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Hillary Clinton stands beside Haitian president René Préval, speaking to reporters at the airport. |
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EVERYTHING YOU need to know about the U.S. aid effort to assist
Haiti in the wake of the catastrophic earthquake can be summed up by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's touchdown in Port-au-Prince on
Saturday, January 16: they shut down the airport for three hours surrounding her arrival for "security" reasons, which meant that no aid flights could come in during those critical hours.
If there was one day when the Haitian people needed aid to flow all
day long, that was the day, because the people trapped under the rubble
on Tuesday evening couldn't survive much beyond Saturday without water.
Defenders of Clinton will say that her disimpassioned, monotone,
photo-op speech was needed to draw attention to the plight of the
Haitians. But no one north of hell can defend her next move: according
to airport personnel that I spoke to during my recent evacuation from
Haiti, she paralyzed the airport later that same day to have a new
outfit flown in from the Dominican Republic.
I am having a hard time readjusting to life back home after having
survived the earthquake and witnessed so much death, so even typing
those words is making my heart pound uncontrollably. I guess for
America's rulers, a new pantsuit is more valuable than the lives of
poor, Black Haitians.
Unfortunately, Clinton's model of diverting and delaying critical
aid to the Haitian people, while emphasizing security, has become
standard operating procedure.
Alain Joyandet, the French minister responsible for humanitarian
relief in Haiti, charged the U.S. with treating this as a military
operation rather than an aid mission. Mr. Joyandet told the Daily Telegraph
that he had been involved in an argument with a U.S. commander in the
airport's control tower over the flight plan for a French evacuation
flight, saying, "This is about helping Haiti, not about occupying
Haiti."
But with the U.S. occupying Iraq and Afghanistan, and funding the
Israeli occupation of Palestine, it seems our government knows how to
do little else when it comes to international affairs.
The day I left via Toussaint L'Ouverture International Airport, I
saw lots of crates of food, water and medical supplies piled on the
tarmac. But I didn't see that aid being transported out of the airport
to actually get to Haitians.
Undoubtedly, there has been some aid distributed, but because there
was no serious effort to disperse that aid in the first four days after
the quake, tens of thousands of people trapped under rubble have died
needlessly because they couldn't get a sip of water.
The Geneva-based organization Doctors Without Borders has been
turned away from the airport numerous times to allow U.S. troops to
land. A ring of U.S. warships surrounds Haiti to make sure that
Haitians don't escape the disaster and try to get to the United States.
The U.S. has taken control of Haiti's main airport and seaport, and
is in the process of deploying 18,000 U.S. troops to bolster the 9,000
UN troops already occupying the island nation--and as an eyewitness, I
can tell you those troops are guarding their own compounds rather than
distributing aid.
The Obama administration will try to dress up their ambition to
occupy and pillage Haiti in a humanitarian evening gown. But clothing
is in short supply in Haiti, and we can't afford to waste it.
As a man from Leogane, Haiti, told Democracy Now!, "Myself,
if you look at me, I don't have shoes, and I don't have food. Even my
shoes, if you look at them, you see. I need clothes. We need
everything. Even medicines, we need."
Socialist Worker