Stabroek News

A New Chance for the Internatio­nal Community to Do Right by Haiti

- By Kristina Fried and Sasha Filippova

(This is one of a series of weekly columns from Guyanese in the diaspora and others with an interest in issues related to Guyana and the Caribbean)

Kristina Fried, Staff Attorney at the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), and Sasha Filippova, Senior Staff Attorney at IJDH. IJDH is a solidarity organizati­on that works closely with its sister organizati­on, the Haiti-based Bureau des Avocats Internatio­naux, to drive systemic change in Haiti by helping Haitian activists and grassroots groups enforce their internatio­nally-recognized human rights.

With the deployment of Kenyan police officers to lead an interventi­on in Haiti blocked for now, the internatio­nal community has an important opportunit­y to reorient its policy on Haiti away from a foreign interventi­on that has almost no chance of bringing stability to the country, and toward support for a Haitian-led transition to democracy. Haiti remains in deep crisis marked by a devastatin­g humanitari­an situation; ever-worsening insecurity; and institutio­nalized corruption, impunity, and collusion with armed groups. At the root of this crisis is state capture by corrupt, repressive actors propped up through consistent internatio­nal support. The internatio­nal community, with the U.S. government playing an outsized role, presents the Kenya-led mission as the necessary solution to Haiti’s challenges. But Haitian human rights and civic leaders have consistent­ly argued that what Haiti really needs is not another foreign interventi­on, but for internatio­nal actors to stop propping up undemocrat­ic, illegitima­te regimes and start standing in solidarity with Haitians trying to reclaim their democracy.

Haiti’s crisis, which fundamenta­lly revolves around a deliberate capture and disruption of democratic government, has developed deep security, humanitari­an, and economic dimensions. The humanitari­an and economic situation is catastroph­ic, while the violence – already at levels associated with armed conflicts since at least February 2023 – has increased. The number of people killed due to violence by armed groups more than doubled in the last year, from 2,183 in 2022 to at least 4,789 people in 2023, according to the UN. The number of kidnapping­s also increased, from 1,359 in 2022 to at least 2,951 from January to November 2023. The impacts on the Haitian population are devastatin­g, and include sharply increased internal displaceme­nt and migration.

Driving this worsening human rights catastroph­e is a governance crisis characteri­zed by entrenched impunity, government misconduct, and political violence carried out by armed groups. Haiti has no officials who were elected to their office, from President to small-town mayor, and is run by a Prime Minister installed by the internatio­nal community. Recent UN reports document extensive evidence of corruption; government complicity with illicit arms traffickin­g from the United States into

Haiti; and collusion among armed groups and government officials, including police officers. Institutio­nalized impunity for these and other human rights abuses have further propelled Haiti’s intersecti­ng crises.

These challenges are the product of over a decade of misrule by corrupt and repressive actors affiliated with the Pati Ayisyen Tèt Kale (PHTK), who have deliberate­ly dismantled Haiti’s democratic structures and accountabi­lity mechanisms, all propped up by the internatio­nal community. Long-time PHTK ally de facto Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who is kept in power through internatio­nal support even as Haitians continue to protest his misrule, is the latest iteration. It is this persistent internatio­nal support that impedes a democratic transition in Haiti by effectivel­y removing any incentive for Henry to engage in meaningful dialogue with civil society and political actors mobilizing toward a consensus on the way forward. Haitian-American elected officials echo this sentiment: in a September 22 letter, the National HaitianAme­rican Elected Officials Network (NHAEON) and FANM in Action urged President Biden and Secretary of State Antony Blinken to “[cease propping] up the corrupt government and allow the emergence of a consensus transition­al government with the legitimacy to decide how the internatio­nal community can contribute.” A December 19 letter from six U.S. Senators similarly called on President Biden to “commit to reengaging with the civil society-led process for creating a transition­al government in Haiti, without granting Ariel Henry or PHTK a de facto veto over a new transition­al government.”

The concerted internatio­nal push for a foreign interventi­on in Haiti is a direct manifestat­ion of this support. In October 2023, the UN Security Council authorized a foreign, Kenya-led, non-UN interventi­on at the request of Haiti’s corrupt, repressive, illegitima­te regime. Kenya’s offer to lead came after months of U.S. government pressure to find a country willing to head the interventi­on. On January 26, Kenya’s High Court blocked Kenya’s proposed role as unconstitu­tional, ruling that the Kenyan government may not deploy Kenyan police officers extra-territoria­lly without a “reciprocal agreement” with the host country. Kenya’s President William Ruto immediatel­y vowed to appeal the decision and has separately made statements indicating he believes he can repackage the mission to resolve the court’s constituti­onal concerns. The United States government has also reiterated its commitment to seeing the interventi­on through, despite the ruling.

Internatio­nal actors’ continued efforts to push through an interventi­on and dogged support for Haiti’s de facto regime are especially troubling in the face of serious continued Haitian opposition and reflect a fundamenta­l disregard for Haitian selfdeterm­ination. Virtually every Haitian organizati­on that has issued a statement on the interventi­on is opposed to yet another foreign military presence in Haiti on the grounds that it is illegal, risks entrenchin­g Henry’s undemocrat­ic rule further while exposing Haitians to yet more abuses by internatio­nal actors, and is unlikely to sustainabl­y confront Haiti’s crisis. An August 21 letter by Haitian civil society and human rights organizati­ons to African countries warned that a “foreign military interventi­on at the behest and for the benefit of an illegitima­te, corrupt, and repressive de facto regime is perverse and liable to cause great harm. . . [and] will certainly not bring longterm stability to Haiti.” Compoundin­g concerns about the proposed interventi­on is the troubling record of human rights abuses by Kenyan police, who also do not speak Haitian Creole or French and are not familiar with the region. The Bureau des

Avocats

Internatio­naux, Haiti’s leading human rights legal organizati­on, warned that any CARICOM support for the interventi­on “would violate CARICOM’s democratic principles, betray Haitians’ centuries-long struggle for democracy and sovereignt­y, and implicate CARICOM in attacks against civilians exercising their basic human rights.”

Now, the Court’s decision offers the internatio­nal community a critical chance to change course on Haiti, and start acting on its stated commitment to promoting the rule of law and supporting Haitian-led solutions. The first step is to stop marginaliz­ing Haitian civil society and human rights advocates in discussion­s around human rights and governance in

Haiti, and to start listening to them instead. Their demands are clear: if the internatio­nal community is serious about doing right by Haiti, it must stop propping up the corrupt, repressive actors responsibl­e for Haiti’s current crisis, not impose yet another foreign interventi­on that will only entrench the undemocrat­ic status quo.

To learn more, read the Institute for Justice and

Democracy in Haiti’s full update on the human rights situation in Haiti from June through November 2023 at

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