Blood-soaked bureaucrats
By John Maxwell
Apr. 26 Nowhere is it more true that the pen is mightier
than the sword than in an efficient bureaucracy. Millions more were
killed by Adolf Eichmann, the dispatcher, than by the armies of Rommel
or Timoshenko.
But the machete wielders and the pistoleros are not to be despised as
they do the work of the often faceless placemen who sign the orders,
or like Henry II, simply express the wish to be rid of turbulent priests,
journalists or human rights agitators.
The Guatemalan government has just admitted its responsibility for the
1991 slaughter of an American anthropologist. She had angered the then
government by reporting that the government was massacring civilians,
indigenous Mayas, in what it called a counter-insurgency campaign backed
and financed by the United States.
In Haiti, on Jan. 24, 1991, the family of 24 year-old youth leader,
Yvon Desanges, found his body just outside their gate. They knew him
by the clothes he was wearing, his face too badly mutilated to be recognized.
There was a rope around his neck. His hands were tied. His eyes had
been gouged out. His tongue had been cut out. He had been stabbed so
many times it was impossible to count the wounds.
He had been shot several times. His abdomen had been slit so that his
guts spilled out onto the street.
Ten years later, youths like Yvon Desanges are still being slaughtered
for the same reason, sometimes by the same people. Their mothers, sisters
and girlfriends are being raped, their houses burnt.
On Thursday, one of Haitis most notorious terrorists, Louis Jodel
Chamblain was escorted to the Justice Ministry in Port-au-Prince by
the justice minister himself, one Bernard Gousse, so Chamblain could
surrender on camera, to officials of the Ministry of Justice.
Chamblains stately surrender came against the glittering background
of an international donors conference from Haiti expects lots
of aid from such as the United States, France, the IMF and the World
Bank, all of whom refused to help the lawfully and overwhelmingly elected
President Aristide when he was in office.
The assassins surrender was heralded as a noble gesture
by Gousse. Gousse is not to be confused with Latortue (Turtle), the
prime minister, who a few weeks ago saluted Chamblains gangsters
as Freedom Fighters.
In the weeks since, Chamblain has been holding court (literally) in
the rural areas of Haiti, where, according to reports, people accused
of various offenses against the new Freedom are summarily
shot or beaten or otherwise abused.
I am ready to give myself up as a prisoner -- to give Haiti a
chance so we can build this democracy I have been fighting for,
Chamblain announced. The former army sergeant ran death squads for dictator
Jean-Claude Baby Doc Duvalier and was a leader of the Front
for the Advancement of Progress of the Haitian People -- a paramilitary
terrorist group which killed some 3,000 civilians in the 1990s. He fled
to the Dominican Republic in 1994, was tried in absentia for several
murders and found guilty as charged. Under Haitian law, people tried
in absentia are entitled to a new trial if they return to the country.
They can also be pardoned.
An American lawyer who visited Haiti earlier this month said hed
been told: Right now anyone can get on the radio stations and
accuse anyone else of a crime or with being associated with violent
Lavalas gangs. It means that without proof they can say this about you
and immediately you have to go into hiding, and immediately you have
to be concerned with your own welfare; and immediately the death threats
begin..
Neither principle nor honor
The assistant secretary-general of the OAS, one Luigi Einaudi, made
a revealing comment to a number of people gathered at the Hotel Oloffson
last New Years Eve l, as Haiti was about to begin the celebration
of its bicentennial years as an independent republic.
The real problem with Haiti is that the international community
is so screwed up that theyre actually letting Haitians run the
place, Einaudi said, as reported by Margaret Laurent, a leading
Haitian lawyer who was one of those within earshot. Laurent was here
last week to give thanks on behalf of the Haitian people to the Government
and people of Jamaica for hosting President Aristide and the refugees
who have fled Haiti to avoid the tender mercies of Chamblains
Freedom Fighters.
It may be less unpleasant to deal with the ruthless Freedom Fighters
than with a diplomatic Canadian named David Lee, special representative
of the OAS secretary-general and head of the OAS Special Mission to
Haiti. He was on the platform at Gonaives when Latortue hailed the gangsters
as Freedom Fighters.
Lee, in an address to the OAS, said: Events on the day were confused.
It was clear that the crowds were large and enthusiastic.
But from our location within the security bubble it was not evident
who was present. Nor could we hear what was being said on the podium
at the large public meeting in the main square. The various speakers
did not have prepared texts and were in the presence of an exuberant
crowd. The OAS, and I personally, certainly did not approve
(as a press article claimed yesterday) of what was reported in the press
to have been said and done on that occasion. I left immediately thereafter
for meetings here in Washington. Or, as the News of the World
used to say when investigating prostitutes: We made our excuses
and left.
According to The Associated Press, the crowd was between 2,000 and 3,000
-- small by any standards.
Rebel leaders who still run Haitis fourth-largest city sat
on a platform alongside Latortue, Organization of American States representative
David Lee, recently installed interim Cabinet ministers Bernard Gousse
and retired General Herard Abraham, and new Haitian Police Chief Leon
Charles.
Lee obviously, had no idea where he was, no idea who was next to him
on the platform and, in fact, was probably not even aware that President
Aristide had been overthrown or that Latortue was pretending to be prime
minister. I wonder what he was smoking? But perhaps, like so many others
in Haiti, he had simply been kidnapped.
Security in Port-au-Prince
According to the Haitian Press Agency, Port-au-Prince is in a state
of paralysis at the moment, trembling in insecurity. Well-known businessman
and leading free-zone operator, Michel Handal (who has Jamaican connections),
was abducted on Saturday a week ago, in the central business district.
Several other business people have been abducted but the families prefer
to deal privately with the kidnappers, with whom, no doubt, they are
on familiar terms.
Meanwhile, prices for staple foods have almost doubled. A bag of rice
which cost about J$1,700 less than two months ago, now costs nearly
J$2,500. Outside of Port-au-Prince the prices are even higher, and the
security situation worse.
People in the capital told a visiting American lawyers group two
weeks ago that they are now afraid not only of the Duvalierist criminals
like Chamblains men, but also of the American Marines.
According to some witnesses, the international forces led by the US
Marines undertook targeted killings of Aristide supporters in the poorest
areas in and around Port-au-Prince.
Anthony Fenton reports: We were told that the US Marines had
recently slaughtered, in one night, 78 people in the Belair neighborhood
of Port-au-Prince. Reportedly, the US [and other foreign occupiers]
had brought ambulances with them in anticipation of a bloodbath. All
but two of the people murdered were carried away in these ambulances.
Now no one will know the identities of those killed. We were told that
the interim government, led by the US, has the intent to destroy
popular organizations.
Popular organizations, of course, means Aristides
Lavalas Family.
Meanwhile, the worlds official Samaritan, the UNs Kofi Annan,
has continued his expert dithering. Having passed by Haiti in January
-- like the Levite on the Jericho Road -- he is now speaking grandly
of a UN force of 6,700 soldiers and 1,600 policemen to turn Haiti
into a functioning democracy.
The transfer from the US to the UN force is to take place by June 1
and will no doubt proceed with the process of nation building,
as patented by George W. Bush and employed so effectively in Iraq. I
am personally offended by the idea of nation building because
I believe the term was invented in Jamaica by Norman Manley and his
people at Jamaica Welfare, and that it properly means that the people
of the country are the ones who consciously mould themselves into a
nation. It is not a political brain transplant nor a transfer of technology.
Nor grace nor shame
A nation was being built in Haiti, but not according to American neo-liberal
specifications. It encompassed things like literacy and 150 new high
schools, more built in 10 years than in the previous two centuries;
it encompassed improved health care, with a little help from Haitis
friends, such as Cuba and Dr. Paul Farmer, a Harvard professor, who
almost single-handedly at first, pulled Haiti back from the brink of
surrender to rampaging HIV/AIDS. Farmer believes treatment for HIV/AIDS
is a human right, which puts him beyond the pale for the bureaucrats.
He deserves to be known and recognized across the world as a true poor
peoples hero.
In an article in the New England Journal of Medicine, Professor Farmer
reports simply and eloquently, the savage disruption the putsch has
had on the health of poor Haitians. He speaks of the advances made over
the past 10 years, noting inter alia, that Haitis government had
$300 million for all the public services it provided, and contrasted
that with the revenues of just one of Harvards 17 hospitals with
revenues of $1.3 billion. There was general disregard for the neutrality
and immunity of health institutions during conflict; several hospitals
were the targets of violence, including Farmers own hospital in
the Central Plateau where two patients were murdered. The university
hospital is at a standstill for lack of personnel; vehicles belonging
to Farmers clinic were stolen, halting the movement of patients
and medicines, and, in early March Haitis newest medical school
-- Tabarre -- for the training of poor peoples children to be
doctors, was taken over by the US Army as a military base.
Dr Farmer asks: What will become of its faculty, composed in large
part of Cuban public health specialists, but also including Haitian,
US and European teachers? More to the point, what will become of its
247 medical students? What will happen to the only medical school in
Haiti whose top priority is the development of a cadre of physicians
to serve the nations poorest and most vulnerable people?
Perhaps we should ask these questions of Kofi Annan, Colin Powell and
P J Patterson, all of whom come from the same sort of background that
most Ghanaians, Jamaicans and Haitians share. Part of that background,
of course, is the struggle for liberty led 200 years ago by Haitian
and Jamaican slaves dying so their children could be free.
Source: The Jamaica Observer