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Driven To Distractions©
The Sound of One Hand Clapping©


A rchive Date
[ 22-02-2004 ]
Category
[ International Relations ]
sub-Categoy
[ Haiti ]

      [http://www.canoe.ca/Columnists/margolis_feb22.html

      Haiti's only hope is foreign intervention
      By ERIC MARGOLIS - Contributing Foreign Editor
      February 22, 2004

      MIAMI - Civil war, chaos, and economic collapse are once again engulfing Haiti. This small Caribbean nation of 8.5 million looks increasingly like one of its legendary undead zombies as it staggers from crisis to crisis.

      Haiti may not seem important, but the mysterious island in the Spanish Main is a tragic symbol of so much that has gone wrong in the Third World.

      During the 18th century, when France ruled Haiti, the island's slave plantations and immensely rich soil produced four annual crops of precious indigo, coffee, spices, and sugar. Haiti generated more revenue than all of Spain's gold- and silver-producing Latin American colonies combined.


      In 1791, Haiti's black slaves revolted, led by a remarkably heroic figure,
      Toussaint l'Overture. He defeated France's finest armies and made Haiti free in 1804. But after his death, Haiti fell into political turmoil.

      The liberated slaves began cutting down Haiti's lush forests to make charcoal. After a century of deforestation, the island's rich topsoil washed away, leaving dead earth and destitute peasants. Two thirds of the island broke away, becoming the Dominican Republic.


      The U.S. Marine Corps took over Haiti in 1915 and administered it wisely and well until 1934 - and, unofficially, until 1957. Many Haitians looked back to the era of U.S. rule as a golden era.


      Then, an obscure country doctor,
      Francois Duvalier, came to power. He turned out to be one of the worst tyrants in the Western Hemisphere's history - a sadistic killer, necromancer and certainly the most frightening man I have ever met.

      Better known as "Papa Doc," Duvalier inflicted a reign of terror on Haiti through his feared thugs, the "
      Ton-ton Macoutes" (meaning bogeymen in Haitian Creole). Duvalier was high priest, or hongan, of the island's cult of African black magic (improperly called voodoo). Haitians believed Papa Doc was the evil deity, Baron Samedi, who could raise the dead, create zombies and kill his many enemies by casting spells.

      Haiti in the early 1960s was a bizarre, dangerous place. I lived at Port-au-Prince's fabled Victorian gingerbread hotel, the Oloffson, dodged Ton-ton thugs, and met many characters from Graham Greene's delightful book on Haiti, The Comedians.


      My old Haitian pal Tijo Noustas (later murdered by the police in Haiti) and I wound up in the middle of two attempted coups against Duvalier. We even brazenly crashed a party for Papa Doc.


      The Oloffson's manager, Mr. Seitz, gave us an invitation he and his wife received to a gala for Duvalier at the national palace. Since Tijo's hair was short, and mine long for the early '60s, I had to play Madame Seitz.


      At the reception, President Duvalier came over to me, surrounded by shotgun-toting Ton-tons in mirrored sunglasses. He stared at me for a long time through his Coke-bottle thick eyeglasses, then whispered in French, "I hope you enjoy your stay in our country ... Madame Seitz!" I was trembling in my shoes. Papa Doc laughed sinisterly and walked off.


      Duvalier was succeeded by his chubby son "Baby Doc," who was exiled from Haiti in 1986. Haiti has since stewed in political and social chaos. During the post-Duvalier years, Haiti's mulatto (light-skinned) minority, which had run the economy and government, was gradually driven from power by black militant groups.


      A leftist Catholic priest,
      Jean-Bertrand Aristide, took power as champion of the underclass. He was totally incompetent as a ruler, and became a petty tyrant. The tiny mulatto-led army kicked him out.

      In 1994, then-president Bill Clinton, in a comic show of liberal machismo, sent 21,000 U.S. troops to invade Haiti and reinstate the inept Aristide - and to avert a mass invasion of Florida by Haitian boat people.


      The U.S. occupation accomplished nothing. Democracy never developed, bribery, corruption and political violence raged on. The
      cocaine trade flourished. Haiti's coffee, sugar and tourism industries collapsed.

      Drugs and theft of foreign aid were virtually Haiti's only revenue. Per capita annual income dropped below $380 and rural Haiti went back to the bush, resembling Central Africa.


      While Washington and Ottawa preached about "restoring democracy" in Haiti, urban gangs battled over turf and drugs. Police degenerated into criminals.

      Haiti's mulattos took their money and ran.


      Starvation
      The peasantry subsisted on the verge of starvation, ravaged by AIDS, syphilis and other diseases not seen for over 100 years.


      In three centuries, Haiti went from the richest nation in the Western Hemisphere to the poorest. Haitians, once renowned as the most artistic, gracious and cultured of all West Indians, have been reduced to being beggars.


      Haiti is too ruined to govern itself. The only solution is foreign intervention. Not a charade, like Clinton's "democracy" invasion, but sustained occupation by forces from the Organization of American States and, hopefully, France, which may lead the rescue mission. The U.S. is too busy trying to colonize Iraq to help Haiti.


      A multinational force should stay until Haiti is reforested, and its basic institutions - courts, police, civil service, schools - made to function. This tutelage will take a decade and cost millions. But there is no other choice for desperate Haiti, except more agony, or a Castro-style Marxist revolution.


      Eric can be reached by e-mail at margolis@foreigncorrespondent.com Letters to the editor should be sent to editor@tor.sunpub.com or visit his home page


      World Fact Book (CIA)]


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