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Haiti comments
- To: PEN-L@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Subject: Haiti comments
- From: Dan Scanlan <dscanlan@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 4 Mar 2004 09:51:24 -0800
- Comments: RFC822 error: <W> Incorrect or incomplete address field found and ignored.
Title: Haiti comments
Postings from a Hawaiian sovereignty forum
on Haiti.....
-------------------------
Strange how differently the stories are
told on mainstream media!
As for the mainstream macroeconomist
Jeffrey Sachs, who directs the Earth Institute and teaches at
Columbia, it makes sense for him to say the following. He was adamant
a few nights ago on Charlie Rose about the way he describes US
position toward Haiti, as he writes below (see his Common Dreams
article after, Ramsey Clark's):
"Attacks on Aristide began as soon as the Bush
administration assumed office. I visited Aristide in Port-au-Prince
in early 2001. He impressed me as intelligent and intent on good
relations with Haiti's private sector and the US. No firebrand, he
sought advice on how to reform his economy and explained his
realistic and prescient concerns that the American right would try to
wreck his presidency...
"When I returned to Washington, I spoke to senior
officials in the IMF, World Bank, Inter-American Development Bank,
and Organization of American States. I expected to hear that these
international organizations would be rushing to help Haiti.
"Instead, I was shocked to learn that they would all be
suspending aid, under vague "instructions" from the US.
Washington, it seemed, was unwilling to release aid to Haiti because
of irregularities in the 2000 legislative elections, and was
insisting that Aristide make peace with the political opposition
before releasing any aid.
"The US position was a travesty. Aristide had been elected
president in an indisputable landslide. He was, without doubt, the
popularly elected leader of the country -- a claim that President
George W. Bush cannot make about himself."
mahalo,
richard salvador
------------------------------------------
Dear Friends,
Here are two articles about US rogue behavior in Haiti. Ramsey
Clark is the former US Attorney General under Lyndon Johnson, and
honest, now radicalized, man. Thought you'd like to know his
take on Haiti. Jeffrey Sachs, who's statement is below, is the
mainstream Harvard economist, reponsible for "shock
therapy" economics in Russia, after the fall of the USSR, who is
now at Columbia University working to end poverty--having seen the
light. Regards, Alice
1. A Message from Ramsey Clark, March 1, 2004
The Bush administration has worked towards the removal of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide from office for three years. It has enforced a
unilateral embargo and cut off humanitarian aid to the poorest
country in the hemisphere. It has sought to undermine support for
President Aristide while supporting his opposition. It has waged a
relentless propaganda campaign to force him out of office. It has
supported calls for elections in violation of the constitution and
laws of Haiti.
Most recently the U.S. has forced regime change by armed aggression
supporting former Haitian military officers, FRAPH leaders and
criminal elements who entered Haiti with heavy firepower. Though only
hundreds in number they easily captured Cap Haitien, Gonaives, Hinche
and Les Cayes, killing the police who were untrained in warfare, or
in defending against commando units, armed only with pistols.
This small force could never have entered Haiti if President
Aristide, a man of peace, had not abolished the Haitian army, a
praiseworthy act. Unfortunately, this left the country defenseless
against armed aggression.
The international organizations, CARICOM, OAS and the UN should have
acted to protect the democratically elected government of Haiti.
After Costa Rica abolished its army, President Somoza (who U.S.
President Franklin Roosevelt called "our SOB") of
Nicaragua, twice threatened invasions of Costa Rica, only to be
stopped, once by the OAS and once by Venezuela.
The U.S. consistently acted to force President Aristide to leave
Haiti, abandon his constitutional duties, repudiate democratic
processes and desert his people to the tender mercies of the Old
Regime. The army, the paramilitary FRAPH, criminal gangs and the old
oligarchy that supported Duvalier terrorism against the Haitian
people with U.S. support for 30 years. When in 1986 Baby Doc Duvalier
was forced to leave, his repressive forces no longer able to contain
the anger of the people, it was in a U.S. Air Force plane to the
French Riviera with millions of dollars wrung from the sweat of the
poor people of Haiti.
President Aristide consistently refused to leave his people, to
resign, to subvert Haitian democracy and constitutional government
under enormous pressure from the Bush Administration. He was under
that enormous pressure for months as violence was again threatening
his presidency as it did in 1991, nine months into his first term as
the first democratically elected president of Haiti, the first and
only country in which a successful slave rebellion took place. That
revolution was begun by Toussaint Louverteur in 1791 and ended under
Jean-Jacques Dessalines and others who defeated Napoleon's legions,
20,000 strong, and win independence for Haiti in 1804.
In his autobiography published in exile in 1992 first in France,
Aristide wrote, "In Haiti, we are watching the ascent of a
rebellious people who are revolting against slavery. I am only the
reflection, an echo of that movement?they are the principal actors. I
simply try to exist in their dimension, to show love and
non-violence, through and beyond all the difficulties of life, as the
only thing that will enable us to go forward."
President Aristide listed in the final chapter of his autobiography,
"The Ten Commandments of Democracy in Haiti," first spoken
by him before the General Assembly of the United Nations in September
1991. The commandments of President Aristide, the political faith of
a priest, scholar and person of, by and for the poor, included:
liberty; democracy; fidelity to human rights; the right to eat and to
work; defense of the Haitian diaspora; no to violence; fidelity to
the human being ― and the highest form of wealth
― fidelity to Haitian culture; everyone around the same
table.
This is the man President Bush has deposed.
If the Bush administration policy of unilateral wars of aggression,
violations of international law and the U.S. Constitution and regime
change is to be stopped before the U.S. loses its last friend and
creates a wave of terrorism that will engulf the planet for years,
the U.S. Congress must investigate:
1. The role of the U.S. in forcing
President Aristide from Haiti
2. The support the Bush administration
gave in training, financing and arming the aggression against
Haiti
3. The acts the Bush administration took
to destabilize social order in Haiti, to support the old army, the
FRAPH and the wealthy oligarchies
4. The role the U.S. played in President
Aristide's sudden departure from Haiti, contrary to all his public
statements, and his transport to a distant country
5. Any explanation the Bush administration
has for its failure to demand the former military, FRAPH and other
violent groups lay down their arms, arms the U.S. provided, until the
eve of the president's coerced departure
6. Why Washington placed every pressure at
its disposal to force the democratically elected President of Haiti
to surrender his constitutional powers
7. Why President Aristide was kidnapped in
fact, even as Toussaint Louverture was kidnapped to imprisonment in
France in 1803 and Philippine President Emilio Aguinaldo was
kidnapped by U.S. soldiers to end the Philippine-American War in
1901?
The Western Hemisphere cannot be a safe or happy place until U.S.
military and economic intervention and regime change end, justice for
all is assured, reparations for past offenses to Haiti are paid and
until President Aristide returns for Haiti to serve his people.
Ramsey Clark
March 1, 2004
******************************************************************
2. Article from Common Dreams
NewsCenter: Jeffrey Sachs on Haiti
http://www.commondreams.org/views04/0301-10.htmhttp://www.commondreams.org/views04/0301-10.htm
--
---------------------------
IMPEACHMENT:
BRING IT ON!
----------------------------------------------
Purge the White House of mad cowboy
disease.
--------------------------------------------------
END OF THE TRAIL SALOON
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- Thread context:
- Re: Administration too quiet in wake of Haiti upheaval, (continued)
- Caricom calls for UN probe of Aristide's ouster,
Diane Monaco Thu 04 Mar 2004, 18:47 GMT
- First Voices Interview,
Craven, Jim Thu 04 Mar 2004, 18:08 GMT
- Haiti comments,
Dan Scanlan Thu 04 Mar 2004, 17:58 GMT
- FW: Life in Bush country...,
Devine, James Thu 04 Mar 2004, 17:46 GMT
- Jeff Sommers article on Haiti,
Louis Proyect Thu 04 Mar 2004, 14:51 GMT
- The Passion of Howard Stern,
Louis Proyect Thu 04 Mar 2004, 14:24 GMT
- Kerry flip-flops,
Louis Proyect Thu 04 Mar 2004, 14:19 GMT
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