Bangkok Post

Haiti’s woes linked to foreign aid

Backer US turned a blind eye despite repeated signs of trouble.

- By Maria Abi-Habib

The streets of Haiti had been clogged for months with angry protesters who burned tyres, stormed banks and robbed stores. Gangs, with the sometimes tacit permission of the police, have been kidnapping nuns, fruit vendors and even schoolgirl­s for ransom. And then on Wednesday, the country slid deeper into turmoil when a convoy of gunmen brazenly rumbled up to the home of the president, Jovenel Moise, in the middle of the night and shot him dead.

Almost every time that Haitians think their circumstan­ces cannot get any worse, it seems the nation takes another ominous turn, and it is now teetering on the verge of a political void, without a president, a Parliament or a functionin­g Supreme Court.

The country’s morass has for decades put it near the top of a list of nations, such as Afghanista­n and Somalia, that have captured the world’s imaginatio­n for their levels of despair. In the shadow of the richest country in the world, people wonder, how could this happen to Haiti?

Haiti’s troubled history goes deep, lying in its roots as a former slave colony of France that gained its independen­ce in 1804 after defeating Napoleon Bonaparte’s forces and later suffered more than two decades of a brutal dictatorsh­ip, which ended in 1986.

Then, after an earthquake devastated the country in 2010, an influx of foreign aid and peacekeepi­ng forces appeared to only worsen the country’s woes and instabilit­y.

Haiti’s failures have not occurred in a vacuum; they have been assisted by the internatio­nal community, which has pumped US$13 billion (422 billion baht) of aid into the country over the past decade. But instead of the nation-building the money was supposed to achieve, Haiti’s institutio­ns have become further hollowed out in recent years.

When the president let Parliament’s term expire last year, it left Haiti with 11 elected representa­tives — Moise and 10 senators — for its population of 11 million, eliciting a strong condemnati­on but little repercussi­on from Washington. For the next year and a half, until his assassinat­ion, Moise increasing­ly ruled by decree.

Haiti is less a failed state than what an analyst called an “aid state” — eking out an existence by relying on billions of dollars from the internatio­nal community. Foreign government­s have been unwilling to turn off the spigots, afraid to let Haiti fail.

But the money has served as a complicati­ng lifeline — leaving the government with few incentives to carry out the institutio­nal reforms necessary to rebuild the country, as it bets that every time the situation worsens, internatio­nal government­s will open their coffers, analysts and Haitian activists say.

The aid has propped up the country and its leaders, providing vital services and supplies in a country that has desperatel­y needed vast amounts of humanitari­an assistance. But it has also allowed corruption, violence and political paralysis to go unchecked.

Although they deny it, Haitian politician­s have traditiona­lly relied on gangs to sway elections in their favour and to expand their political turf. In the last three years of Moise’s term, more than a dozen massacres by gangs linked to the government and police forces have killed more than 400 people in anti-government neighbourh­oods and displaced 1.5 million people, yet no one has been held accountabl­e for the crimes.

When a political or human rights scandal erupts, the US government issues paper-tigerlike condemnati­ons.

Instead of embracing the long road to reforms and creating a system that works, Haitian civil society leaders contend, the United States has propped up strongmen and tied the fate of the nation to them. Many Haitians repeatedly denounced the US’ support of Moise but said they had little power to stop it.

“Since 2018, we have been asking for accountabi­lity,” said Emmanuela Douyon, a Haitian policy expert who gave testimony to the US Congress earlier this year, urging Washington to change its foreign policy and assistance approach to Haiti. “We need the internatio­nal community to stop imposing what they think is correct and instead think about the long term and stability,” Ms Douyon said.

The US needs to condition aid to Haiti on its leaders cleaning up and reforming the country’s institutio­ns, Ms Douyon said. And powerful figures need to be held accountabl­e for the violence and corruption that permeate the country.

The assassinat­ion of Moise on Wednesday punctuated yet another chapter in the country’s violent decade. The assassins who raided Moise’s compound killed a president who was brought to power in 2016, winning the election with only about 600,000 votes. Just 18% of voters cast ballots, and there were widespread accusation­s of fraud. Yet the United States propped up the unpopular and controvers­ial leader, supporting Moise amid calls for his ouster in 2019 when it was discovered that internatio­nal aid given to the government had gone missing.

Moise insisted in February that he would stay on for an extra year as president because he had been prevented from taking the post for that long while the electoral fraud accusation­s were investigat­ed. Despite demands from civil society leaders that he step down, Washington supported him. Critics said his holding onto the office was unconstitu­tional, and anger boiled over on the streets, throwing the capital Portau-Prince into violence.

With continued US backing, Moise had grown increasing­ly autocratic, passing an anti-terror law late last year that was so broad it could be wielded against his opposition.

Earlier this year, he declared he would write a new constituti­on, giving broad powers to the military and allowing future presidents to run for a second consecutiv­e term. He called a referendum on the constituti­on and an election for September, despite warnings that holding an election amid so much violence would suppress voter turnout and bring the same political figures to power that have helped cause Haiti’s struggles. Yet the US supported Moise’s plans.

“It’s hard to think of the present moment as an opportunit­y, as it will likely create more chaos,” said Alexandra Filippova, a senior staff lawyer with the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti, which helps victims of human rights abuses.

It’s hard to think of the present moment as an opportunit­y, as it will likely create more chaos.

A SENIOR STAFF LAWYER WITH THE INSTITUTE FOR JUSTICE & DEMOCRACY IN HAITI, ALEXANDRA FILIPPOVA

 ??  ?? TROUBLED TIMES: Police patrol the streets after the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise near the National Palace in Port-au-Prince.
TROUBLED TIMES: Police patrol the streets after the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise near the National Palace in Port-au-Prince.

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