Stamford Advocate

I stand with the Haitian people

- Fred McKinney COMMENTARY

“The Problem for Haiti is that God is too far, and the United States is too close.”

Dante Bellegarde, the Haitian representa­tive to the League of Nations

Sunday, April 7, marked the 222nd anniversar­y of the death of the great Haitian leader Toussaint L’Overture. He died like a pauper in a cold damp French prison in solitary confinemen­t. This remarkable man led the most successful slave revolution in the history of man! The Haitian revolution started in 1791, just two years after the French Revolution in 1789, and a short 15 years after the start of the American Revolution in 1776. The Haitian Revolution influenced the entire Western world for the next century. Most Americans do not know that without Toussaint L’Overture’s victory over French, English, and Spanish colonizers in Haiti, we might not have an America from sea to shining sea. The loss of Haiti made the Louisiana Territory worthless to the French and available for sale to the Americans in 1803.

Ironically, it is with both great sadness and hope that I watch the current crisis in Haiti and how it harkens back to the great Haitian revolution­ary leaders such as L’Overture, Dutty Boukman, Cecile Fatiman, Jean Jacques Dessalines, and Henry Christophe. Today’s problems are firmly rooted in this past.

In 1825, with the looming threat of French re-enslavemen­t on the island, Haiti agreed to compensate France for French recognitio­n of the country and to repay the Haitian slaveholde­rs for the loss of their “slave property” after slavery was abolished. Haitian payments to France did not stop until 1947.

In 2003, President Jean Bertrand Aristide demanded that the French repay these funds. In today’s dollars, that debt amounted to $30 billion. However, the French, the Americans, the Canadians, the Vatican, and the Dominicans overthrew Aristide on Feb. 29, 2004. This 2004 coup d’etat, or what some have called a kidnapping, was the second time Aristide had been forcibly removed from office after being democratic­ally elected.

In the 1990 Haitian election,

Aristide had won 67 percent of the vote. In 2000, he won an astonishin­g 91 percent of the vote. There is no doubt that

Aristide and his Lavalas party had the overwhelmi­ng support of the Haitian population. But he did not have the support of

America, France, Canada, the

Vatican and others in the internatio­nal community who theoretica­lly supported popular democracy but opposed the righting of historical wrongs.

The violence in the streets of

Port au Prince today has been labeled by Western media as

“gang violence” and anarchy.

The release of political prisoners is a pretext for why “we” need to intervene. The Western narrative is that the violence is random, unnecessar­y, brutal, and uncivilize­d. The images repeatedly shown are designed to make the public equate the Haitian people with barbarism — unlike us. This makes interventi­on by the United States and our allies even more justifiabl­e.

The U.S.-led blockade during the second Aristide administra­tion cut off all economic aid from the World Bank, the IMF and the Inter American Bank. This, combined with France’s refusal to make any reparation­s for the money owed to the Haitian state, led to the destructio­n of the Haitian infrastruc­ture and public services, and resulted in the worst poverty in the Western Hemisphere.

On July 7, 2021, 28 Colombian mercenarie­s, trained, billeted, and protected by the Dominican Republic and funded by the United States, assassinat­ed Haitian President Jovenel Moise. This was the latest example of imperial intrigue that has plagued Haiti since its founding in 1804. And now, the United States and France are attempting to pay the Kenyan government to outsource police forces to Haiti for $200 million to suppress what is nothing less than a revolution. I guess four occupation­s of Haiti by U.S. Marines is enough.

This is a revolution, not gang violence. The United States and all foreign powers need to stay out of Haiti unless they are prepared to support the interest of the Haitian people who are overwhelmi­ngly poor. Trickle-down economics does not work in the United States. What makes policy makers in Washington, Rome, and Paris think that this is the appropriat­e economic and political policy for Haiti? The Haitian people know Western capitals do not have their interests in mind with their schemes. Most Haitian people reject the Western influence that has killed its leaders, committed multiple coup d’etats, occupied the country many times, and systematic­ally exploited the country.

It is important to note that Aristide, a former Catholic priest, was not a Marxist revolution­ary calling for massive confiscati­on and redistribu­tion of wealth and income. In the words of Aristide, he only wanted what Toussaint L’Overture wanted for Haiti: “freedom, democracy, and dignity.”

I am not Haitian, but I stand with the Haitian people.

Fred McKinney is the co-founder of BJM Solutions, an economic consulting firm that conducts public and private research since 1999, and is the emeritus director of the Peoples Center for Innovation and Entreprene­urship at Quinnipiac University.

This is a revolution, not gang violence. The United States and all foreign powers need to stay out of Haiti unless they are prepared to support the interest of the Haitian people who are overwhelmi­ngly poor. Trickle-down economics does not work in the United States. What makes policy makers in Washington, Rome, and Paris think that this is the appropriat­e economic and political policy for Haiti?

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