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Bill Clinton Loves Haiti

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by Jemima Pierre

If there’s one American export that Haiti needs no more of, it’s Bill Clinton. The former U.S. president, now the United Nations “viceroy” to Haiti, has arguably done more harm to the first Black Republic than any person in history. “It is Haiti that needs to be liberated from Bill.”

 

Bill Clinton Loves Haiti

by Jemima Pierre

For Haitians, Clinton’s ‘liberation’ is more dehumanization.”

There is no Haiti without Bill Clinton. Rarely has the Republic entered the mainstream press since the January 12, 2010 earthquake without mention of the former US President. When it comes to Haiti, Clinton is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent. In the days after the earthquake Clinton saturated the media with Haiti-related appearances on cable news networks, a spread in Esquire Magazine, a speech at the UN, and editorials in prominent newspapers. Clinton is the co-chair of the Interim Commission for the Reconstruction of Haiti. He is the UN Special Envoy for Haiti. And he is the co-director of the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund, a foundation involved in number of neoliberal economic initiatives in Haiti. Clinton justifies his involvement by saying he is “responding to the needs of Haitians.” But what needs? Which Haitians? And to what end?

There are very few critical appraisals of Clinton’s role in Haiti. It is easy to understand why. The liberal press is enchanted by the story of the Clintons’ “long standing commitment to Haiti” and often point to the history of their “love” for the country. The young, newly-wed Clintons honeymooned there in 1975 and are said to be enraptured by the republic’s culture and people.

However, white liberal sentimentality aside, Clinton’s oversized role in Haiti only makes sense when we remember that both the left and right see Haiti through deeply racist lenses. Haiti is locked within a myth of white liberal benevolence – how else do we explain the uncritical lionizing of Sean Penn or the now-compromised Paul Farmer, among others? While Haiti, it is presumed, cannot help its dysfunctional and incompetent self, Clinton is seen as Haiti’s CEO, its savior, its great white hope.

But Haiti has done more for Clinton than Clinton has done for Haiti.

When it comes to Haiti, Clinton is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent.”

Haiti was a policy bonanza for Bill Clinton during his presidency. In his 1992 presidential campaign, Clinton used U.S.-Haiti policy to differentiate himself from the first George Bush, castigating his administration for not providing asylum to fleeing Haitian refugees. Once in office, he continued not only the same racist policy of forcibly repatriating Haitian—but not Cuban—refugees, but also their indefinite detention at the notoriously brutal Guantanamo prison. Clinton’s first foreign military intervention also occurred in Haiti. In 1994, he sent 20,000 troops with the official purpose of restoring democracy and returning democratically elect Jean Bertrand Aristide to power. They would remain until 1999.

But this was really not about restoring Aristide, who was deposed in a CIA-backed coup; it was not about democracy because the administration worked with the military junta that overthrew Aristide. Clinton’s policy was also not about improving the lives of Haitians. The real goal was keeping order in Haiti as a means to stem the flow of "ignorant, violent, diseased” Haitian refugees to Florida while also guaranteeing full access to the Haitian market by U.S. business interests. Most importantly, Clinton imposed crucial conditions for Aristide’s return, forcing neoliberal economic policies—including the acceptance of an IMF loan package whose structural adjustment conditionalities included the dismantling of import tariffs and the repression of a minimum wage hike—that would ultimately destroy Haiti’s economic, and political, sovereignty. By dropping import tariffs and flooding the Haitian market with cheap, US-subsidized rice, the Clinton administration destroyed Haiti’s domestic rice production. Clinton recently admitted this fact in a cynical mea culpa.

After a combination of scandals and the dispiriting 2008 presidential campaign that saw Hillary Clinton lose her presidential bid to Barack Obama, Clinton’s popularity seemed to wane. That is until early 2009 when the ever-compliant UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, called on him to be the UN Special Envoy to Haiti. Once again, Haiti came to Clinton’s rescue. As journalist Jeremy Scahill pointed out, it made no difference to many that Clinton “participated in the systematic destabilization of Haiti” by effectively subverting the democratic process and by implementing a “vicious regime of economic neoliberalism” inside the country. In fact, if there was anyone that needed to stay as far away from Haiti and Haitian politics and economics, it was Bill Clinton. But the UN needed a familiar face to legitimate its illegitimate military occupation of Haiti, and the U.S. needed to tap into Clinton’s long-standing relationship with the Haitian business elite for access to Haitian markets and labor.

If there was anyone that needed to stay as far away from Haiti and Haitian politics and economics, it was Bill Clinton.”

Just when Clinton could not be more entrenched in Haitian politics, the January 2010 earthquake happened. One mainstream news headline captured this sentiment exactly: “With Response to Haiti, Clinton Returns to the Spotlight.” And liberal fawning over Clinton’s great relationship to Haiti shifted into high gear. With no sense of irony, Obama appointed Clinton and the second George Bush as fundraisers for earthquake relief. At the same time, Obama and his Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, forced the powerless Haitian government to appoint a reconstruction commission that was in theory co-chaired by Bill Clinton, but in practice is run by the U.S., especially USAID. In all of this, the blatant disregard for Haitian dignity and sovereignty, and the gross disrespect for Haitian people, are breathtaking. Nevertheless, except for a couple of underreported news stories about his problematic “relief” work or complicity in the country’s ongoing economic exploitation, Clinton remains, for most people here, Haiti’s golden boy.

It seems that he will continue to enjoy the spotlight. To add insult and irony to injury, Clinton was even recently awarded the Haitian “National Order of Honor and Merit to the rank Grand Cross” by the U.S.-selected government of Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly. This was "for his various initiatives in Haiti and especially his high contribution to the reconstruction of the country after the earthquake of January 12, 2010." No wonder Clinton can go around saying he is helping “these people,” helping to “liberate them from 200 years of misery.”

But for Haitians, Clinton’s “liberation” is more dehumanization. On Monday, October 22, 2012, Haiti was in the news again as the two Clintons arrived in the northern city of Cape Haitian to inaugurate the new Caracol Industrial Park. This park, funded with $124 million from US taxpayers (along with $105 million from the Inter-Development Bank), and located far away from the earthquake site, is a new factory complex designed to turn Haitians into sweatshop labor for foreign companies. The main tenant is the South Korean company, Sae-A Trading, which is supposed to pay Haitians a mere $3.65 a day to make products to ship abroad. This park was not well received by Haitians and other activists. But what’s most egregious is that it was built on fertile farmland that was scheduled for environmental protection and displaced hundreds of peasant farmers. As the blog, “Let Haiti Live” rightly argues, Caracol is basically “replacing durable economic activity with dependence on foreign factories.” But for the Clintons and their cronies like Sean Penn and Haitian puppet president, Michel Martelly, that’s exactly what they want for Haiti.

It is Haiti that needs to be liberated from Bill. Bill Clinton is no friend of democracy, fairness, and Black self-determination. His priorities in Haiti are self-serving. At best Clinton will amass great personal wealth and social capital as the front man for the U.S. and European business elites’ neoliberal economic exploitation of the island. At worst, he will continue to be celebrated as the benevolent liberal face of racist U.S. imperialism. Neither of these scenarios bodes well for Haiti.

Meanwhile, Haiti will continue to work for Bill Clinton.

Jemima Pierre can be reached at BAR1804@gmail.com.

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Then expect a rash of

Then expect a rash of mysterious cases of African leaders contracting CANCER...typical that the presstitute ignores the improbability of 5 current/former Latin leftist leaders who have recently been stricken with cancer...Ft. Detrick is really busy these days or should i say

I've heard a few reports saying there will be riots if Obama loses. One wonders if these stories are being planted by Team Obama and the Dems or by the right wing. Either side would benefit from a race riot, be it an authentic ruckus or a covert op initated by agent provacatuers: 1) With less enthusiastic Obamabots this time round, such rumors get the bleeple out in greater numbers to vote for Obama; 2) both Team Obama and the right wing can use a race riot as an excuse to gut even more civil liberties and continue the quest for a police state society.

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Thank you so much!

I couldn't let this opportunity pass and not thank you for all the knowledge you shared in this post!

"Eyes wide shut" is how I descibe my prior understanding of the Clintons until I began to critically think.  It's been a long, long walk to "getting it," I promise you!  But -- as long as I'm not waking up, "hittin wood" as I stretch, like my grandmother used to say, I'll keep learning!  This post, is yet another way for me to do just that.

"Once in office, he continued not only the same racist policy of forcibly repatriating Haitian—but not Cuban—refugees, but also their indefinite detention at the notoriously brutal Guantanamo prison."

My first, real "awakening," happened as an accidental, editorial columnist in South Florida.  On October 29, 2002, a 50-foot, wooden vessel ran aground about 500 yards from Miami.  Aboard were approximatly 200 Haitians, at sea for a number of days without food and water and weakened by those conditions.  To my horror, they began jumping and/or throwing their children overboard into 10-12 feet of water, hoping against hope to elude the Coast Guard vessels that had been following them for two hours -- and make it ashore.  Twenty-one of them had to be rescued from the water, and those who made it ashore, ran onto the busy, 6-lane Rickenbacker Causeway, trying desperately to stop motorists, hoping they could somehow escape the Border Patrol agents they knew would detain them.

It was then that I learned, and wrote about the "wet foot/ dry foot" policy of the 1966 Cuban Adjustment Act (and its 1999 "clarification" by then, INS Commissioner Doris Meissner), which automatically allowed Cubans to stay here if they were able to "touch U.S. soil" -- versus my Haitian brothers and sisters who'd risked the same, "life and limb," but were immediately taken to the Krome Detention Center and either, repatriated poste-haste, or held, interminably in inhumane conditions.

The "quiet riot" in my gut has never subsided.

But even then, though I knew the CAA was a carry-over from the Clinton era, my still-colonized mind, did not connect the dots (too ready and willing to blame Shrub and his party for sh*t I guess - much like what's going on now with Black folk re: Obama vs Romney!).

Thanx again so very much, for all the learnin' you continually provide here, my Sister.  Please don't stop educating us American Blacks, who have little, if any knowledge -- at all --about our brothers and sisters all over the world!  But for Black Agenda Report and writers like you, I'd still be living with my "eyes wide shut!"

Haitians need to consult with

Haitians need to consult with Cuba, Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia to find out how these nations got from under Uncle Sam's thumb.  If these countries can break free, Haiti can too.  It will take the mother of all grassroots efforts from the Haitian people and I long for the day when they've had enough of western oppression and will throw out their oppressors.



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