Time to Build a Just Society, Rights Groups Urge
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By William Fisher
Inter Press Service
Tuesday, Feb 2, 2010
In the wake of last month's catastrophic
earthquake in Haiti, prominent advocacy groups are calling on the U.S.
and the international community to reverse decades of racial and
political discrimination and build relief and reconstruction efforts on
human rights principles, transparency, and respect for the dignity of
all Haitians.
The director of one of the groups, Monika
Kalra Varma of the RFK Center for Justice & Human Rights, told IPS,
"Over the years, help for Haiti has been shaped by ideological politics
and broken promises."
"Generally, the international community has made pledges to
Haiti and not fulfilled them. Donor states have human rights
obligations in Haiti as well - they must do no harm," she said.
"When states pledge funds to Haiti which the Haitian people
and government rely on in figuring out how to meet the needs of its
people, particularly when you're talking about monetary pledges to
strengthen water, education, and health systems, and that money doesn't
come in, the donors have violated their human rights obligations," she
said.
Some development experts who have worked in Haiti for years
spoke with IPS on condition of anonymity because they have friends and
family members involved in the relief effort.
"There have been hundreds of millions of dollars in
development assistance that has gone to benefit Haiti's elites -
government, business and the military - at the expense of the country's
common people," one source said. "These elites have abused
international aid, and have done nothing to create an education system,
a public health system or any meaningful infrastructure."
Racial politics has always played a significant role in Haiti's
history. Haitian elites "tend to have lighter skin colour than their
darker-skin brothers and sisters who make up the vast majority of
Haitians," the source said.
At one point in its storied history, Haiti was divided into
separate sections for lighter and darker-skin citizens. In 1806, Haiti
consisted of a black-controlled north and a mulatto-ruled south.
That was a mere five years after a former black slave,
Toussaint Louverture, became a guerrilla leader and overthrew French
rule, abolished slavery and proclaimed himself governor-general of an
autonomous government. For decades afterward, Haiti was crippled by
reparations it was forced to pay to former slave owners.
Another Haiti expert, Prof. Robert Maguire of Trinity College
in Washington, D.C., told IPS that the history of aid to Haiti has been
a complex combination of corruption among the government and business
elites of the country and the selfish interests of private sector
international investors who "wanted to maintain the status quo" and who
viewed Haiti only as "a low-wage and stable dictatorship" able to
manufacture basic garments and other textile products.
He is proposing a 700,000-strong national civic service corps
made up of Haitian youth, who he calls the "wellspring of creativity,
talent and potential."
"A civic service corps would get the young and able out of the
tent cities in and around Port-au-Prince and into work. They could
start with the once-iconic centre of the capital, but also could begin
planting trees, working the fields and providing services in Haiti's
countryside," said Maguire, who is an advisor at the U.S. Institute of
Peace.
Journalist Eric Michael Johnson, writing in The Huffington
Post, notes that "Haiti has a historically unhealthy dependence on
foreign commerce and finance, from the colonial days of the sugar trade
to the current assistance provided by developed countries."
"Now the same politicians and financial elites that helped create this
mess are proposing an even larger programme following the same mode,"
he says.
Johnson writes that "since 2004, Haitian exports to the United
States increased by 32 percent while, during the same period, the
Haitian minimum wage declined by 36 percent."
The Kennedy Centre's Kalra Varma noted that multilateral aid
has frequently been marked by stop-start-stop politics, with aid
stopping when Haiti elects a leader not favoured by donors.
She cites the refusal of the Inter-American Development Bank
(IDB) to release funds earmarked for water projects, which would have
benefited the poor.
"The IDB is controlled by its largest donor - the U.S. - and the U.S. did not like Haiti's government of the day," she said.
She added, "All too often, aid has been slow to arrive,
uncoordinated, and planned with no input from the people most affected
- that legacy must and can end today. We have an opportunity to break
with the past and ensure that assistance is given in a way that
strengthens Haitians' fundamental rights to food, water, and health.
The Haitian people deserve no less."
The other groups include the Centre for Constitutional Rights
(CCR), the Centre for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ), the
Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), Partners In
Health/Zanmi Lasante, and TransAfrica Forum.
Loune Viaud, director of Strategic Planning and Operations at Zanmi
Lasante, a health organisation, cautioned, "The only way to avoid
escalation of this crisis is for international aid to take a long-term
view and strive to rebuild a stronger Haiti - one that includes a
government that can ensure the basic human rights of all Haitians and a
nation that is empowered to demand those rights."
The groups cited past relief efforts in Haiti that were uncoordinated,
unpredictable, and lacked community participation, often leading to
increased suffering. They called on the international community to
seize on this opportunity to advance human rights and sustainability in
the ravaged country.
"The magnitude of the catastrophe is not entirely a result of
natural disaster but rather, a history of deliberate impoverishment and
disempowerment of the Haitian people through a series of misguided
polices," said Brian Concannon Jr., director of IJDH. "Lack of donor
accountability and continued aid volatility will only guarantee even
greater suffering."
In an editorial prepared for distribution, Kalra Varma and
Kerry Kennedy wrote, "As international aid begins to pour into Haiti,
we have a brief moment to break with past mistakes and bring real
change to Haiti."
U.S and international aid efforts "could be characterised, at
best, as unsustainable and, at worst, deliberately harmful," they
wrote. Kerry Kennedy is the daughter of Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
The editorial continues, "In 2000, the U.S. and the
Inter-American Development Bank approved millions of dollars of what
would have been lifesaving loans for improvements to water, health,
education, and road infrastructure, only to later withhold these funds
because they opposed then President [Bertrand] Aristide."
"While the loans were eventually released, the communities
where the very first water projects were to be financed still lack
access, ten years later, to reliably clean drinking water, contributing
to countless deaths due to waterborne illness."
It adds, "In 2004, the international community pledged a
billion dollars to support Haiti. The RFK Centre, along with the health
organisation Zanmi Lasante and the NYU Centre for Human Rights and
Global Justice, tried to track the fulfillment of those pledges, but
never received clear and consistent answers from donor states on the
status of the aid."
"With no transparency or coordinating body to turn to, the
Haitian people had no hope of knowing if that money ever got to Haiti,
much less where it was directed and how it could be used to improve
their communities. Haitian government sources later confirmed that most
of the pledges had never been fulfilled."
Inter Press Service
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