Washington's Anti-Aristide Game Plan for Haiti
Taking a Closer Look at Washington's Anti-Aristide Game Plan for Haiti
Murky circumstances surrounding the departure of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide may at last be clarified.
The resolution by the Organization of American States (OAS) in favor of an investigation of the U.S-orchestrated removal of the Haitian leader is a triumph for CARICOM, especially Jamaica, which stubbornly persisted in raising questions about the dubious circumstances surrounding Aristide’s ouster. It also represents a defeat for the U.S. and France, which self-servingly blocked any move towards an investigation by the UN – perhaps afraid of embarrassing revelations that might arise.
At long last, there is a clear acknowledgement by the OAS that the transfer of power in February may have violated the Interamerican Democratic Charter and represented an unconstitutional interruption of Haiti’s democratic process.
The strong stand taken by the OAS throws into sharp relief the listless performance of the United Nations, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and his aide for Haiti, Reginald Dumas.
The OAS investigation should be followed by an international inquiry aimed at bringing to justice those responsible, both in Port-au-Prince and in Washington, for the illegitimate transfer of power in an atmosphere of violence.
At its June General Assembly gathering in Quito, Ecuador, the Organization of American States approved a resolution on Haiti calling for an investigation into the circumstances surrounding former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide’s departure into exile on February 29. The president’s hurried departure occurred at a time when an armed rebellion, led by former Haitian military leaders and backed by a junta of rightwing businessmen and civic figures, had taken control of much of Haiti and was pressing towards Port-au-Prince.
The CARICOM (Caribbean Community) group of 15 nations has been aggressively pressing for such an investigation for the last three months, due to the strong belief on the part of many of its member states that the far-from-invisible hand of Washington had helped to push Aristide out of Haiti.
Over the objections of the United States and the new Haitian government – led by longtime Florida resident and certified Washington servitor, interim-Prime Minister Gerard Latortue – the resolution invokes article 20 of the OAS charter, which calls for “a collective assessment” if there is reason to suspect “an unconstitutional alteration of the constitutional regime that seriously impairs the democratic order in a member state.” While doubts are already being raised about whether the OAS has the resources or political will to carry out an inquiry of the needed depth and scope, the invocation of article 20 – a de facto acknowledgement that democratic order has broken down in Haiti – represents a victory in the struggle to learn the truth about Aristide’s departure.
An Unexpectedly Strong Stand
The OAS resolution, the
subject of hours of debate at the General Assembly session
on June 8, takes a firm stand on the democratic crisis in
Haiti, despite attempts by ambassadors from the U.S. and the
Haitian interim government to soften its language. It begins
with an invocation of “the fundamental purposes of the OAS,”
citing, among other things, “respect for democratic
institutions” and “due regard for the principle of
non-intervention.” The resolution also takes a subtle and
necessary dig at the UN, calling attention to an earlier OAS
resolution from February 26 which asked for “necessary and
appropriate urgent measures . . . to address the crisis in
Haiti” – measures that were obviously never taken,
considering that Aristide’s government was overthrown a mere
three days later.
Kofi Annan and his representative to Haiti, Reginald Dumas, as well as the UN Security Council have been widely condemned for their calculated inaction, no doubt attributable to the desire of hard-line State Department policymakers to see Aristide removed by any means possible. The motto of such policy zealots, like Assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs Roger Noriega, might well be, 'One down (Aristide), two (Chávez and Castro) to go.' Turning its attention to the future, the OAS calls for democratic elections in Haiti as soon as possible and legal accountability for those responsible for the loss of life and destruction of property that has plagued Haiti. Most importantly, the General Assembly instructs the Permanent Council to use “all necessary diplomatic initiatives” in order to “foster full restoration of democracy in Haiti.”
The OAS resolution clearly acknowledges the breakdown of democratic institutions in Haiti, casting doubt on the legitimacy of the Latortue government, and calls attention to what it ambiguously refers to as “questions surrounding [Aristide’s] resignation.”
Ouster, kidnapping or resignation?
The
abrupt and surreptitious exile of former president Aristide
took place following several weeks of violent turmoil in
Haiti as the rule of law broke down in the face of the rebel
advance towards Port-au-Prince. On February 29, Aristide was
escorted by Marines from the U.S. embassy to a U.S.-supplied
aircraft and flown, without knowledge of his destination, to
the Central African Republic. At the time, the former
president said that he left to prevent further bloodshed,
but he has since accused both the United States and France
of being involved in his removal and has filed suit to this
effect in both countries.
Undermining Democracy
CARICOM and a number of other nations, including Venezuela
and 53 Africa Union countries led by South Africa, have
expressed concerns about the dangerous precedent set by the
removal of Aristide, a democratically elected leader, by
military force. Aristide had already been deposed once by
the Haitian military in 1991, only nine months after his
1990 election as Haiti’s first democratically-chosen
president. He was eventually restored to office by the
Clinton administration in 1994 in an effort to staunch the
politically risky influx of Haitian boat people to Florida.
Upon his return to power, he dissolved the Haitian military,
which had supported the brutal three-year military regime.
However, he did not have the resources to disarm the former
soldiers -- something that the U.S. military had failed to
do -- and many of the most notorious members of the regime
took refuge in the Dominican Republic, returning to Haiti at
the beginning of this year as leaders of the armed uprising.
Election Controversy
After completing the remainder
of his first term, Aristide was constitutionally forbidden
to stand for a second consecutive term in 1995, but won the
office again in the controversial November 2000 elections.
Opposition groups boycotted the presidential election in
protest against alleged fraud during legislative elections
the preceding May. However, international monitors –
including OAS observers – who supervised the legislative
election asserted at the time that the balloting was
generally free and fair. The eventual controversy centered
around an OAS finding that eight senate seats should have
gone on to “run-off” elections. Subsequently, seven of the
eight senators, all from Aristide’s Lavalas party, resigned
their seats at his urging, while the remaining senator, from
an opposition party, insisted on retaining his seat.
Exploiting the System
The opposition rejected the
senators’ goodwill gesture and continued to refuse to
participate in the democratic process, even going to the
extent of failing to nominate representatives to the
provisional electoral council that had to be formed prior to
any elections. The Democratic Convergence and Group 184, the
most prominent opposition organizations, draw most of their
supporters from Haiti’s affluent business community and
former supporters of the military junta. According to
polling data, they commanded at most eight percent of the
vote, in contrast to Aristide, who had a large following
among Haiti’s poor, attracting two-thirds of the vote in
1990. Both opposition groups have received funding from the
United States, which had always felt somewhat uncomfortable
with Aristide’s political radicalism and his alleged ties to
Castro’s Cuba. By frustrating the democratic process, Group
184 and its patrons in Washington – who saw to it that most
international aid to the island was blocked – were able to
undermine Aristide’s rule, severely limiting his
effectiveness and delegitimizing the democratic process
itself. The crisis peaked in January when the terms of the
lower house and one-third of the upper house of the Haitian
legislature expired, leaving that body unable to legally
conduct business. The opposition continued to refuse to
participate in elections and immediately began to accuse
Aristide of ruling by fiat when their unwillingness to take
part in the democratic process forced him to govern without
a sitting legislature. While Aristide showed himself to be
willing to comply with virtually any condition for a return
to political normalcy, the opposition remained intransigent,
even raising their demands to include Aristide’s
resignation.
Calculated Inaction
As rebel forces
consisting of former members of the discredited and
disbanded military and paramilitary forces from the
notorious vigilante group, the FRAPH, approached
Port-au-Prince, the U.S. refused to send troops to support
Aristide’s government without an agreement between Aristide
and his opponents. Moreover, Washington instructed its UN
ambassador, John Negroponte, to block any move to send an
international force to protect the Aristide government. The
first significant contingent of U.S. troops did not enter
Haiti until after the president had departed. The United
States’ position allowed the opposition groups to stubbornly
refuse to compromise, eventually destabilizing the political
situation to the point where Aristide’s overthrow was
inevitable.
The Interim Government
After Aristide’s
departure into exile, the head of Haiti’s Supreme Court,
Boniface Alexandre, assumed the presidency while a council
of three Haitians hand-picked by the U.S. embassy in
Port-au-Prince nominated Gerard Latortue to serve as Haiti’s
prime minister. Latortue replaced the prime minister
appointed by Aristide, despite the fact that Prime Minister
Yvon Neptune remained in Port-au-Prince, willing to continue
to serve in his office. Latortue, a former foreign minister
and UN official who has lived in the United States since
1988, was deemed by U.S. authorities to be politically
acceptable – though in fact he is ineligible to serve as
Haiti’s prime minister under the terms of the Haitian
constitution because of his extended foreign residency.
Latortue’s supposedly non-partisan government has since been
widely criticized not only for its failure to include
members of the Lavalas political party, but also for its
single-minded hounding and even jailing of former Aristide
officials. Prominent members of Lavalas have felt it
necessary to go into hiding, while others have been arrested
for crimes allegedly committed while Aristide was in office.
Others were murdered solely because they were Lavalas
members -- murders that Latortue's government has
conspicuously failed to condemn. The Latortue government’s
close collusion with the U.S. was made even more apparent by
his recent request that U.S. troops remain in Haiti in
addition to the UN peacekeepers who are taking over at the
end of June. Rather than being part of the UN mission, some
U.S. troops would remain, but under their own command.
Is the UN Finally Taking Action?
The UN is in the
process of sending a force of 8,000 soldiers and civilian
police, led by Brazilian troops, to take over from the U.S.,
French and Canadian forces that have maintained security in
Haiti since Aristide’s abrupt departure.
The mission of the UN force includes training the local police force and disarming the militant groups whose demonstrations and eventual uprising led to Aristide’s forced departure. Both of these objectives were also part of the mission of the U.S. forces that restored Aristide to power in 1994, but those forces were withdrawn long before the objectives could be fulfilled, leaving Aristide to attempt to maintain order in a country filled with disaffected, armed and unemployed former soldiers.
While the UN has shown itself to be willing to commit troops and resources to support the interim government, it continues to show no interest in investigating the circumstances of Aristide’s removal from office or the horrendous atrocities now being visited upon pro-Aristide elements of the population.
Such a probe would have to be approved by the UN Security Council, but the United States' status as a permanent member would allow it to veto any such proposal. UN Secretary General Kofi Annan issued a report in April, prepared under the supervision of the UN envoy to Haiti, Reginald Dumas, which was highly sympathetic to the opposition groups and accused the Aristide government of failing to advance the cause of democracy and contributing to lawlessness in Haiti.
A
Crucial Moment for the OAS
The ousting of Aristide and
his replacement by a weak caretaker government with a
hapless prime minister, who is little better than a national
embarrassment and is clearly intended to be a dependent of
the U.S. ambassador in Port-au-Prince, has generated outrage
in nearly one-third of the UN membership. Yet the Secretary
General and a number of the permanent members of the UN
Security Council still appear to be unconcerned about either
the removal of a democratically elected president by an
armed uprising or the interference in Haitian sovereignty by
the United States.
CARICOM and Venezuela have been the only significant voices in the hemisphere defending Aristide, and media and legislative circles within the United States have paid only perfunctory attention to the highly suspect circumstances surrounding Aristide’s removal. This shocking lack of attention to a clear violation of constitutionality in one of the hemisphere’s weakest democracies may finally be remedied by the upcoming OAS investigation.
Having shown a disturbingly weak spine in
the past when faced with a confrontation with the Bush
administration, the OAS will need to prove itself capable of
undertaking a thorough and critical investigation of the
events surrounding the Aristide departure if it is to regain
its flagging credibility as a proponent of democracy in the
region. The spotlight is now on newly inaugurated Secretary
General Miguel Ángel Rodríguez to see whether he will
forcefully try to implement the resolution or allow it to
drift into obscurity.