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By William Fisher
Inter Press Service
Saturday, Feb 13, 2010
On the one-month
anniversary of the devastating earthquake of Jan. 12, Haitians continue
to perish from a variety of causes, including death by red tape: they
fall between the cracks of a still poorly-coordinated aid effort.
The physicians working in Haiti call these "the stupid deaths" – by which they mean avoidable.
Yet amidst the chaos and suffering that inevitably accompanies natural
disasters, there are people who are beginning to plan for Haiti's
future. And, for many, their optimism is rooted in the miserable
performance of international assistance in the past. Against that
background, they say, they have nowhere to go but up.
It is an unusual combination of optimism and realism that is
driving development experts to try to shed the blemished history of
international aid to Haiti, rid the issue of a generation of
devastating politicisation, and think way outside the conventional
development paradigm.
The fate of one particularly important project is emblematic of factors
that have consistently and severely reduced the effectiveness – even
the existence – of viable development projects.
Eric Michael Johnson of the Department of History at the
University of British Columbia in Canada told IPS, "The U.S. role
towards Haiti can best be understood as a kind of abusive paternalism,
at times condescending and at others domineering depending on how fully
Haitian governments obey the patriarch's dictates."
To illustrate his point, Johnson told IPS what happened after
the first coup d'etat and reinstatement of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide in late 1994 to a term that ended in 1996. This was followed
by five years of René Préval (who is president today).
In 2000, Aristide once again won overwhelmingly in the Haitian
elections. Aristide's second election did not please the new U.S.
president, George W. Bush.
Johnson then recounts how the Bush administration conspired to cut off
funds already appropriated for a vital infrastructure and public health
project.
An award of 146 million dollars from the Inter-American Development
Bank (IDB) had already been approved, but at U.S. insistence was not
being disbursed. Some 54 million dollars of this loan was intended for
desperately needed water and sanitation projects.
"This decision likely resulted in the needless deaths of an untold number of poor Haitians," Johnson said.
In 2006, the Robert F. Kennedy Center filed a Freedom of
Information Act Request to force the U.S. to release documents related
to this decision.
According to the documents, "there was clear evidence that the
United States blocked the loans because they objected to the election
of Aristide," Johnson said.
The IDB approved these loans between 1996 and 1998, and Haiti
paid around 10 million dollars in interest even before the loans were
dispersed. By 2001, there was no reason for the IDB to continue
blocking these loans. But block them they did.
The loans were not disbursed and, on Nov. 8, 2001, the
Congressional Black Caucus wrote to President Bush stating that "it is
wrong to impose an inflexible policy which conditions U.S. relations
and aid, be it loans or grants, entirely on a country's political
process" and insisting that "it is imperative that the U.S. remove its
blockade of essentially all aid to Haiti, particularly the loans
currently held up at the Inter-American Development Bank."
The U.S. - the largest contributor to the IDB - continued to put
roadblocks in the way of disbursement of these loans, even while Haiti
was paying interest on the loans it hadn't received. In 2002, Haiti
stopped payment.
A study published in the journal Health and Human Rights stated:
"Public statements by U.S. government officials soon explicitly linked
non-disbursement with political concerns."
In early 2002, the journal concluded that the IDB did not
intend to disburse the loans, and the Haitian government suspended
interest payments. Haiti's loan arrears rendered the loan ineligible
for disbursement - meaning, Johnson said, "the U.S. government's plan
to slow disbursement succeeded in blocking the loans indefinitely."
The bottom line, Johnson says, is that these loans were denied
to Haiti "because the Bush administration objected to Haiti's internal
politics, a decision that violated the IDB's charter."
He adds, "The development loans were being used as a weapon to
oppose the government of Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Even after the loans
were finally approved in 2003 - primarily because of Congressional
pressure - the water projects were only moving into their
implementation stage by mid-2007."
The lack of clean water has seriously impacted health, he
said, noting that at least 84.4 percent of households had experienced
at least one case of infectious illness.
This is a situation "that could have been different," he said.
He believes the U.S. "shares significant responsibility for this and
owes the people of Haiti for the decisions of past administrations."
Writing in The Huffington Post, Johnson 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 program following the same mode," he
said.
But he is quick to point out that "the Haitian people are not
children and they can effectively manage their own affairs if given the
chance to do so."
Johnson's point of view is echoed by USAID itself, which says,
"It will be important that Haitians themselves assume responsibility
for and full ownership of their future. Government, civil society and
the business sector should lead the setting of the national development
agenda."
An encouraging variety of Haitian and international
development professionals is now working to craft ideas for rebuilding
projects that are necessary, practical and fundable.
Most development professionals say that, unlike projects in
the past, these initiatives should not be U.S. creations alone,
superimposed on Haitian needs, or programmes that favour the elites
only. Participants are hopeful they will bear the fruit of sustained
cooperation between ordinary Haitians and the international community.
*The next installment of this three-part series describes some
of the specific development initiatives undertaken by the U.S. and
international institutions and donors.
Inter Press Service
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