By Abayomi Azikiwe
During the month of February, hundreds of thousands of Haitians took to the streets to demonstrate in response to the horrific economic crisis sweeping the Caribbean nation.
For 10 straight days, workplaces, schools and normal business activity were shut down when a coalition of opposition parties and community organizations engaged in a general strike.
In recent months, Haitian have suffered the consequences of a declining value of the national currency (gourde) making it almost impossible to purchase food and other consumer goods amid a 15 percent inflation rate. Allegations of widespread government corruption and the country’s ongoing subordinate position within the world capitalist system has resulted in an $89.6 million budget deficit.
Security forces seeking to restrain the masses in their justified discontent lead to violence involving extensive property damage. Anger erupted in early February, prompting thousands of people to hurl rocks at security forces, blockading streets with burning tires and the carrying out of brazen attacks on police stations.
During the first few days of the rebellion, there were at least 36 arrests, the deaths of two people and the injuring of police. This recent unrest was the third of its kind within a span of four months.
These events have led to the recent censure of the current government led by Prime Minister Jean-Henry Céant. President Jovenel Moïse had appointed Céant and the cabinet six months earlier with a mandate to take corrective measures aimed at improving the economy, which is dependent upon usurious loans under restrictive conditions imposed by financial institutions and agencies dominated by imperialism.
The only alternative being proposed by the western-backed politicians is more of the same neo-colonial oriented policies. Haiti, which has been sanctioned, attacked and vilified since its successful revolution of the enslaved Africans extending from 1791 to 1804, has been exploited by multinational corporations and subjected to numerous military interventions by the U.S., France, Canada and the United Nations.
An article published in the Miami Herald on March 18 written by Jacqueline Charles notes that: “Last month the International Monetary Fund agreed to provide Haiti with $229 million in loans at zero percent interest paid over three years. But the money, which included an initial disbursement of over $40 million, was conditioned on the government carrying out several measures including reducing its budget deficit, implementing social protection programs and getting approval for the budget from parliament by May.”
This report illustrates that some of the same entities, which have attempted to re-enslave peoples throughout the Caribbean, Latin America, Africa and the Asia-Pacific utilizing destabilization projects and perpetual debt, are now claiming to come to the aid of Haiti once again. Why should the masses of workers, farmers and youth believe that international capital will provide an equitable and sustainable solution to the present economic quagmire?
Charles, in the same article, emphasizes to the readers: “The European Union, Inter-American Development Bank and World Bank had also agreed to provide an additional $60 million in assistance before the start of the June 1 hurricane season. That $100 million in aid disbursement is now dependent on how quickly lawmakers can agree on the next prime minister, which will be Moïse’s third since taking office in February 2017.”
The Haitian Senate voted 93-6 to terminate the current administration. President Moïse has a limited window of time to appoint another prime minister and cabinet.
A significant aspect of the contemporary discord is related to the apparent mismanagement of a $2 billion fund from the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela oil assistance program allocated under PetroCaribe. Thousands of protesters have demanded the removal of Moïse, who has shirked responsibility for the escalating problems after days of demonstrations, blaming Céant for the difficulties facing the nation.
Origins of the current crisis
During early July 2018, the Haitian government under former Prime Minister Jack Guy Lafontant announced a series of austerity measures which would prove disastrous for the majority of impoverished and working people. Rather than address the structural character of the economic problems emanating from the dependency upon unequal terms of trade and international relations with the industrialized capitalist states, the Lafontant government along with President Moïse sought to address these contradictions by enacting draconian programs which only benefit imperialism.
Robert Roth, an educator and co-founder of Haiti Action Committee (HAC), wrote an article on the situation which began last year, outlining the following: “The protests were sparked by the government’s announcement that it would reduce or remove subsidies on fuel, leading to a rise of 38% in the price of gasoline, and that the price of kerosene would jump 50% to $4.00 a gallon. The uprising spread across the country and lasted three days. Port-au-Prince was brought to a standstill. Protesters set up barricades in the streets, burned tires, and attacked stores owned by the rich. Luxury hotels in the Petionville area were sacked by angry demonstrators. In the immediate aftermath, the government rescinded the price increases (for now), and Prime Minister Jack Guy Lafontant – the same official who announced the fuel price hike – resigned. And a squad of U.S. Marines was sent to Port-au-Prince, supposedly to increase security at the U.S. Embassy, but also to send Haitians an ominous warning of what was to come should the protests continue.”
Since this time period, anger has mounted. Instability within the government hampers the capacity for any coherent and consistent efforts to find solutions to the problems the masses are grappling with on a daily basis.
Historical role of imperialism in the Haitian crisis
The policy of Washington towards Haiti has not fundamentally changed since the acquisition of its independence in 1804. Between the time of national liberation and establishment of a Black republic, the U.S. has been hostile towards the people.
During the time frame of 1804 and 1862, the U.S. government refused to even diplomatically recognize Haiti. Only after the disastrous first two years of the Civil War, when the administration of President Abraham Lincoln developed plans for the possible evacuation of the capital of Washington, D.C., did the Union Army realize it was necessary to recruit Africans as soldiers into the Northern military, along with issuing an Emancipation Proclamation, ostensibly freeing enslaved Africans in the Confederate rebel states.
It is within this historical context that the U.S. exchanged diplomats with Haiti. Since the Civil War, there have been numerous attempts to recolonize the country. For 19 years (1915 to 1934), Haiti was occupied by the U.S., which imposed Jim Crow laws including the willful lynching of Black people.
Successive national dictatorships, including François (Papa Doc) and Jean-Claude (Baby Doc) Duvalier in the mid-to-late 20th century, were propped up by U.S. imperialism and its allies. February represented the 33rd anniversary of the mass uprising which led to the overthrow of Baby Doc Duvalier in February 1986.
When Haitians elected people’s candidate Jean-Bertrand Aristide for the first time in 1991 and later after being taken back into the country by the U.S. Marines in 1994, right-wing military coups were engineered in an effort to maintain foreign hegemony from Washington. As Haiti was celebrating the bicentennial of its founding in 2004, another counterrevolution was organized and ensured through the invasion of thousands of U.S., Canadian and French troops.
Fanmi Lavalas party work suffered repression while Aristide was kidnapped by the NATO forces and taken illegally to the Central African Republic (CAR). Only a campaign of worldwide outrage created the conditions for the ousted president to gain political asylum in the Republic of South Africa under an African National Congress (ANC) government.
The devastating earthquake of 2010 killed and displaced hundreds of thousands of people. Despite grandiose pronouncements by the U.S. government under former President Barack Obama that tens of millions of dollars in humanitarian aid would be forthcoming, the reconstruction needs of Haiti was utilized for further exploitation and financial fraud.
Haitian people must be allowed to determine their own destiny outside the domination of western imperialism. The masses have proved to be formidable opponents to the imperatives of Washington, Ottawa and Paris.
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