Latin America
Related: About this forumHumanitarian Occupation of Haiti: 100 Years and Counting
July 28, 2015
Humanitarian Occupation of Haiti: 100 Years and Counting
by Mark Schuller
This Tuesday marks the 100th anniversary of the commencement of the U.S. Occupation of Haiti. On July 28, 1915, U.S. Marines landed on the shores of Haiti, occupying the country for 19 years. Several college campuses, professional associations, social movements, and political parties are marking the occasion with a series of reflections and demonstrations. Several have argued that the U.S. has never stopped occupying Haiti, even as military boots left in 1934. Some activists are using the word humanitarian occupation to describe the current situation, denouncing the loss of sovereignty, as U.N. troops have been patrolling the country for over 11 years. The phrase humanitarian occupation may seem distasteful and even ungrateful to some considering the generosity of the response to the January 12, 2010 earthquake, however there are several parallels between the contemporary aid regime and the U.S. Marine administration. First and foremost, foreign troops are on the ground, controlling the country; the military regimes operated with complete immunity and impunity. Second, a new constitution was installed, centralizing power in the executive. Third, both occupations involved Haitis gold resources.
Military Maneuvers
The U.S. Marines invaded Haiti ostensibly to restore order, disrupted by the kako, an armed peasant resistance. From 1910 to the 1915 invasion of the U.S. Marines, Haiti had 7 presidents, marked with violent clashes between two factions of Haitis ruling elites. The exploits of the occupying forces were well documented, including by soldiers themselves. Faustin Wirkus declared himself to be the White King of La Gonave. Many troops were from Jim Crow South, and they took their racism and white supremacy with them. This racism colored how they saw elements of Haitian culture and folklore, and in turn how the rest of the world was to see Haiti. Voodoo and zombies were popularized by Hollywood, as the film industry was just taking off, announced by explicitly white supremacist Birth of a Nation. Haiti continued to play boogieman, scaring foreigners through exotification.
The U.S. Marines invaded Haiti ostensibly to restore order, disrupted by the kako, an armed peasant resistance. From 1910 to the 1915 invasion of the U.S. Marines, Haiti had 7 presidents, marked with violent clashes between two factions of Haitis ruling elites. The exploits of the occupying forces were well documented, including by soldiers themselves. Faustin Wirkus declared himself to be the White King of La Gonave. Many troops were from Jim Crow South, and they took their racism and white supremacy with them. This racism colored how they saw elements of Haitian culture and folklore, and in turn how the rest of the world was to see Haiti. Voodoo and zombies were popularized by Hollywood, as the film industry was just taking off, announced by explicitly white supremacist Birth of a Nation. Haiti continued to play boogieman, scaring foreigners through exotification.
Why would its mandate be renewed, following the 2006 elections that brought René Préval and his ruling Lespwa party to power? Colleagues in Haiti pointed out that the keyword stabilization refers to keeping the leaders in office and quelling dissent. In 2008, the country erupted in protest against the high cost of living; the so-called political class seized this opportunity to force the Prime Minister to resign. In 2009, activists mended fences over their conflict over Aristide to call for an increase in the minimum wage, from 70 gourdes a day ($1.75) to 200 ($5). Both houses of Parliament voted unanimously to approve it. In a report for which he spent only days in the country to write, Oxford economist Paul Collier outlined a strategy of tourism, export mango production, and subcontracted apparel factories and suggested Bill Clinton as U.N. Special Envoy. Clinton and newly-named U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with Préval in support of the Collier Report. Bill Clinton publicly questioned the minimum wage increase as undercutting Haitis comparative advantage, and WikiLeaked documents outlined intense pressure to keep wages low. Préval rejected the 200 gourdes increase, unconstitutionally writing in a figure of 125 gourdes (a little over $3) for workers in overseas apparel factories. Street-level demonstrations increased their intensity, and U.N. troops responded with increasing force. Certain areas of Port-au-Prince perennially smelled like tear gas at the time, more so than any period since the 2004 ouster of Aristide. MINUSTAH played a central role in suppressing dissent, taking a lead role instead of supporting the police, as their mandate dictates.
More:
http://www.counterpunch.org/2015/07/28/humanitarian-occupation-of-haiti-100-years-and-counting/
guillaumeb
(42,641 posts)An Unending Debt: Financial Neocolonialism in Haiti from 1825 through Today
Haiti, as is widely known, is the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere. Its health statistics resemble those of Sub Saharan Africa and 80% of its people live below the poverty line (CIA World Factbook). Like its peers in Sub Saharan Africa, Haiti struggles with the legacy of colonialism; unlike its peers, it has been a (nominally) free and independent nation for two hundred years. Though Haiti declared its independence in 1804 and had its sovereignty recognized by France in 1825, it is still a country bullied and controlled by outside powers, including France, the United States, and international financial institutions
In order to pay its debt to France, Haiti sought loans from other nations, mainly the United States, Germany, and France, pushing itself deeper into debt (von Tunzelmann 1). For instance, in 1922 the United States lent Haiti $40 million (during this time the U.S. occupied Haiti and New York banks took over the national bank and national treasury) (Farmer 2003 88). Thus the cycle of debt payment and new loans continued: the indemnity that had been imposed upon the Haitians forced them into a position in which they had to seek out loans from other nations, providing no relief from the crushing debt.
In 1947, Haiti finally finished paying off the debt, from the indemnity plus interest, to France(von Tunzelmann 1).
Read more:
https://globalsouth12.wordpress.com/an-unending-debt/