre
Labossiere, from whom I received this request.
=============================
January 5, 2001
Dear Friends of Haiti,
If you have been watching the news then you are aware of the recent
statements of President Clinton and other U.S. representatives about
the
Haitian elections.The letter below is a sign on letter for both
organizations and individuals to express their concern that U.S.
representatives recognize the legitimacy of the elections of November
26
and the official results that name Jean-Bertrand Aristide as
president-elect.
PLEASE NOTE: The deadline for signatures to be returned to me at
Haiti Rebornhaiti@quixote.org is January 15, 2001, 12 noon.
The letter will be mailed to President Clinton, State Department
representatives in the U.S. and Haiti and Congressional members. It
will
also be sent to major U.S. newspapers in hopes that it might be placed
before the presidential inauguration in Haiti, on February 7, 2001.
For more information on the elections, please contact me via email or
phone (301)699-0042 or visit the website of the ICIO at
www.quixote.org/haiti/elections.
Thank you,
Melinda Miles, Coordinator
Haiti Reborn/Quixote Center
_____________________________________________________________________
To Whom It May Concern:
We, as individuals and organizations who support the Haitian struggle
for independence and participatory democracy, call on the United States
Government to recognize the legitimacy of elections held on November
26,
2000 in Haiti. We call for recognition of the overwhelming mandate
received by president-elect Jean-Bertrand Aristide. We reject the
campaign to discredit this important step towards democracy in Haiti.
The International Coalition of Independent Observers (ICIO), a
coalition
of four U.S.-based non-profit organizations, deployed 24 observers in
four geographical regions of Haiti. These observers, all volunteers
from
the U.S., Canada and Europe, reported voter participation rates from
30-90% differing by location based on independent and on-site
observation. Kozepep, a national Haitian peasant organization, deployed
nearly 6,000 election observers. This popular organization reported
national voter participation averages of 60-65%.
Both of these groups, independent of governmental and international
structures, had findings in line with those of the official Haitian
Electoral Council. This Council is the only autonomous body, according
to the Haitian Constitution, with the authority to release official
election results. They have released figures stating that 60.5% of the
registered voters cast their votes, and that 92% of them voted
Jean-Bertrand Aristide into his second term as president of Haiti.
It is clear that President-Elect Aristide has a mandate from the people
of Haiti. Haitians suffered through years of a bloody coup only to see
Aristide return to them without the power to finish his term as
president. The time has finally come when he can return to office. A
92%
popular vote in an election declared democratic by international and
national observers should be enough for the world. The people of Haiti
should have their choice respected, not attacked, by the United States
government.
Sincerely,
The Assassination of Jean Dominique:
Part of Washington's Offensive?
HAITI PROGRES
"Le journal qui offre une alternative"
* THIS WEEK IN HAITI *
April 5 - 11, 2000
Vol. 18, No. 3
At 6:15 a.m. on Apr. 3,
a gunman entered the courtyard of
Radio Haiti Inter and shot to death pioneering radio
journalist Jean Dominique, 69, as well as the station's
caretaker, Jean-Claude Louissaint. Dominique, who was just
arriving by car to prepare for his hugely popular 7:00 a.m.
daily news roundup, was struck by seven bullets in the head,
neck, and chest. He was loaded with Louissaint into an
ambulance, but both men were pronounced dead on arrival at
the nearby Haitian Community Hospital in Pétionville.
In recent weeks, Dominique had been sharply critical of the
U.S. government's heavy-handed meddling in Haitian elections
and bullying of Haitian President René Préval, to whom
Dominique was a close friend and advisor.
Are agents of Washington behind Jean Dominique's brutal
murder? Is this just the opening salvo of a more violent
stage in the wide-ranging campaign to intimidate the Haitian
government and people into following Washington's
directives?
That is the suspicion voiced by Haitians on radio call-in
shows and street corners since the killing. For them, this
is just the latest act of aggression in an escalating war
which Washington is waging to see that its neoliberal agenda
eventually goes through in Haiti. Vilifying articles in the
mainstream press, warnings from diplomats, hold-backs of
international assistance, and killings by the "forces of
darkness" have all been part of a growing offensive to block
the return to power of former president Jean-Bertrand
Aristide and his party in what has become known as the
"electoral coup d'état."
Let's briefly review the various elements of this offensive.
The media offensive
There are four things which Washington wants you to know
about Haiti:
1) President Préval dissolved parliament in
Jan. 1999;
2) a new Parliament must be elected and seated by
Jun. 12, according to the Constitution;
3) Préval is former
president Jean-Bertrand Aristide's puppet; and
4) Préval is
a dictator or close to becoming one.
Unfortunately, every one of these assertions is untrue.
1) The term of most parliamentians expired in Jan. 1999 and
Préval refused to violate the constitutional ban on
extending mandates;
2) Jun. 12 is merely the date a sitting
Parliament is supposed to return from vacation; there is no
sitting Parliament;
3) Préval remains in touch with
Aristide, but Aristide and his party have often differed
with and criticized Préval's policies and decisions;
4)
Préval's administration bears no comparison to the regimes
of his predecessors like Duvalier, Namphy, Avril, or Cédras.
Nonetheless, U.S. and Canadian mainstream newspapers, as
Washington's handmaidens, have been blaring the four lies
far and wide in recent weeks. This is their way of preparing
the North American public for aggressive U.S. actions.
Take for example, the Mar. 20 Miami Herald editorial
"Haiti's Elections in Peril: President Préval to Blame for
Latest Holdup." It says that "Mr. Préval is validating
suspicions that he's delaying the parliamentary elections to
help his party, Fanmi Lavalas." First, Préval is not a
member of Fanmi Lavalas, Aristide's party. Second, he has
often repeated that he just wants elections which are fair
and inclusive. With probably half the estimated 4.5
million-member electorate without electoral cards (nobody
knows for sure how many have been issued), it is obvious
that elections cannot be held. But the editorial never once
refers to the lack of electoral cards. Instead, it calls
Préval "contemptuous of democracy" and a "despot."
One week later on Mar. 27, the Herald published the article
"U.S. presses Haiti over elections," by Don Bohning. The
author is not embarrased to write that both the Democratic
Clinton administration and the Republican Congress have
their "patience growing shorter... over continued delays by
Haitian officials in holding critical legislative and local
elections." Why are they impatient? Are Haitian elections
being held in the U.S.?
The article contains all the usual untruths (Préval
"effectively dissolved Parliament" and "June 12 [is] when
Parliament is constitutionally mandated to begin its second
session of the year"). Like the Herald editorial, the
article never mentions the lack of electoral cards, nor the
fact that the shortage can be traced back to the U.S. State
Department (which funded the cards), the U.S. State
Department-spawned International Foundation for Electoral
Systems or IFES (which chose the contractor), and the
Canadian firm, Code, Inc (which produced the card
materials).
Instead, the main purpose of Bohning's article is to deliver
the threats that the U.S. will undertake "economic and
diplomatic isolation and the denial of U.S. visas to those
seen as obstructing the democratic process." Ironically, the
real obstructionists are all in Washington.
The diplomatic offensive
Indeed, a constant stream of diplomats bearing threats have
passed through Port-au-Prince in recent weeks. "Failure to
constitute a legitimate parliament risks isolating Haiti
from the community of democracies and jeapardizes future
cooperation and assistance," said Arturo Valenzuela, the
White House's National Security Council official for Latin
America who visited Préval with Donald Steinberg, the State
Department's special Haiti coordinator last week.
Two weeks before it was a bipartisan letter from Benjamin
Gilman (R-NY), chariman of the House International Relations
Committee, along with John Conyers (D-MI) and Charles Rangel
(D-NY), who threatened Préval in no uncertain terms. "The
Clinton administration informs us that it will use all
diplomatic means to respond to those who seek to disrupt or
corrupt the electoral process," the letter said. "The
administration has our full support to so act to protect
vital American interests." So at least they are honest. They
are protecting American, not Haitian, interests.
Also earlier last month, former National Security Advisor
Anthony Lake visited Haiti where he met separately with
Préval and Aristide to warn them of dire consequences if
elections were not held before June.
Alarm in Washington grew last Friday, Mar. 31, when Préval
and the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) met and agreed
to postpone elections unrealistically set for Apr. 9 and to
take about eight weeks to review and correct the
deficiencies in the electoral machinery: recuperate all
electoral registers, compile a definitive list of
registration stations and authorized personnel, determine
the shortfall in electoral card materials, check for
duplicate registrations, verify electoral ballots with
candidates, and so on. Despite this amiable accord between
the only two instances concerned, State Department spokesman
James Rubin used the death of Jean Dominique to reiterate
U.S. pressure on Apr. 3. "From our standpoint, we believe
that credible elections can be held in April and May, in
time to convene the new parliament by the second Monday of
June, consistent with Haitian constitutional law,'' Rubin
said. His "standpoint" is not relevant in a Haitian
election.
Meanwhile, Albright buttonholed Foreign Minister Fritz
Longchamp at the CARICOM meeting held in New Orleans,
Louisiana on Mar. 29 to communicate U.S. displeasure over
election delays.
The international assistance offensive
Then there are the dangled carrots. Whenever they want the
Haitian government to do something, U.S. and "international
community" officials inevitably announce that there are
millions in international aid in jeopardy.
So last week , it was the turn of Gérard Johnson of the
Interamerican Development Bank (IDB) to announce that he
would not release $200 million earmarked for over sixty
projects until after elections were held.
The U.S. has often repeated that it has hundreds of millions
more that it is ready to "unblock" as soon as a Parliament
sits and passes legislation neoliberalizing Haiti's state
and economy.
The "observer" offensive
Since early March, the U.N. began deploying about 80
election observers throughout Haiti (see Haïti Progrès, Vol.
17, No. 51, Mar. 8, 2000). But more central to their plan is
the "Haitian" National Council of Electoral Observation
(CNO) headed by Léopold Berlanger, who is director of the
USAID-funded Radio Vision 2000, a frequent recipient of
National Endowment for Democracy grants, and a long-time
agent of Washington (see Haïti Progrès, Vol. 17, No. 43,
Jan. 12, 2000). Last week, Jean Dominique revealed over the
airwaves of Radio Haiti Inter that Provisional Electoral
Council (CEP) president Léon Manus signed an accord with
Berlanger on Feb. 25, without the knowledge of any other CEP
members. The deal would allow Berlanger's CNO to pick not
only the CEP's accredited election observers but also the
members of the registration stations, voting stations, and
the supervisors.
Jean Dominique's last editorial was precisely to denounce
Berlanger and the secret accord which made the entirely
self- appointed CNO a final arbiter of any upcoming
elections.
The "opposition" offensive
For months we have reviewed how the principal currents of
the opposition - the Espace de Concertation, the Patriotic
Movement to Save the Nation (MPSN), the Organization of
People in Struggle (OPL), the Democratic Nationalist
Patriotic Assembly (RDNP), and Mochrena - have waged their
war against Aristide's party, the Fanmi Lavalas, and the
people. This week however they have upped the ante.
Evans Paul of the Espace has virtually called for civil war,
seizing on chaotic street demonstrations, which closed
downtown Port-au-Prince from Mar. 27-29. The
anti-electoral-coup-d'état demonstrations, which were surely
infiltrated by provocateurs, were blamed for breaking car
and shop windows and the shooting of a policeman. "The
Espace is now calling for the establishment of committees
for legitimate defense," Paul said. "The Espace asks people
to identify the rioters, point out the houses where they
meet, and write down their license plates. We ask for
drivers to show solidarity. When rioters attack a driver,
don't run away. Instead, run down the rioters with your
car."
Meanwhile, Paul's putschist-collaborator colleague, Serge
Gilles, called for all Espace partisans in the government of
Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis to resign, a step
toward the "Zero Option" (i.e. removal of Préval and new
presidential elections without Aristide) proposed by the
MPSN and the OPL over these past weeks. "The Espace asks the
people it has placed in the government and which today
occupy posts of minister or secretary of state to leave the
Préval/Alexis government," Gilles said. "This appeal is also
addressed to all other government members who consider
themselves democrats and who refuse to be seen associating
with the downfall of the Lavalas power."
The offensive of the "Forces of Darkness"
Historically, alongside all the above-mentioned visible
offensives, there has always been the "invisible" pressure
exerted by "forces of darkness," that is former Tonton
Macoutes, soldiers, death-squads, and assorted putschist
henchmen. For example, while the U.S. formally supported the
return of Aristide during the coup, the CIA set up and
supported Toto Constant's FRAPH as a network to pressure,
spy on, and kill the population. Many Haitians call this
CIA-Pentagon-Macoute nexus the "laboratory."
"The assassination of Jean Dominique, it is clear, is a
political assassination," said Ben Dupuy, secretary general
of the National Popular Party (PPN) in an Apr. 3 press
conference. "It was carried out by the 'forces of darkness'
and it was a warning."
Dominique's murder is very similar to that of Lavalas
businessman and activist Antoine Izméry on Sep. 11, 1993.
They were both outspoken and progressive elements from
Haiti's bourgeoisie. In both cases, their deaths sent a
chill through the entire population.
Whether it was "rogue" elements of Washington's shadowy
reserve army of former thugs or whether it was an ordered
hit, the killing was a "professional job." It is almost
certain that, in some way, the "laboratory" had a hand in
Jean Dominique's murder.
The "forces of darkness" are also used to infiltrate genuine
demonstrations such as those last week, which were demanding
the resignation of the CEP, electoral cards for all, and a
single election in November. "Often in demonstrations, I
have seen elements who start violent acts like breaking
windows and damaging property randomly," said Leon, a
long-time Lavalas organizer. "When you question what they
are doing, they won't listen to you. They are acting under
somebody else's orders."
Change of Strategy?
Finally, the U.S. and its proxies may be now changing
strategy, as outlined by Dupuy at the PPN's Apr. 3 press
conference. He noted that the Haitian people have up until
now been able to thwart the original version of the
"electoral coup d'état," which was to hold an election for
parliament with a limited electorate.
Now they may have shifted to a new and revised plan. Since
electoral technicians have estimated they will need about
two months to straighten out the current electoral mess, a
new election date could be no earlier than June. If the CEP
and government cling to having two elections, that leaves
only five months for the CEP to prepare for the November
presidential elections. Already it has taken them 15 months
to prepare the legislative and municipal elections.
"If after 15 months we still haven't had legislative
elections, we wonder how long we will have to wait for
presidential elections which are supposed to be in Nov.
2000," Dupuy said. "That is where it seems that USAID and
IFES now want to lead the country. To arrive at a point
where there is not enough time to have a presidential
election and then the Presidential mandate of President
Préval will end [on Feb. 7, 2001], and thus they will have
managed to have us arrive at a version of the 'zero option.'
Then we will see a real catastrophe. The head of the Supreme
Court, a zombie, will take control of the country, and I
don't need to tell you what kind of mess we will have. The
country will be upside down. And since the proponents of the
'zero option' know that they can't do much without the
'international community,' many of them will call for
another occupation of the country and in fact, several have
already made declarations in this sense."
In short, Washington and its local agents are upping the
pressure on the Haitian government and the Haitian people in
every way possible. This week, even the normally submissive
Prime Minister Alexis had to speak out. "I am sure that the
'international community' knows better than us what is
really going on here," he said. "It is very strange that
certain members of the 'international community' were at one
point pressuring us in the executive to get more involved
with the CEP and today these same people are saying that we
don't want elections. That is strange." Alexis went on to
conclude that "the 'internaitonal community'... is orienting
things in a sense that is not in the general interests of
the country."
This is the essence of the problem in Haiti today. This was
the very problem Jean Dominique was denouncing in his last
broadcasts. And this may well be the reason why he was
killed.
All articles copyrighted Haiti Progres, Inc. REPRINTS
ENCOURAGED. Please credit Haiti Progres.
"This Week in Haiti" is the English section of HAITI PROGRES
newsweekly. For information on other news in French and
Creole, please contact the paper at (tel) 718-434-8100,
(fax) 718-434-5551 or E-mail us.
Also visit our Website.
This article forwarded by: Black Radical Congress
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