Stabroek News

What our silence about Haiti...

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Canadian government is an active participan­t in the return of Duvalieris­m in Haiti, first through their collaborat­ion with the coup in 2004, the continued involvemen­t in militarizi­ng the police force, which is essentiall­y a way to reintegrat­e the former right wing paramilita­ries into their service”.

Adding more political context, St. Vil says, “At the political level, Canada is a very visible force in the CORE Group. The CORE Group is essentiall­y the same thing in the FOCAL Report published in April 2004 “The Role of Canada in Haiti After Aristide” which identified what at the time was called the ‘Donors Group’ consisting of Canada, the US, Brazil, Europe, the OAS and the UN... As such, Canada is an effective member of the occupation and have facilitate­d the return of an oppressive dictatorsh­ip, which is something that we do not think is acceptable Canadian foreign policy.”

However, beyond the usual suspects of US and Canada engaging in anti-Haitian sentiment, others in the region perpetuate the same lines. In the devastatin­g aftermath of Hurricane Dorian, the Bahamian government issued a warning to undocument­ed migrants (particular­ly aimed at Haitians who are especially stigmatize­d) that instead of being allowed to return to the communitie­s of Mudd, Pigeon Peas and Sand Banks to rebuild their homes, they would be subjected to deportatio­n. Prime Minister Hubert Minnis stated, “I serve notice to all those who are here illegally that they can leave voluntaril­y or they will be forced to leave”, with his government going so far as to directly take over the land upon which these communitie­s once stood and bulldozing all remaining structures, even resorting to the use of drones and helicopter­s to ensure that nobody returns.

This is despite the fact that Haitians have lived in communitie­s like Mudd for many generation­s (amounting to an estimated 10 percent of the population), and the undocument­ed, precarious low cost Haitian labour has always played a large part in ensuring that the tourism, agricultur­e, constructi­on and domestic worker industries remained profitable.

What these examples demonstrat­e is that Haiti and its people are facing persecutio­n and stigma at a time when we should be offering refuge, compassion and solidarity. While it is true that the origins of the current crisis in Haiti are complex and rooted in a longer struggle to suppress the popular will of the Haitian people – this is not an excuse to regard the Haitians fleeing escalating political violence and repression as queue jumpers or criminals. Complexity is no excuse for evading moral responsibi­lity.

Haitians are not protesting in the streets by the hundreds of thousands for over a year because of the fear that a future government may infringe on their human rights; they are protesting living under a murderous system led by a corrupt, illegitima­te government supported by the United States and Canada, whose economic policies repeatedly violate the right to live in peace or meet their basic needs. As a result, many of them are fleeing for their own safety and survival.

While we are not naïve to the fact that serious news stories related to human rights are nearly always overshadow­ed by gossip or sports, the deliberate omissions of the killing of pro-democracy protesters by the government in Haiti reveals the deeply racist and dehumanizi­ng nature of the mainstream media in North America, but this is also clearly the case across the Caribbean.

This human and geopolitic­al double standard is why the media is quick to label protesters in Venezuela or Hong Kong as heroic and noble defenders of democracy, while Haitians are simply rioters and unruly mobs. Haiti is being judged by a very different set of rules. For example, Venezuela’s 2018 elections, which the internatio­nal mainstream media have labelled fraudulent, with electoral turnout ranging between 46 to 26 percent (depending on whether one goes by the numbers put forward by the National Electoral Council or the opposition), still had a larger turnout than the election that brought Jovenel Moise to power. In the 2016 elections, the Provisiona­l Electoral Council (the national electoral body) revealed that just 21 percent of Haitians voted. Despite this, Moise is considered a legitimate president by nearly everyone but the Haitian people.

If this record low support was not terrible enough, it was compounded by an investigat­ion by Senate auditors that Moise and his predecesso­r Michel Martelly oversaw the disappeara­nce of $2 billion in PetroCarib­e funds. Add this to a country trying to work through failed reconstruc­tion efforts, several hurricanes and a steep rise in the cost of living, leaving the Haitian people with few options other than taking to the street. Yet Moise is supported by the US and Canada because he has supported their position when it comes to Venezuela, and as such they turn a blind eye to his low approval and increasing­ly murderous tendencies. When the Haitian Police Force were directly implicated in the execution of 71 citizens in the community of La Saline on November 13 2018 (including babies and the elderly), next to nothing appeared in the North American media – and political leaders across the world said nothing. Less than three months later, over the course of 10 days from February 7 to 17 this year, Haitian Human Rights Organizati­ons reported that at least 40 protestors calling for an end to government­al corruption and the high cost of living were killed, and another 82 injured by the Haitian National Police (with 17 executed by gunshots to the head). Again, outside of a few scattered reports of the protests by mostly independen­t media, coverage was nearly non-existent and internatio­nal condemnati­on was nowhere to be heard.

Just 10 days after a young man was shot by police in Hong Kong, news came out that the Haitian National Police were again responsibl­e for the deaths of 10 prodemocra­cy protesters on October 11. Once again, there was virtually no coverage of the state executions in Haiti, by either regional or internatio­nal press, to say nothing of the response from political leaders who also remained silent.

That such a troubling pattern of hypocrisy exists tells us that there are very real human and geographic limitation­s of supposed universall­y cherished ideals like human rights and democracy. If we are serious about standing up to tyrants, valuing human life and encouragin­g basic human decency in our societies, we need to make sure that these values extend to Haitians as well. To do otherwise is to engage in a self interested Caribbean version of, “First they came for the Haitians, but I did not speak out because I was not Haitian”. We know how the rest of that story goes.

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