VIDEO: Amanda Diva

Friday, 17 December 2010

 Video: Amanda Diva "Manchild"

 


TECHNICOLOR LOVER EPISODE 9 from Creative Control on Vimeo.

I wasn't expecting to say it about an Amanda Diva video but I love this. I respect her accomplishments as a broadcaster, and the lovely down to earth (to the point of goofy) energy she gives off, but hadn't seen or heard anything artistically I could sink my teeth in to until now.

_______________________________

Windows Over Harlem

 

Def Poetry - Amanda Diva - 40 Emcees

 

PHOTO ESSAY: True Hip Hop of photographer Mike Schreiber > WUZZ MAG

Livre : True Hip Hop de Mike Schreiber




Depuis plus de 10 ans, le photographe new-yorkais Mike Schreiber shoote en noir et blanc les stars du hip-hop, (Mos Def, Nas, Common, P Diddy, etc...). Retrouvez ces clichés dans son nouveau livre, "True Hip-Hop", disponible sur Mike Schreiber.com.

 















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PUB: Bateau Press - Literary Magazine, Poetry, Flash Fiction, Plays, Graphic Narratives, Letterpress, Chapbook, Illustrations

Boom Chapbook Contest

Congrats to Jessica Young whose Only as a Body won our 4th annual Bateau chapbook contest.

Order Here.

The 5th Annual Boom Chapbook Contest will open 15 September 2010.

 

ELIGIBILITY

Open to all writers.

Age and previous book publication are not considerations for eligibility.

Poems published in periodicals may be included in the manuscript.                

Please, no submissions from students or close friends of the editors.

READING FEE

$12 entry fee must come with EACH entry by deadline or entries will not be considered.

Manuscripts will NOT be returned.

Pay online! You can pay by credit card or check online. (You still need to send in your check via postal mail. But by "paying" online, we can keep track of your transaction and manuscript much more efficiently.)

FORMAT

Manuscript format:

between 20 and 30 pages

must be typed (clear photocopies are fine)

(for mail submissions only) 2 title pages 1- title with contact info. 2- book title only

A biographical profile is not necessary.

****FOR ELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONS: There is no need to submit 2 title pages. Simply submit the manuscript with an anonymous title page online. Your contact info is with your submission (though the readers are not able to access this information).

COMPENSATION

The winner will receive $500 and copies of the winning chapbook.

The winning chapbook will be a high quality printing with letterpress cover.

To get a very good idea of the production, order any of our previous winners.

DEADLINE

Deadline for submission is a December 31, 2010 postmark.

SEND TO

Bateau Press

BOOM contest

POB 1584

Northampton MA 01061

QUESTIONS

info@bateaupress.org

 

PUB: In Barbados, 1st Annual Environmental Essay Contest « Repeating Islands

In Barbados, 1st Annual Environmental Essay Contest

The Graeme Hall Nature Sanctuary in Christ Church, Barbados, announced last month (November 30, 2010) the first Annual Environmental Essay Contest for students ages 9-18. The Contest deadline is February 19, 2011, and the winners will be invited to a special awards ceremony in March, 2011. 

Sponsored by the Canada-Barbados Environmental Youth Awards Program (CBEYA), the Essay Contest promises $4,000 in cash prizes for the top six winners, plus gift certificates for Honorable Mention winners.  It is an opportunity for students to develop and write their thoughts about the importance of the environment to Barbados, and an opportunity for the Graeme Hall Nature Sanctuary to provide public service.  Entry to the CBEYA Essay Contest requires an essay of 300-500 words, and the student writer must obtain the sponsorship of a teacher. 

For more information, you may write to news@graemehall.com; Official Rules and Entry Form can be found at http://www.graemehall.com/awards/essay-contest/

 

 

PUB: Poem of the Year Contest - ARC Poetry

Poem of the Year Contest

Arc: Canada’s National Poetry Magazine invites entries to its International Poem of the Year Contest.

Next Deadline: February 1, 2011

 

Contest Guidelines

Arc: Canada’s National Poetry Magazine invites entries to its International Poem of the Year Contest.


1st Prize: $1500

2nd Prize: $1000
3rd Prize: $750

Contest Entry:
Entry fee is $32, in Canadian funds, which entitles you to a one-year subscription of Arc mailed to a Canadian address, beginning with the Summer 2010 issue. (If you already have a subscription, you can give your new one-year subscription to a friend. Please include their mailing address.) Alternately, you can choose to have one issue sent to a U.S. or overseas address.

You can pay your contest entry fee online where we accept Visa, Mastercard, paypal, and e-cheques. Alternately, you can send a cheque or money order with your mailed contest submission.

Contest Rules:

  • All contest submissions must be submitted by post mail.
  • All cheques or money orders should be in Canadian funds and made out to the Arc Poetry Society.
  • Arc welcomes Poem of the Year entries from Canada, the United States, and around the world, but if you live outside Canada we still need to receive your entry fee in Canadian funds. It is easiest if you use the online payment option to submit your contest entry payment. Otherwise, you should be able to obtain a money order in Canadian funds from your post office, if you are not able to write a cheque in Canadian funds.
  • Entrants may submit up to two unpublished poems with your $32 fee. To include extra poems, add $5 per poem.
  • No e-mail submissions accepted.
  • Length of each poem must not
    exceed 100 lines.
  • Entrant’s name, address, e-mail
    and phone number must not appear on the poems, but instead on a separate
    sheet that also lists the titles of the poems entered. Judging is blind.
  • No entrants (including winners, honourable mentions, or authors of Editor’s Choice poems) may substitute, before, during, or after judging, a revision of any poem already submitted to the contest.
  • No poems will be returned.

Judging: Arc editorial consortium

Next Deadline: Entries must be postmarked
no later than February 1, 2011. All winners will be notified by April 15, 2011, and results will be published in the Summer 2011 issue of Arc.

Privacy Notice: Unless you indicate otherwise, Arc may share addresses of entrants to the 2010 Poem of the Year Contest with similar literary magazines or related organizations for promotional purposes. If you would like your address information kept private, write “Please don’t share my address” near your address information on the sheet you include with your submission. Your request will be honoured.

Shortlist: 50 shortlisted poems, pending permission of their authors, will be eligible for the Readers’ Choice Award. Visit this site between March 15 and April 15, 2011 to read poems contending for Readers’ Choice and cast your vote!

Publication: Winning poems will be published
in Arc’s Summer 2011 issue (published June 2011).

Send entries to:

Poem of the Year Contest

Arc Poetry Magazine

P.O. Box 81060

Ottawa, Ontario

Canada, K1P 1B1

 

 

OP-ED: Gone With the Myths - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributor

Gone With the Myths

Related in Opinion

Disunion

A series on America’s most perilous period, using contemporary accounts and historical assessments to follow the Civil War as it unfolded.

ON Dec. 20, 1860, 169 men — politicians and people of property — met in the ballroom of St. Andrew’s Hall in Charleston, S.C. After hours of debate, they issued the 158-word “Ordinance of Secession,” which repealed the consent of South Carolina to the Constitution and declared the state to be an independent country. Four days later, the same group drafted a seven-page “Declaration of the Immediate Causes,” explaining why they had decided to split the Union.

The authors of these papers flattered themselves that they’d conjured up a second American Revolution. Instead, the Secession Convention was the beginning of the Civil War, which killed some 620,000 Americans; an equivalent war today would send home more than six million body bags.

The next five years will include an all-you-can-eat special of national remembrance. Yet even after 150 years full of grief and pride and anger, we greet the sesquicentennial wondering, why did the South secede?

I can testify about the South under oath. I was born and raised there, and 12 men in my family fought for the Confederacy; two of them were killed. And since I was a boy, the answer I’ve heard to this question, from Virginia to Louisiana (from whites, never from blacks), is this: “The War Between the States was about states’ rights. It was not about slavery.”

I’ve heard it from women and from men, from sober people and from people liquored up on anti-Washington talk. The North wouldn’t let us govern ourselves, they say, and Congress laid on tariffs that hurt the South. So we rebelled. Secession and the Civil War, in other words, were about small government, limited federal powers and states’ rights.

But a look through the declaration of causes written by South Carolina and four of the 10 states that followed it out of the Union — which, taken together, paint a kind of self-portrait of the Confederacy — reveals a different story. From Georgia to Texas, each state said the reason it was getting out was that the awful Northern states were threatening to do away with slavery.

South Carolina: “The non-slaveholding states ... have denounced as sinful the institution of slavery” and “have encouraged and assisted thousands of our slaves to leave their homes.”

Mississippi: “Our position is thoroughly identified with the institution of slavery — the greatest material interest of the world. ... There was no choice left us but submission to the mandates of abolition, or a dissolution of the Union.”

Georgia: “A brief history of the rise, progress, and policy of anti-slavery and the political organization into whose hands the administration of the Federal Government has been committed will fully justify the pronounced verdict of the people of Georgia.”

Several states single out a special culprit, Abraham Lincoln, “an obscure and illiterate man” whose “opinions and purposes are hostile to slavery.” Lincoln’s election to the White House meant, for South Carolina, that “the public mind must rest in the belief that slavery is in the course of ultimate extinction.”

In other words, the only state right the Confederate founders were interested in was the rich man’s “right” to own slaves.

It’s peculiar, because “states’ rights” has become a popular refrain in Republican circles lately. Last year Gov. Rick Perry of Texas wondered aloud whether secession was his state’s right in the aftermath of laws out of Congress that he disliked.

In part because of this renewed rhetoric, in the coming remembrances we will likely hear more from folks who cling to the whitewash explanation for secession and the Civil War. But you have only to look at the honest words of the secessionists to see why all those men put on uniforms.

 

Edward Ball, the author of “Slaves in the Family,” is writing a biography of the photographer Eadweard Muybridge.

 

HAITI: Haiti's Poverty Is A Crime—Guess Who The Big Criminals Are

World Oil News Center

Haiti could have larger oil reserves than Venezuela

Amidst the utter devastation left in the wake of the earthquake that rocked Haiti on January 12th, new findings indicate the existence of 3 million barrels of oil in a shallow formation Offshore the island.

The Greater Antilles, which includes Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, Puerto Rico and their Offshore waters, probably hold at least 142 million barrels of oil and 159 billion cubic feet of gas, according to a 2000 report by the US Geological Survey. Undiscovered amounts may be as high as 941 million barrels of oil and 1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas, according to the report.

Among nations in the northern Caribbean, Cuba and Jamaica have awarded Offshore leases for oil and gas development. Trinidad & Tobago, South American islands off the coast of Venezuela, account for most Caribbean oil production, according to the US Energy Department.

According to French scientist Daniel Mathurin, “The Central Plateau, including the region of Thomond, the plain of the cul-de-sac and the bay of Port-au-Prince are filled with oil”. He added that “Haiti's oil reserves are larger than those of Venezuela . An Olympic pool compared to a glass of water that is the comparison to show the importance of oil Haitian compared to those of Venezuela.”

Mathurin also stated that “We have identified 20 sites Oil…5 of them are considered very important by practitioners and policies.”

President Hugo Chavez recently announced that he would write off the undisclosed sum Haiti owes Venezuela for oil as part of the ALBA bloc’s plans to help the impoverished Caribbean nation after the devastating January 12 earthquake.

“Haiti has no debt with Venezuela, just the opposite: Venezuela has a historical debt with that nation, with that people for whom we feel not pity but rather admiration, and we share their faith, their hope,” Chavez said after the extraordinary meeting of foreign ministers of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas, or ALBA.

He also announced that ALBA has decided on a comprehensive plan that includes an immediate donation of $20 million to Haiti’s health sector, and a fund that, Chavez said, will be at least $100 million ‘for starters.’

01/27/2010

____________________________________

The Two Haitis

There are two Haitis today: one where tourists play and another that is plagued by poverty and violence.

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HAITI ONCE HAD TOURISTS. NOW IT HAS GHOSTS

Naked children cling to a water taxi off of the shore of Labadie, a tropical wonder in the north of Haiti. 

Naked children cling to a water taxi off of the shore of Labadie, a tropical wonder in the north of Haiti.

Lucas Oleniuk/Toronto Star

 

Jennifer Wells

Feature Writer

LABADIE, HAITI

“A tourist got off a plane in Port-au-Prince, told immigration officials he was Miles Graham, 35, a dentist from Omaha. The Haitians looked right past his white cap, tight woolen shirt, dark glasses and absurd phony mustache and said: ‘Welcome, Marlon Brando.’”

The Time magazine People item that ran Sept. 28, 1959, was light on intimate details. Brando was in the company of ingénue actress France Nguyen — “lush” was Time’s description of the just-turned-20 Nguyen — who was starring on Broadway in The World of Suzie Wong. A Volkswagen Beetle was rented for getting around. (That will be an eyebrow raiser for those familiar with travelling throughout Haiti.) And the couple danced to the voodoo drums at the Bacoulou nightclub.

Perhaps the tumescent atmosphere didn’t need underscoring then, back in the day when Haiti was a tourist hot spot, a rum-soaked island getaway for romantics and sun-seekers, when lovers swam naked at Kyona Beach and dined at La Picardie in Port-au-Prince, as Brando and Nguyen did.

The journalist and author Bernard Diederich added those details in his book 1959: The Year that Inflamed the Caribbean. The arrival of Cuba’s Castro had caused the U.S. administration to look more favourably upon the murderous little man leading Haiti who conjured the voodoo gods sitting in his bath wearing a black top hat: Papa Doc Duvalier, that bulwark against Communism, as the rationalizing Americans saw it. Thus began a time, Diederich wrote, “of collective denial and frozen expressions . . . as if Medusa had magically turned us all, foreigners and Haitians alike, into stone.”

Still we stare.

Is it too obvious to state, all these years later, that this curiosity of a country is unnervingly destabilizing? What you see in Haiti, an observer told me, depends on where you’re standing. As incongruous as it sounds, a main plank of the country’s economic rehabilitation platform is tourism, which thrives next door in the Dominican Republic and is all but dead in Haiti, and that was before the earthquake, and before the cholera. Where can one possibly stand to get a clear-eyed view of that?

The Royal Caribbean ocean liner is sounding the retreat from its berth at Labadie on Haiti’s north coast.

I cannot determine whether the ship is Freedom of the Seas or Liberty of the Seas or Independence of the Seas, but it sure is big, a multi-storied floating city that can accommodate more than 3,500 passengers. The Oasis of the Seas holds 6,000. Could that be she?

Some of the passengers are waving from their state-room balconies, which is nice.

Abandoned in their wake is the zip line for the adventurers, the aqua park for kids and the beach chairs from which the indolent can order the Labaduzee, the Royal Caribbean’s signature frozen rum punch.

No, I can’t tell you what the Labaduzee tastes like. The beach is off limits to regular folk, cordoned off by sky-high wire fences. When the cruise line states in its tourism literature “Only Royal Caribbean can take you there,” they mean it quite literally. The promotional materials persist in locating Labadie “on the north coast of Hispaniola” — the land mass shared with the Dominican Republic — as if the word “Haiti” would give foreigners the jim-jams.

On this side of the fence, beguilingly decrepit tin-topped water taxis are humped up on the beach. They are painted in reds and blues and yellows, a welcoming sight for wanderers open more to adventure and less to private enclaves.

We are headed to Norm’s Place, one of those guest house names that gets tipped from traveler to traveler as a place you would rather be.

There is no road to Norm’s Place.

To get to Norm’s Place you have to walk up the two-step gangplank of one of these twee boats and putt-putt into the Atlantic Ocean, heading westward, momentarily dwarfed by the Royal Caribbean behemoth and those waving stick figures. As with the city tap-taps — the converted pickups that serve as private buses — the water taxis are emblazoned with comforting affirmations. In our case, La Main du Sauver.

Norm’s Place comes into view as an ancient, low stone guest house tucked in a cove. The grounds are flowered and treed. The bedrooms are scattered in outbuildings behind the main house. Four-poster beds are dressed in mosquito netting. The doors from the main house stand open to the ocean. The sunset is blushing in shades of apricot and goes exceptionally well with a Prestige beer in its stubby brown bottle with its cheery red label.

So this is Haiti. A pretty narrative at last, thank God.

Snap out of it.

“I used to sleep here the whole night when I was 18 years old. We would go swimming at four o’clock in the morning.”

Franck Madiou is rather mournfully tipping his head toward the western reaches of the beach. One doesn’t have to look far to note that what was a stretch of virgin sand — Madiou is holding up an ’80s-era photograph against the horizon — is defiled now by concrete buildings mere steps from the water’s edge. “For me this is a paradise,” he says, staring at the snapshot. He raises his eyes to the newer reality: “That is very ugly.”

There’s the usual tale of corruption and short-term thinking and serial local politicians with pocket-fattening agendas that don’t include, say, shoreline preservation.

When he was a young lad Madiou remembers holiday trips to Port-au-Prince. It was a 2 ½-hour drive from nearby Cap-Haïtien to the capital. Today the trip takes at least six, possibly seven, hours. We flew Salsa Air, an experience that involved extended delays on the way up and, eventually, the absence of our names on the return flight manifest. Photographer Lucas Oleniuk proposed a spirited branding line for the airline: “Why fly when you can dance?”

Back to Norm. “Norm” was Norman Zarchin, an American businessman who travelled through Haiti in the ’70s. Stayed. Started dealing in mahogany masks and sculptures. Fell in love, married Franck’s mother, Angelique.

Norm’s Place is Norm and Angelique’s joint labour of love. Norm died last year. Angelique is temporarily in the U.S., so Madiou is managing the joint.

Madiou’s story-telling takes a sharp corner and goes to what anywhere else would seem an inconceivably dark place. “I was born in Cap-Haïtien . . . 1965,” he says. The time of Papa Doc. His father’s name was Captain Serge Madiou. In the spring of 1967, Captain Madiou was found by the Haitian military’s Grand Tribunal in Port-au-Prince to have conspired with 18 other officers “with the intention of creating a climate of disorder and anarchy with the ultimate goal of a criminal attempt against the life of the Constitutional Chief-for-Life.” Each in the group was found guilty on two counts, mutiny and high treason, and ordered executed at Fort-Dimanche, the dungeon of death where more than 3,000 Haitians were disappeared in the Duvalier years.

The mind snaps and zaps as Madiou recounts the stories he has heard. The prisoners were given food too hot to eat with only 30 seconds to get the gruel down. So they threw their plates against the jail cell walls — “plat,” he says, trying to verbalize what that might sound like — and ate their dinner as it ran in rivers to the stone floor.

He believes his father spent no more than two weeks in Fort-Dimanche. He was told his father instructed his fellow officers: “Do not bend your knee before Duvalier.” He believes his father spat in the face of the bespectacled Chief-for-Life. He believes — and there is some documented support for this — that his father was executed by Duvalier personally.

Madiou was 2. His father’s photo is on his cellphone.

This was meant to be a story about tourism. One gets used to the curlicues of the Haitian reality. Just as I’m expecting a buildup to a thunderous indictment of the Duvalier years, Madiou weaves. “I can tell you the dictatorship of Duvalier was very hard. But under Duvalier’s system we live better. . . . The only thing you have to do is, don’t interfere with political affairs. That way you can send your children to school. You can eat. You have a house or a home. It was better.”

What you see depends on where you’re standing.

I see young laughing, naked boys splish-splashing in the warm ocean waters, hanging off the bows of the water taxis. I go swimming too, with an American backpacker we have picked up on our travels. A fisherman poles slowly alongside and asks if we would like him to bring us conch for dinner. Tip: if you come here and would like to have lobster for dinner, you need to order it early in the day.

Visiting Cap Haïtien in October, 2009, Bill Clinton, then the newly appointed UN special envoy to Haiti, enthused about the prospects for tourism. “I love this place,” he said. “It’s wonderful. I see the potential.”

There is potential. There’s Jacmel with its cultural vibrancy, even if it isn’t the St.-Tropez of the Caribbean as once hoped. More promising is the area further west on the south coast: Les Cayes, Ile-a-Vache. Port-Salut with its beaches. Port-a-Piment with its caves.

But if a tourism plan is to work, it has to work in Cap-Haitien.

Come.

The cicadas are singing so loudly in unison, one can barely hear the clopping of the horses as they head up the stone path to the Citadelle La Ferrière.

Wusses ride horses. Better to walk up the steep incline and pledge not to stop for little rests. It’s harder than it looks.

Situated just south of the Cap, the Citadelle is a UN world heritage site, the landscape is green and glorious, and the experience is as historically gratifying as a trip to any of those French chateaux.

The French. Henri Christophe, who fought in the revolutionary battle under Toussaint L’Ouverture, built the fort so he could put down the French, should they ever return. He declared himself King Henri I, ruler of Haiti’s northern region, and he had bronze and iron cannon hauled up here by human chain to help reinforce the point.

The French never came. Cannonballs remain stacked on site, the breeze drifts languorously across the grounds, and toilets installed prior to completion of the fort in 1813 still do the job: lift the wooden lid and observe the 40-metre open-air descent to the ground. Children would love it.

There are no children. A half-dozen visitors drift about the great stony stairs sucking in the vistas that never end. The grounds of Christophe’s Sans Souci Palace are similarly barren. There are no buyers for the straw hats that blanket the little market area just outside the palace grounds. There’s no one to listen to the tale of an ailing and embattled Christophe killing himself by means of a silver bullet to the heart.

Wait. A tiny gathering of horse-backed tourists approaches. A boozy-looking fellow is teetering side to side, managing to hold a cigarette and a beer in one hand, a sandwich in the other. The little pageant quickly passes.

Twenty years ago, visitors would come by the carload from the DR, says Eduardo Almeida, country manager for the Inter-American Development Bank. For the IADB, tourism is a small, but fundamental, part of its plan for development in the country’s north. “If we focus here we will be able to make a tremendous difference,” he says. “Every week Royal Caribbean stops at Labadie with 6,000 people. . . . So let’s say that 10 per cent of these people would be willing to spend $100. $60,000 a week, $3 million a year. Three million dollars in a region that is totally poor. That’s a lot.”

There are no visitors poised on the underwater sapphire blue bar stools at the Karibe Hotel. It is too cool at this time of year for in-pool drinking.

But the hotel is full. “We mostly have reconstruction wheelers and dealers coming in,” says Richard Buteau, whose family owns the Karibe and the Kinam and the Ritz apartment hotel, all in Port-au-Prince.

The Buteaus have been in the hotel business in Haiti for 80 years, starting with Aux Cosaques, an auberge that Buteau’s grandfather built above the capital in Kenscoff as a cooling getaway. As a young boy Buteau’s father was given the task of priming the oil lamps every Sunday.

That boy would go on to create Le Rond Point, a restaurant near the port, where tourism in the capital really started. “It was the place to be,” says Buteau.

On Tuesday, the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission will once again descend on the Karibe to outline more go-forward plans for the country.

Tourism isn’t the kind of story that draws much press. Buteau, not surprisingly, sees it as a linchpin. “But you need to have people with a vision who believe tourism is an alternative to poverty,” he says. “Even Fidel Castro, one of the biggest leaders in the Caribbean, who threw away capitalism and the tourism industry with his revolution, has realized that if he wants his people to get out of poverty he has to consider tourism as an option.”

Tourism is complicated. “It’s easier to have a textile industry,” Buteau continues. Tourism demands non-stop electricity, water, roads, hospitals, security. But rather than seeing those gaping inadequacies as impediments, Buteau sees tourism as a driver to help force change. Environmental protectionism is in there, too. “Once you bring an economic value to something the people start protecting it rather than destroying it.” Unquestionably, a strong tourism sector is a cultural boost, something that Haiti deserves to benefit from.

Funny, but as we sit behind the hotel on the enormous grounds I realize how quiet it is. Where’s the music? “You put Haitian music next to them, they get annoyed.” He’s talking about the wheeler dealers.

He champions developing the industry in hubs, like the north. “You cannot solve all the problems of Haiti but you can decide, well, we’re going to take that region and we’re going to do a success story there and we’re going to make it happen.” Other hubs would ignite, he believes, if just one success could be proved.

At the end of our conversation we walk through the Karibe lobby. There are photos of Aux Cosaques and Le Rond Point hanging on a wall by the bar. “The good old days,” he says, breezing away to his next appointment.

>via: http://www.thestar.com/haiti/economic/article/908715--haiti-once-had-tourists...

____________________________________

 

Justice for Haiti: Beyond Aid and Debt Forgiveness

by COHA Research Associate Ethan Katz and Visiting Scholar Daniel Boscov-Ellen

Over the last few months there has been a surfeit of talk in the international community over what should be done for Haiti. However, in almost all of these discussions Haiti’s historical context is completely excised – it is almost as if the country had only come into being as a result of January’s earthquake. This collective amnesia is damning. The hurricanes of 2008 and the recent earthquake brought unfathomable damage upon Haiti, but their effects have been greatly exacerbated by Haiti’s widespread poverty, lack of adequate public infrastructure, food insecurity and an utterly bleak horizon. Unlike the hurricanes and earthquake, these are not natural phenomena. The devastating nature of these natural disasters cannot be understood apart from over two centuries of Haiti’s colonial and postcolonial subjugation, foreign occupation, economic exploitation and the degrading conditions faced by most of its population.

If one chooses wisely (and not selectively), one can learn from Haiti’s history in order to assure that this cycle of oppression, destitution, and destruction is not repeated. As a first step, providing Haiti with unconditional disaster relief on an urgent basis remains critical. However, so long as the developed countries that played such a significant role in creating Haiti’s present ruinous political and economic conditions continue to ignore and evade their responsibility for Haiti’s impoverishment, the country will remain vulnerable. Recognition of and restitution for past wrongs, coupled with an authentic commitment to end the sabotage and exploitation of this tortured nation, would be the best way to help Haiti achieve the stability and freedom to determine its own future.

Regrettably, such a recognition rarely can be found in the mainstream reporting on Haiti’s situation. In the words of Noam Chomsky, “the facts are extensively documented, appalling, and shameful. And they are deemed irrelevant for the usual reasons: they do not conform to the required self-image, and so are efficiently dispatched deep into the memory hole…” However, if we are to talk in good faith about what must be done for Haiti, we must first confront what we already have rendered there.

From Columbus to Napoleon 
The Spanish were the first Europeans to land on present day Haiti, arriving in 1492 on Christopher Columbus’ first voyage. Columbus named the island La Española, from which the Latinized Hispaniola was derived. At that time, there were an estimated one million Taínos living there and on the surrounding islands. Columbus launched a devastating military campaign against the indigenous peoples, and within a few decades the Taínos population had been utterly decimated, scarcely numbering in the thousands. Diseases such as smallpox, forced labor in the mines and fields and tributes of gold demanded by the Spaniards took a fearful toll on the indigenous population.

The French did not arrive to Haiti until 1625. They eventually were ceded the western third by the Spanish in 1697, upon the signing of the Treaty of Ryswick, which ended the Nine Years’ War waged between the two colonial rivals. The result was a divided Hispaniola consisting of the separate colonies of Santo Domingo and Saint-Domingue. French Saint-Domingue quickly became the most profitable colonial possession in the world. This wealth, though, was only made possible by the forced labor of more than 800,000 slaves brought from Africa in chains to work on giant sugar and coffee plantations. At the time of the American Revolution, Saint-Domingue was estimated to be more profitable than all thirteen American colonies combined. During the French Revolution, the colony was the world’s leading source of coffee, produced roughly 75% of the world’s sugar and supplied about two-thirds of Europe’s tropical produce.

This lavish productivity came at a terrible price. Conditions on Saint-Domingue’s plantations were especially harsh, and the white slave-owners, who were outnumbered by slaves at least by 10 to 1, resorted to spectacular cruelty and violence to keep their slaves tractable. The environment eventually became so intolerable that a slave rebellion erupted in 1791. After 13 years of struggle, gens de couleur and affranchis under the leadership of Toussaint L’Ouverture and Jean-Jacques Dessalines liberated Saint-Domingue from the French, thus establishing Haiti as the first free black republic in modern history.

As opposed to the rhetorical notions of liberty of nations such as France and the United States, both of which still tolerated slavery at the time, “Only in Haiti was the declaration of human freedom universally consistent,” writes Peter Hallward. “Only in Haiti was this declaration sustained at all costs, in direct opposition to the social order and economic logic of the day. Only in Haiti were the consequences of this declaration – the end of slavery, of colonialism, of racial inequality – upheld in terms that directly embraced the world as a whole.” Indeed, as Paul Farmer points out, Haiti “declared itself a haven not only for all runaway slaves but also for indigenous people,” though few were to be found after the French-led genocide.

Shorn of respect
In response to their defeat and subsequent expulsion, the French placed an embargo on Haiti, fearful that its successful fight for independence might encourage slaves elsewhere to demand their freedom. Almost all of the world’s powers shared this apprehension, including the United States, which sided with France and refused to recognize Haiti’s independence. As a Senator from South Carolina explained it at the time, “Our policy with regard to Haiti is plain. We never can acknowledge her independence… the peace and safety of a large portion of our union forbids us even to discuss it.” Similarly, in a letter to then-Secretary of State James Madison, French Foreign Minister Charles Talleyrand decried Haiti as “a horrible spectacle for all white nations.” The embargo, supported by the United States, remained in place until 1825. Given that virtually all of Haiti’s economy was based on the export of tropical produce and sugar, the embargo was utterly crippling.

Strangled by the embargo imposed by France and the U.S. and under the threat of military invasion, Haiti acquiesced to Paris’ demands for reimbursement for the losses resulting from the Haitian Revolution (demands supported by the United States). From land to the value of the slaves themselves, to the exorbitant sum of 150 million gold francs, France sought reparations. Consider for a moment the severity of these demands in light of the fact that the Louisiana territory, nearly thirty times the size of the entire island of Hispaniola, was sold by the French to Thomas Jefferson for a mere 60 million francs and the cancellation of 18 million francs worth of French debt. In fact, Haiti was a mainstay of Napoleon’s ambitions in the Western hemisphere and the loss of it played a decisive role in the monarch’s decision to relinquish its huge North American territory.
Thus Haiti’s slave revolt, won at tremendous cost, actually had the unforeseen consequence of doubling the size of the United States. The U.S. repaid Haiti by supporting the embargo and France’s decades-long extortion of the impoverished island.

While the amount Haiti “owed” to France was later reduced to 90 million francs in 1838, it would take the nation the next 122 years to repay the debt, primarily by way of loans from French and other European banks. One third of these loans came from France itself, at a rate of 6% interest. Demands, most recently made by then-President Aristide in 2004, that these funds (estimated by Aristide at $21 billion, adjusted for inflation and with 5% interest) be returned to Haiti were scornfully dismissed at the time by French authorities. Yet Aristide’s estimate may in fact be on the low side – another recent calculation found that if Haiti were to charge 7.5% interest, France would owe $4 trillion today. Considering the fact that the embargo and subsequent extortion permanently submerged Haiti’s previously profitable economy, leaving the nation under a dark and suffocating economic shadow that persists to this day, perhaps this is not an unreasonable rate.

Wilsonian idealism?
The story of 20th century Haiti will be sadly familiar for students of Latin American history. It took the U.S. until 1862 (shortly after the outbreak of its own Civil War) to recognize Haiti’s independence and eventually to appoint Frederick Douglass as Foreign Minister in 1889. But in 1915, the U.S. again rejected Haitian autonomy under the principles of the Monroe Doctrine and Roosevelt Corollary, which were used to justify intervention. At the time, Germany controlled roughly 80% of Haiti’s international trade and was making strong inroads into the nation’s utilities and overall infrastructure, while both France and Britain represented their own interests in the country. Haiti’s proximity to the Windward Passage, which was significant as a shipping route joining the newly completed Panama Canal and the Atlantic Ocean, and the country’s general political and economic instability convinced the U.S. that more active intervention on the island had become a necessity.

On July 28, 1915, President Woodrow Wilson sent in troops to protect U.S. commercial interests and prevent further foreign interference in Haiti, or elsewhere in the hemisphere. Wilson’s intervention in Haiti was reminiscent of his prior invasion of Mexico, and was a harbinger of subsequent forays into the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Panama, Nicaragua, and Mexico again (10 more times in all by the end of his presidency) – interventions which made possible the rise of the age of dictators – Batista, Trujillo, the Duvaliers, and the Somozas. The U.S. perception of Haiti at the time was perhaps best expressed in the words of then-Secretary of State and three-time presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan: “Dear me, think of it…Niggers speaking French.”

The U.S. began its occupation by installing the Haitian president of the Senate as head of state in a snap election in August of 1915. Within two months a treaty was signed to legalize the U.S. occupation for the next 20 years. Haiti’s finances and entire government apparatus were placed in U.S. hands. Even its army was disbanded in favor of a 3,000-man marine force under the control of the Secretary of the State. Historians at times have defended the U.S. occupation by citing the construction of infrastructure and public works during this period. While it is true that significant progress was made in these respects, such good works were incidental development and held little long term significance. Progress was accomplished only through the institution of a corvée, requiring the forced labor of those who could not buy their way out of such service.

Conditions deteriorated to such a degree that a revolt was undertaken by the Cacos, nationalist peasant militias to be found in the mountainous north, who were opposed to the occupation and the corvée. After an unsuccessful initial attempt to repel the American invaders, the Cacos regrouped and carried on a stronger campaign of resistance in 1918, in which they were led by Charlemagne Masséna Péralte, a former politician and general in the National Army, who had escaped from imprisonment after being apprehended during the original failed revolt. The Cacos, numbering in the thousands, were so successful that they began to establish a parallel government in the northern part of the country, which had remained largely under their control. Eventually, two raids on Port-au-Prince failed, and Péralte was killed after being betrayed by a cunning Haitian spy. Not long after, the same fate befell Péralte’s successor and the insurgency was at an end.

It is estimated that, by the time the Marines departed in 1934, they were responsible for the deaths of between 15,000 and 30,000 Haitians. Accusations of abuses of power during the occupation led the U.S. Senate to hold an “Inquiry into the occupation and administration of Haiti and Santo Domingo” in 1921. Although the New York Times reported that “the committee found that on the whole American administration in Haiti had been of great benefit to the Haitians and was so regarded, it said, by a vast majority,” the testimony heard in the Senate did not entirely support this cheerful evaluation. Roger L. Farnham, Vice-President of the National City Bank of New York (which owned the National Bank of the Republic of Haiti and which eventually became part of Citibank), provided a damning description of Washington’s occupation of Haiti to the Senate Committee:

The Occupation was always drifting in the absence of any policy in Washington. As far as I know nothing was ever done for the economic rehabilitation of the country, the establishment of schools generally, the development of agriculture, or the development of the capacity of the Haitian people for self-government. The Occupation was a failure and, when I say a failure, I mean the failure of the United States Government. Washington, not Port au Prince, was to blame.

Understanding the implications of the U.S. occupation is imperative if one wants to understand the trajectory of 20th century Haiti. Perhaps the greatest legacy of the occupation was the role of the military, which persisted as the central locus of power in Haiti until President Aristide abolished it in 1995. The Haitian military historically functioned as a means of controlling, intimidating, and assuring the obedience of the poor. As Paul Farmer points out, “from its founding during the U.S. occupation until it was demobilized by Aristide, the Haitian army has never known a non-Haitian enemy. Internal enemies, however, it had aplenty.” Haiti remained an authoritarian military-police state from the beginning of the U.S. occupation, through the rule of the U.S.-backed anti-Communist Duvalier dictatorships, until the direct military rule that ended with Aristide’s first election in 1990.

It’s the economy, stupid
The U.S. legacy of military rule is directly related to another anti-democratic legacy: economic intervention. In 1917, Haiti’s legislature was dissolved to prevent the adoption of a Haitian-authored constitution, thus paving the way for a U.S.-drafted document that reversed the prohibition on foreign ownership of land that had been in effect since Dessalines. The new constitution was passed by a public referendum – the final tally an impressive 98,225 to 768. Needless to say, this “decision” opened the door for nearly a century of economic exploitation by the United States. Given that U.S.-championed economic policies benefited only the Haitian elite and foreign businesses and was not backed up by any sort of popular support, this exploitation was accomplished through the usual means: direct military intervention, overt support for dictators, and the covert training, funding, and arming of paramilitary forces.

The growing new oligarchy, whose origins date back to the reversal of the ban on foreign ownership of land, found the military to be an excellent incubator for investment. Marine General Smedley Butler, who had dissolved the National Assembly when it refused the U.S.-authored constitution, bragged that he “helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in.” And indeed it was – in 1926, a business paper in New York described Haiti as “a marvelous opportunity for American investment . . . the run-of-the-mill Haitian is handy, easily directed, and gives a hard day’s labor for 20 cents, while in Panama the same day’s work cost $3.” While it is true that public infrastructure (such as roads, bridges, and hospitals) and investment made significant strides forward during this period, the new wealth was created on the backs of the poor through the corvée and was concentrated in the elite classes, which were aligned with the military.

The symbiotic relationship between the growing oligarchy and the military continued after the official end of the U.S. occupation. For example, the Tonton Macoutes, the roughly 10,000 murderous thugs that reported directly to the Duvaliers, took advantage of the military infrastructure left behind after the Marines exited in 1934. Through the use of terror, the Macoutes assured the obedience of the slums as Jean-Claude Duvalier opened the country for foreign investment by imposing “minimal taxes, a virtual ban on trade unions, the preservation of starvation wages, [and] the removal of any restrictions on the repatriation of profits.” True, private investment soared during this period: in 1967 there were less than 10 foreign firms in Haiti, but by 1990 this number had increased to 300. But a further stake was driven between the plight of the poor and the wealth of the rich by the neoliberal reforms (or as Haitians call them, “death plans”) imposed by the International Monetary Fund, which began to hit the island in the 1970s and were accelerated in the 1980s. GDP per capita dropped from approximately $750 in the ’60s, to just over $600 in 1990, and well under $500 in 1994.

The rise of Aristide
In 1990, after several failed elections in which the military gunned down those who lined up for the polls, Haiti finally held its first free and fair democratic ballot. Jean-Bertrand Aristide, enemy of military rule and preacher of liberation theology, won by a landslide, with 67% of the vote (with eleven other candidates on the ballot) and with a greater than 80% rate of participation. As a preacher, Aristide was a vocal champion for the poor: in an interview in 1988, he affirmed that: “The solution is revolution, first in the spirit of the Gospel; Jesus could not accept people going hungry. It is a conflict between classes, rich and poor. My role is to preach and organize. They can kill a thousand people but they can’t kill everybody. Only with a conversion of the heart will come a change in social structure.”

Aristide and his loose-knit political coalition, Lavalas, advocated “growth with equity” – and given his concern for equity, Father Aristide was strongly opposed to the neoliberal policies being imposed on countries throughout the region. Although he had the overwhelming support of the Haitian people, and even the initial blessing of institutions like the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank, Aristide’s victory was not celebrated in the U.S. As Chomsky writes, “Washington was appalled by the election of a populist candidate with a grass-roots constituency just as it had been appalled by the prospect of the hemisphere’s first free country on its doorstep two centuries earlier.”

Concerned about the “the ‘virus’ effect of successful independent development,” the first Bush administration reacted to Aristide’s election by withdrawing its aid to Port-au-Prince and funding opposition groups – those almost entirely composed of Haiti’s business elites and members of the military, who already were responsible for the torture and death of countless Haitians. After a failed coup in January of 1991, the army, led by General Raoul Cédras, seized power in September. Following the coup, the CIA then played an integral role in creating, funding and arming a vicious paramilitary group, FRAPH (Front for the Advancement and Progress of Haiti), to maintain the ascendency of the junta and eliminate resistance. Framed as a “political balance” to Lavalas and commanded by CIA asset Emmanuel “Toto” Constant, FRAPH brought state terror in the country to new heights (the most infamous example of which was the Raboteau massacre of April 1994), killing thousands of civilians and forcing hundreds of thousands more to flee. Although Constant theoretically is wanted for the death of between 4,000 and 5,000 people and was petitioned by Haitian authorities to be made to return to Haiti, the Department of Justice denied the request on the contrived grounds that he would not receive a fair trial if returned there. Both Presidents Clinton and Bush II have also refused to extradite him “because he would reveal [further] U.S. ties to the murderous junta, it is widely assumed.” While in November of 2000 Constant was convicted for his role in the Raboteau massacre in absentia by a Haitian court, he is currently incarcerated in New York for mortgage fraud.

Not satisfied with merely facilitating Aristide’s removal and essentially looking the other way as the junta ruled by terror, the CIA’s Brian Latell went so far as to prepare a completely fabricated intelligence briefing for Senator Jesse Helms, alleging that Aristide had received treatment at a psychiatric hospital in Montreal in 1980. In fact, however, Aristide was in Israel at the time studying Hebrew. This justified the Republican senator to describe Aristide as a “psychopath” and running a vicious smear campaign against him. Although the CIA’s report has been completely discredited (the hospital denied ever treating him), Aristide’s policies must indeed have seemed crazy to Washington. Despite crippling economic interference, outside connivance and plots against his presidency, his accomplishments still managed to include some impressive political feats: greatly expanding access to health care and education for the poor, reducing illiteracy from 85% to 55%, improving the judicial system, dissolving the repressive Haitian military, more than doubling the minimum wage, creating community stores and restaurants to drive down prices and reduce malnutrition, and implementing agricultural reforms to help Haiti’s impoverished farmers.

In the wake of the coup against Aristide, the OAS declared an embargo against Haiti’s military rulers. However, Bush announced that he would be making an exception for all U.S. corporations in the country, and in fact under Clinton, trade with the junta greatly increased. Indeed, the Clinton administration knowingly undermined one of the most important aspects of the embargo – the restriction on oil shipments. This was accomplished by secretly authorizing Texaco “to ship oil to the junta, in violation of presidential directives,” even as the CIA was testifying to Congress that the junta “probably will be out of fuel and power very shortly,” and proclaiming that their intelligence efforts were “focused on detecting attempts to circumvent the embargo and monitoring its impact.” In another revealing violation of the embargo, FRAPH was provided significant quantities of weapons from the U.S. through Miami. Even as President Clinton denounced Cédras and his cohorts as “armed thugs,” the U.S. was helping to keep the junta in power. When Cédras later agreed to resign, the U.S. awarded him at least $1 million and even agreed to rent out his three homes in Haiti for him while he was in exile in Panama.

The result of this deceptive strategy employed by the Clinton administration was that the U.S. was able to make a show of returning Aristide to power and “restoring democracy” in 1994, while simultaneously compelling him to accept the terms set by Washington for reinstating him. Aristide was forced to adopt a neoliberal economic program which was unpopular among all Haitians but the business elite. The U.S.-backed candidate in the 1990 elections who campaigned on a similar platform won just 14% of the vote, even though the U.S. contributed $36 million to his campaign.

Under the “Paris Plan,” which promised a package of aid to Haiti totaling $770 million and paved a way for Aristide’s return, “tariffs were to be ‘drastically’ reduced, wages frozen, around half of the civil service to be laid off, and all nine of Haiti’s remaining public utilities . . . were to be sold off.” Aristide fought hard to soften these harsh provisions, successfully negotiating progressive clauses to be inserted in the pending agreement to limit the damage and ensure some help for Haiti’s poor. For instance, the plan specified that the privatization of utilities “must be implemented in a way that will prevent increased concentration of wealth within the country.” Had the Paris Plan been implemented as Aristide negotiated it, it might not have been disastrous. However, as soon as he returned to Haiti, “the U.S. and [international financial institutions] put huge pressure on his government to abandon all of the social conditions and compensations that has just been agreed to in Paris, and threatened to suspend the disbursement of the promised funds unless he moved forward with the immediate and unadulterated privatization of state assets.”

The results were typical of such neoliberal reforms: the agricultural sector was decimated by cheap imports of subsidized produce from the U.S. This drove Haitian farmers off their land, created widespread hunger and caused the loss of agricultural autonomy, a problem exacerbated by illegal “dumping” of surplus products from the U.S. Take, for example, rice, cornerstone of the ordinary Haitians diet. Under the Paris Plan, Haiti’s rice tariffs were cut from 35% to 3%. Imports of rice from the U.S., humanitarian donations not withstanding, increased by more than a factor of 30 between 1985 and 2002. By 2005, rice dumping from the U.S. accounted for 75% of all rice in Haiti. Since two-thirds of Haitians relied on farming for their income, such changes were particularly damaging. Many farmers and peasants, driven out of business by these policies, moved to shanty towns in and around Port-au-Prince, where the population exploded from 760,000 in the early 1980s to around 3 million in January of 2010. Haiti was already one of the poorest countries in the world, but the Paris Plan’s corporate-friendly program, which focused on helping “Civil Society” and the “more open, enlightened business class,” exacerbated the situation by placing emphasis on privatization and opening Haiti to market forces, hamstringing Aristide’s efforts to alleviate the country’s poverty.

Clinton’s mea culpa
Recently, Clinton admitted that strategy “may have been good for some of my farmers in Arkansas, but it has not worked. It was a mistake.” These policies, which brought on the bargain-based sell-off of subsistence farm plots to large landholders were supported by only a very small percentage of the Haitian population (the same ones who benefited), and would never have been put in place had the removal of Haiti’s democratically elected leader not been an objective of U.S. policy. Yet Chomsky points out that the American press described Clinton’s show of returning Aristide as “‘restoring democracy,’ a prime illustration of how U.S. foreign policy has entered a ‘noble phase’ with a ‘saintly glow.’” A more accurate interpretation of events is that after secretly supporting, or at least doing nothing to prevent the ouster of a democratically elected and immensely popular president, Clinton and his advisers took advantage of the crisis to impose programs of economic architecture friendly to U.S. business interests while capitalizing politically on his return.

Along with the neoliberal reforms, drastic cuts in Haiti’s aid further impeded efforts to lift the country out of its desperate poverty. Just a few weeks after Aristide’s return, Congressional Republicans, who were uniformly opposed to the Haitian president and greeted him with great enmity, worked to block aid to Haiti. By May 2000, all direct U.S. aid to Haiti was suspended. According to Paul Farmer, “the cuts in bilateral aid and the diversion of monies to the opposition meant there could be, in a country as poor as Haiti, little effort to build schools, health care infrastructure, roads, ports, telecommunications, or airports.”

Although assistance to the Haitian government was suspended, aid to Aristide’s opposition flowed freely – between 2000 and 2003, opposition-linked NGOs received an average of $68 million a year from USAID. It is a sad irony that most of the money that was guaranteed to Aristide (and for which he made such painful concessions in the Paris Plan) was put to the use of further undermining his government through the IFIs, USAID and NED, and various NGOs that were “pro-elite, pro-US, as well as pro-business private sector groups whose political opposition to Lavalas was already explicit.” For example, in a classic implementation of Washington newspeak, USAID began a program of “Democratic Enhancement,” with the goal of “assist[ing] political parties develop (sic) the necessary political skills and organization to compete effectively at the local, municipal, legislative, and national level.” But in fact, the program was designed to “fund those sectors of the Haitian political spectrum where opposition to the Aristide government could be encouraged.” The International Republican Institute (“Advancing Democracy Worldwide”), funded by the State Department, USAID, and the Reagan-minted National Endowment for Democracy, had a similar euphemistic goal: to “foster a level political playing field for smaller opposition parties.”

The interesting thing here is the strange definition of democracy – it seems that helping to amplify the voice and influence of an elite affluent minority to override the clearly expressed wishes of Haiti’s poor majority hardly constitutes “enhancing democracy.” Of course, often, democracy has simply designated that which is in the interest of the United States, so perhaps the deployment of the term here should not be surprising. The Haitian elite, which had received funds from the U.S., adopted the same twisted terminology as used by Washington, eventually forming an opposition coalition called the Democratic Convergence. The DC, a coalition of around 200 political groups united in their opposition to Aristide, who had became the only major candidate in the 2000 elections. Knowing that they would be swapped in a landslide, anti-Aristide politicians sat out the election under the pretense of protesting a few disputed congressional election outcomes. Thus, in November 2000, Aristide was reelected with 92% of the vote under the now institutionalized political party of Fanmi Lavalas. Despite the fact that he was the only major candidate on the ballot, two USAID-commissioned Gallup polls found that the turnout for the election was around 61%, thus validating Aristide’s victory.

That same year, George W. Bush, although at first failing to win his reelection, was installed as president of the United States by a conservative Supreme Court. The Bush II administration, together with his team from the days of the Reagan and Bush I presidencies (including Otto Reich, Elliot Abrams, John Negroponte and Roger Noriega), proved to be an even greater foe of Aristide and his populist following than his father’s or even Clinton had been. Not content only to cut off U.S. aid, in 2001, Bush’s team worked to block international aid to Haiti, secretly (and illegally) getting the Inter-American Development Bank to institute a funding freeze. Nevertheless, the IDB continued to require Haiti to pay interest on their loans, even though it would not disburse any new funds.

In fact, in 2003, Haiti was forced to send “over 90% of all its foreign reserves to Washington to pay these arrears,” despite the fact that no new aid money would be forthcoming. This freeze had a huge impact on a country which was already the poorest in the Western hemisphere, with 78% living on $2 a day or less by 2001. Haiti also, thanks largely to the past role of the U.S. military and economic interventions, came to be one of the most unequal countries in the world, with a handful of elite owning a disproportionate share of the country’s wealth. The IDB’s economic freeze amounted, in essence, to “the world’s most powerful nations joining forces to block aid and humanitarian assistance to one of its poorest.”

The IDB freeze, combined with the onerous interest payments on the country’s debt, made any investments in public infrastructure by Haiti’s authorities all but impossible. While whatever precious funds Haiti may have had flowed to foreign creditors, there was no budget available for health care, education, or infrastructure – facts which are highly relevant when talking about the impact of the recent earthquake. The IDB funding freeze remained in place until 2004 when, after allowing for the arming and training of anti-Aristide paramilitary forces and countenancing a rebellion led by ex-military man and former police chief Guy Philippe and former FRAPH deputy commander Louis-Jodel Chamblain, the U.S. sent military personnel to scatter Aristide’s privately hired security forces. This was meant to intimidate President Aristide into boarding a chartered plane to fly him to the Central African Republic which was to provide asylum. He was not told where he was being taken until an hour before landing. It should be noted that just before the paramilitary renegades entered Port-au-Prince and were bearing down on a defenseless Aristide, the Haitian president beseeched the Clinton administration for anti-riot gear, a request the White House summarily turned down. The U.S. still denies involvement, but its version of events has been thoroughly discredited by a number of blatant inconsistencies as well as by eyewitness accounts which tell a different story. As a result of the two U.S.-backed coups alone, more than 13,000 Haitians lost their lives. Since Aristide’s removal, most of his administration’s hard-fought accomplishments have been reversed, as President René Préval has become but the latest figure in this drama to turn on his former ally.

Earthquake and aftershocks
The January 12th earthquake was an unimaginable tragedy, the consequences of which will plague Haiti for at least a generation. The death toll now has surpassed 230,000, and President Préval has suggested it could reach as high as 300,000. The human destruction overwhelmingly has eclipsed the suffering caused by other more powerful earthquakes, like the one which recently rocked Chile (with a death toll likely to approach under 500 victims), or the 1994 Southern California earthquake of a similar magnitude which killed just 72 people. In an editorial on Haiti (with the unironic subtitle “The U.S. Military Will Provide Relief, as Ever”), the Wall Street Journal recently compared that California quake to the one in Haiti: “The difference is a functioning of a wealth-generating and law-abiding society that can afford, among other things, the expense of proper building codes.” In a perverse way, this piece has some merit. It is true that the utter devastation wrought on Haiti is a direct result of its rank near the bottom of the global South, with its extreme poverty and seemingly eternal lack of political stability. What the Journalfails to address, beyond the entire history of U.S-Haiti relations, is its own clear and direct complicity in this lamentable situation. Outlets like the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, whose economic allegiances are quite clear, were all along instrumental in twisting reality and manipulating public opinion in the U.S. against Aristide and the bona fide interests of the Haitian people.

We must bear in mind the international community’s historical relationship with Haiti when we hear the media describe Haiti as a “failed state.” The implicit (and often explicit) message in such post-earthquake commentaries is often that Haitians lack the capacity to rebuild their own country. For example, after discussing the inefficacy of macro and microdevelopment aid to reduce poverty, David Brooks of the New York Times suggests that perhaps Haitians, by virtue of their natural culture, are simply “progress resistant,” and the U.S. should therefore concentrate on exporting its “culture of achievement.” For those familiar with the country’s history, this argument mixes bad history with a failed memory of how U.S. self-serving policy destroyed Haiti’s rural agricultural economy and deprived Haitians of their political voice. The sad truth is that during the past two hundred years, some of the richest countries in the world have worked to destroy any hope of a politically and economically autonomous Haiti. If the Haitian people were given the opportunity to freely determine their own future, the Haiti of the 21st century might have had a chance to be radically different from its recent past.

Capitalizing (on) disaster
In the months following the quake, many of the guilty parties – conservative think-tanks like the Heritage Foundation, media outlets such as the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, as well as ex-Presidents Clinton and Bush II (who apparently had proven his mettle for disaster relief in responding to Hurricane Katrina) – are offering their own visions for how, not to help Haiti rebuild, but how to help rebuild Haiti. Immediately following the earthquake, the Heritage Foundation advised how to use the present opportunity for “reforms” in Haiti: “In addition to providing immediate humanitarian assistance, the U.S. response to the tragic earthquake in Haiti offers opportunities to re-shape Haiti’s long-dysfunctional government and economy as well as to improve the public image of the United States in the region.” The essay was quickly removed, edited, and reposted, as it was perhaps a little too distastefully forward in its avarice, even for Heritage.

This idea of pushing through extreme and unpopular, but artfully self-serving, policies after a disaster is, as the Heritage Foundation well knows, not a new strategy. In fact, this model of change is perhaps one of the greatest legacies of University of Chicago Professor Milton Friedman, pioneer of fundamentalist free-market capitalism. In terms of implementing policy, Friedman believed that “only a crisis – actual or perceived – produces real change. When that crisis occurs, the actions that are taken depend on the ideas that are lying around. That, I believe, is our basic function: to develop alternatives to existing policies, to keep them alive and available until the politically impossible becomes politically inevitable.” This has been deemed “disaster capitalism” by Naomi Klein. In other words, “using moments of collective trauma to engage in radical social and economic engineering.” Friedman’s strategy of using settings that are characterized by mass disorganization and confusion to push through radical and unpopular policies has been employed in countries as diverse as Chile under Pinochet, Russia’s transition to a market economy under Boris Yeltsin, and the U.S. invasion and resulting reconstruction of Iraq (to name just a few of a number of examples).

Much of the international brainstorming for reconstruction, including the plan ironically offered by UN Special Envoy to Haiti Bill Clinton, has centered around the idea of increasing private investment. But if history has taught us anything (which it apparently may not have in Clinton’s case), it is that promoting economic growth by exploiting the low costs of labor in international markets will do nothing other than further stratify a society that already is starkly divided along class lines and could worsen the plight of Haiti’s poor (if that is even possible). As David Harvey shows conclusively in “A Brief History of Neoliberalism,” in nearly every instance neoliberal policies have resulted in increasingly unequal distributions of wealth and dramatically weakened social programs. More of the same is not an acceptable option for Haiti when its very survival is at stake. The continuation or expansion of neoliberal economic policies will only tee the island up for another disaster.

“Liberal communists”
Many of those who suggest encouraging the expansion of private investment as the most effective way to rebuild Haiti barely veils a desire to exploit the disaster for profit in the language of development and economic growth. A less brazen and more socially acceptable approach could begin by advocating a mix of aid and debt forgiveness. Following the earthquake, $1.2 of the roughly $2 billion Haiti still owes to both foreign governments and international institutions was annulled. This is clearly a step in the right direction – toward allowing Haiti the space and opportunity to begin to construct new and authentic economic and political institutions. But it is just a first step, one which should not have required a catastrophe for the international community to take.

“Forgiving” the country’s debt sounds quite generous, until one considers the origins of this debt. Almost half of the money Haiti owed was ‘odious debt’ incurred under the Duvalier regime – about $844 million. Some Haitian critics have asked why should the people of Haiti be responsible for the debt of past dictators like the Duvaliers, who were supported by the U.S. for their anti-communist agenda? They forged a welcome environment for foreign business at the expense of the country’s poor majority and employed a ruthless paramilitary police force to terrorize this majority into obedience – hardly a legacy for which Haiti should be held accountable. The Duvaliers and their thugs killed an estimated 60,000 civilians during their rule, while torturing countless others. For this service, it would be quite unseemly for the U.S. to demand payment, with interest.

In fact, does the very discussion of debt forgiveness not already pre-suppose a certain ideological viewpoint? Is not the wrong question being asked? Instead of asking how much is owed by Haiti, perhaps one should really be asking, what is the magnitude of our debt to Haiti? In addition to the long history of military occupation, political manipulation, economic exploitation, and illicit lending, one would have to add to this already long list the debt arising from climate change. The United States is by far the world’s biggest contributor to climate change, whereas Haiti’s impact on the climate has been truly negligible. Per capita, Haiti’s carbon emissions are just one percent of the United States’. Yet, as Naomi Klein points out, “Haiti is among the hardest hit countries – according to one index, only Somalia is more vulnerable to climate change.”

Complementing the annulment of debts, there was almost immediately a tremendous outpouring of donations of aid in the wake of the quake. At the recent UN Donors’ Conference in New York, pledges of $5 billion in short-term aid and $10 billion in long-term aid were made by the international community, which will be allocated by a commission run by former-President Clinton and Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive. Such aid is significant and will certainly help the afflicted Haitian people. But this mode of giving often simultaneously serves to conceal subtle forms of violence. Political philosopher and cultural critic Slavoj Zizek describes the agents of this process as “liberal communists,” those who “give away with one hand what they first took with the other.” People like Bill Clinton and George W. Bush may be two prime examples of these “liberal communists,” and they played key roles in depriving the Haitian people of their political voice and running off with Haiti’s economy in the 1980’s and 1990’s. Both Clinton and Bush helped to maintain Haiti as an excellent incubator for private investment for foreign industries by cultivating low wages and a basically unemployed population, kept in check by the terror of military or paramilitary forces as well as the firepower of the Brazilian-led MINUSTAH forces.

Therefore, when we see the two former U.S. presidents join forces to tell us that they “. . . are partnering to help the Haitian people reclaim their country and rebuild their lives,” in fact, to “build back better” (better for whom?), we must maintain a wider perspective of their roles in Haiti’s history. Here cause and cure unite as one, where “the thing itself [Bush and Clinton's pledges of aid] is the remedy against the threat it poses [decades of manipulation and subjugation]. . . In liberal communist ethics, the ruthless pursuit of profit is counteracted by charity. Charity is the humanitarian mask hiding the face of economic exploitation.” In this sense, charity and aid, in a perverse way, can serve to further weaken a country. Looking at the historical correlation between the hegemony of neoliberalism and the dramatic rise of NGOs, David Harvey explains that the non-profits and aid groups usually step in to fill “the vacuum in social provision left by the withdrawal of the state from such activities . . . in some instances this has helped accelerate further state withdrawal from social provision. NGOs thereby function as ‘Trojan horses for global neoliberalism.’”

Haiti has more NGOs per capita than any other country in the world, with one NGO for every 3,000 Haitians. Some estimate that 75% of the USAID money given to Haiti makes its way back to the United States through NGOs. Meanwhile, less than one cent of every dollar of U.S. disaster aid currently goes directly to the Haitian government. Prime Minister Bellerive, recently expressed his concern that “the NGOs don’t tell us . . . where the money’s coming from or how they’re spending it. Too many people are raising money without any controls, and don’t explain what they’re doing with it.” Of course, one cannot minimize the care that must be taken that such funds given to the central government are not wasted by nepotism, corruption, or cronyism – admittedly no easy task. Critics such as highly regarded Haitian specialist Brian Concannon, director of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, have stressed that the Haitian people must be allowed to lead the way for their country’s rehabilitation. If we are genuinely interested in helping the Haitian people, more money must be directed away from the NGOs and towards a legitimate and functioning government and organisations populaires, community based groups established in the 1980s to defend the poor majority from paramilitary violence while at the same time providing basic living necessities and social services.


**************************************************************************

Up until this point, the U.S. has been successful in preventing Haiti from engaging in even an iota of economic and political self-determination. What Washington cannot undo is its former misguided actions which brought great grief to the nation and its people. But by taking responsibility for its part in the disaster, the time may come where Washington can, for once, play a constructive role when it comes to Haiti.

**************************************************************************

 

Reconstruction or reoccupation?
Where the aid money goes and what it is used for makes a huge difference. While only a trifle goes to the Haitian government, a full third of U.S. money earmarked for the relief effort was allocated for defense and security. When the U.S. personnel arrived in Haiti, several days after Venezuela and Cuba were already set up on the ground saving lives and providing assistance, the emphasis they placed on security and military aid at first compromised the distribution of humanitarian aid. Groups like Doctors Without Borders and the UN World Food Program have complained that their shipments of aid were delayed at the airport, even in some cases turned away, because the deployment of U.S. troops took priority over their incoming flights. With so much U.S. money for Haiti being allocated to military funding, “security and defense” have eclipsed what should be the clear focus: importing and distributing humanitarian aid to a desperately needy population.

To many critics, the heavy military presence of the U.S. in Haiti and efforts to effectively bypass the Haitian government increasingly appear as the groundwork for a new “death plan.” But the U.S. military presence may be less troubling than what is already starting to follow in its wake. Just as private security contractors profited from disasters in New Orleans and Iraq, these mercenary groups are now salivating at their current prospects in Haiti. The International Peace Operations Association, a security contractor trade association, recently held a trade show in Miami, giving roughly 20 private security companies the opportunity to advertise their services to government representatives, IFIs, NGOs, private companies and other parties involved in the Haiti recovery effort. The modern-day, privatized equivalent of Wilson’s marines, they will no doubt ensure a hospitable environment for future foreign investment.

Even if the military presence is not meant to be the hallmark of renewed economic exploitation, the almost single-minded focus on security illustrates that the U.S. perception of Haiti has changed little since the days of William Jennings Bryan. From many accounts in the mainstream media, one would think that since the earthquake, Haiti has become a vicious battleground for thieves, rapists, and murderers. While CNN’s Anderson Cooper described Port-au-Prince as a “frenzy of looting,” FOX News spoke of “small bands of young men and teenagers with machetes,” who “roamed downtown streets and helped themselves to whatever they could find in wrecked homes.” This is an addition to 4,000 escapees from the capital’s main prison. U.S. troops and mercenaries have been sent to Haiti, in large part, to keep order and prevent looting. This emphasis on looting should remind us of the reporting on Hurricane Katrina, where distinctions were often drawn between white families, who were “looking for food,” and black families, who were “looting.” Even if the stories of wide-spread looting in Haiti were true, would that justify the militarization? Should the first priority of the U.S. be securing the private property of businesses from Haiti’s hungry and homeless, those who have already lost everything? The question is entirely hypothetical – the reality of the situation is that, much like in the aftermath of Katrina, most of these reports have little or no basis in reality. The vast majority of Haitians, almost unbelievably, remained calm, even tranquil, in the midst of the utter destruction that surrounded them.

A group of reporters and academics recently there to assess conditions wrote that “while the US media has portrayed Haiti as a place of chaos and helplessness, we found just the opposite.” In a week spent there after the earthquake, they encountered no gangs of roving bandits – instead, they found long but orderly lines waiting for food, water, and money transfers, and communities organizing “makeshift roadblocks to protect those sleeping in the streets from cars. In many cases, people stood guard over the sleeping. After dark the most prominent sounds were dogs barking and roosters crowing. We heard no gunshots in the air.” The militarization of aid may reveal as much about our collective perception of the Haitian people as it does about our national priorities.

Breaking the cycle
One needn’t belittle the outstanding contributions of aid that have been given in the past months, or malign the good intentions of the millions of Americans who have donated money. But as Richard Kim argued in a recent piece published in The Nation, the dialogue in the international community must shift from discussing charity to demanding justice. Justice for Haiti requires more than debt forgiveness and pledges of aid. It requires the creation of the conditions for self-sufficiency and self-determination rather than further subjugation and exploitation. Rather than only appealing for foreign investment, creating sustainable and equitable growth in Haiti necessitates accomplishments like raising the minimum wage, improving a decimated and woeful natural environment, instituting agricultural policies that support local farmers, and rebuilding and constructing new public infrastructure, including schools, roads, hospitals, public utilities, and housing. If this is to occur, the Haitian people must be allowed to determine their own political future, and to provide the appropriate resources to help them rebuild their own lives – resources owed to them with interest.

This is not to say that the U.S. has no role to play in recovery efforts. In fact, Haiti needs help from the U.S. now more than ever. It is estimated that the cost for demolition efforts alone could run as high as $1 billion. Without commitments from the U.S. and the rest of the international community that it will avoid the advent of donor fatigue, the Haitian government will be effectively paralyzed. It cannot face these challenges alone. But the U.S. role in Haiti’s reconstruction must not be the same as it has been in the past – manipulating the political process and depriving Haitians of a voice, using USAID funds to prompt militias and studiously ignoring the use of terror against civilians. Rather, the U.S. must pledge not to interfere in any democratic election in any self-serving way, including through selective funding. Once the Haitian people have chosen a representative in a free and fair election, the U.S., France, Canada, and the U.N. might begin to redress their shoddy treatment in the past and pledge to provide all the direct support that the new government requires to get back on its feet. They must also work with international economic institutions to ensure that no “austerity measures” are imposed on any further development aid to the country.

Up until this point, the U.S. has been successful in preventing Haiti from engaging in even an iota of economic and political self-determination. What Washington cannot undo is its former misguided actions which brought great grief to the nation and its people. But by taking responsibility for its part in the disaster, the time may come where Washington can, for once, play a constructive role when it comes to Haiti.

 

 

 

 

 

 

WIKILEAKS: Liars & Thieves Go After Assange Because He Revealed Truths They Wanted To Keep Hidden

WikiLeaks cables: Julian Assange says his life is 'under threat'

• WikiLeaks founder says Swedish rape case is 'a travesty'
• Bank of America blocks WikiLeaks payments

Julian Assange
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrives back at Ellingham Hall, Norfolk, on Saturday. Photograph: Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images

Julian Assange said today his life and the lives of his colleagues at the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks are under threat.

Speaking to reporters outside Ellingham Hall, the Norfolk house at which he is staying following his release on bail from prison, Assange said: "There is a threat to my life. There is a threat to my staff. There are significant risks facing us."

Assange is wanted in Sweden, after he was accused of committing sex offences. He denies the allegations and his lawyers have accused the Swedish authorities of waging a "vendetta".

He was initially remanded in custody but freed from prison on Thursday after a judge granted bail pending a court ruling on extradition to Sweden.

Assange said: "The case in Sweden is a travesty. No person should be exposed to that type of investigation and persecution.

"I have seen a statement from one of the witnesses that she was bamboozled ... I have heard a rumour that one has withdrawn her statement."

Meanwhile, Bank of America has become the latest financial institution to refuse to handle payments for WikiLeaks.

The bank released a statement saying it will no longer process any transactions that it believes are intended for the site, which has released thousands of secret US diplomatic cables.

"This decision is based upon our reasonable belief that WikiLeaks may be engaged in activities that are, among other things, inconsistent with our internal policies for processing payments," the bank said.

The action comes as WikiLeaks says it plans to release information about banks.

Other financial institutions, including MasterCard and PayPal, have also stopped handling payments for the site.

In response to the bank's announcement, WikiLeaks issued a message on Twitter urging its supporters to leave the bank.

"We ask that all people who love freedom close out their accounts at Bank of America," it said.

"Our advice is to place your funds somewhere safer," the organisation said in another post.

Assange told Forbes magazine last month that the data on banks would show "unethical practices".

_________________________________

Bank of America agrees to $140m fraud settlement

By finance reporter Sue Lannin

Updated Wed Dec 8, 2010 6:40pm AEDT

A man stands at a row of Bank of America ATM's

Bank of America admitted its employees had rigged bids in their marketing of financial contracts linked to municipal bonds. (ABC News: Giulio Saggin, file photo)

The largest bank in the United States, Bank of America, has agreed to pay nearly $140 million to settle a fraud case with the US Department of Justice.

Bank of America admitted its employees had rigged bids in their marketing of financial contracts linked to municipal bonds.

The settlement follows a four-year investigation by US authorities into anti-competitive practices in the sale of investment agreements linked to the bonds.

Municipal bonds are sold by government departments, local councils and non-profit groups in the US to raise money for their services, such as schools and roads.

The US Department of Justice says Bank of America employees were involved in illegal conduct, including a conspiracy to rig bids on investments linked to the bonds.

So far eight executives from financial institutions, including Bank of America, have pleaded guilty to criminal charges brought by the department.

It says the bank was the only financial institution to voluntarily come forward before the investigation started.

The company was granted amnesty from prosecution in return for its cooperation in the investigation.

The assistant attorney-general in charge of the department's antitrust division, Christine Varney, says the investigation into fraud in the mortgage bond industry is continuing.

"Bank of America's disclosure of wrongdoing and cooperation has led to an aggressive ongoing investigation by the department into anti-competitive activity in the municipal bond derivatives industry," she said in a statement.

"The prosecution of anti-competitive conduct in the financial markets remains our highest priority."

The bank said it was pleased to put the issue behind it.

"Bank of America continues to cooperate with all agencies on their inquiries," it said in a statement.

Earlier this year, US investment bank Goldman Sachs agreed to pay $550 million to settle fraud charges brought by the US corporate regulator in relation to a subprime mortgage-linked investment.

Professor of finance at the University of New South Wales, Fariborz Moshirian, says settlement by financial companies in US fraud cases is now routine.

He says court action had not deterred offenders in the past.

"The Bank of America accepted they have done something illegal and also it is significant because the Bank of America is trying to settle all other challenges they are facing with the Department of Justice," he said.

Professor Moshirian says the department's Antitrust Corporate Leniency Program has encouraged companies to provide information to the Department of Justice.

"It could assist the justice department to identify other major banks which were engaged in similar fraud activities," he said.

Tags: business-economics-and-financebankingbusiness-regulationlaw-crime-and-justiceunited-states

First posted Wed Dec 8, 2010 5:44pm AEDT

>via: http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/12/08/3088361.htm?section=justin

_________________________________


Bank of America appeals $595 million Lehman ruling


 

WILMINGTON, Delaware | Thu Dec 16, 2010 9:44am EST

(Reuters) - Bank of America (BAC.N) has appealed a bankruptcy court order that it must pay Lehman Brothers Holding Inc (LEHMQ.PK) about $595 million, according to court documents.

 

The bank said in papers filed on Wednesday it would post a $660 million bond and asked the court to stay the enforcement of the ruling.

 

A hearing on the issue is set for January 19, according to court documents.

 

In November, Judge James Peck ruled that Bank of America violated federal law when it "brazenly" seized $500 million of Lehman's deposits, taking advantage of Lehman's weakened condition in the summer of 2008.

 

The judge later ruled the bank must also pay interest, which brought the total to about $595 million.

 

The decision was a victory for Lehman as it tries to repay creditors still owed hundreds of billions of dollars following its September 15, 2008, bankruptcy.

 

A Lehman Brothers spokeswoman did not immediately return a call for comment.

 

The case is In re: Bank of America NA vs Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc et al, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 08-ap-01753.

 

The main bankruptcy case is In re: Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc in the same court, 08-13555.

 

(Reporting by Tom Hals; additional reporting by Santosh Nadgir in Bangalore, editing by Dave Zimmerman)

>via: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6BF2UM20101216

 

 

 

INFO: Maritza Stanchich, "Puerto Rico Student Strike Intensifies, Public Education and Civil Rights at Stake"

Puerto Rico Student Strike Intensifies, Public Education and Civil Rights at Stake
by Maritza Stanchich

Coincident with massive, at times explosive, student protests in Rome and London, the University of Puerto Rico has again become a flashpoint with a student strike beginning Tuesday that turned the main campus into a militarized zone of police, riot squads, and SWAT teams, complete with low-flying helicopters and snipers.  What began as a conflict over a steep student fee hike is now seen as a larger struggle to preserve public education against privatization.

Resistance to the imposed $800 student fee has triggered repressive state measures: police have occupied the main campus for the first time in 31 years, and Monday the local Supreme Court, recently stacked by the pro-Statehood political party in power, outlawed student strikes and campus protests.  More than 500 students defied the ruling by demonstrating on campus Tuesday, brandishing the slogan "They fear us because we don't fear them" ("Nos tienen miedo porque no tenemos miedo").  This current strike revisits accords to negotiate the $800 fee, which in June ended a two-month shut down of 10 of 11 UPR campuses, as UPR faces a $240 million budget shortfall precipitated by the state not honoring its own debt to the institution.

Civil rights groups have declared a state of high alert in the wake of disturbances last week and statements by leading public officials seen as creating a hostile climate that inhibits free speech rights.  In response, about 15,000 UPR supporters marched on Sunday from San Juan's Capitol building to La Fortaleza governor's mansion, under a balmy bright blue tropical sky in this U.S. Territory of about four million U.S citizens, though little known to most Americans beyond being a tourist destination.

In the standoff leading up to this week, top university officials have repeatedly threatened that a strike may prompt them to shut down the main campus at Río Piedras, which serves 20,000 plus students, employs about 1,200 professors and 5,000 non-teaching staff, and hosts millions in scientific research funding (system-wide the UPR serves about 65,000 students).  In addition, 10 of 11 University of Puerto Rico campuses remain on probation by its accrediting agency, the Middle States Association, in the areas of long-term fiscal viability and effective administrative governance, of which the current student mobilization is a symptom, not a cause.

Tensions mounted last week leading up to a two-day student walkout when Capitol Security, a private security firm contracted by the university for $1.5 million, demolished entrance gates to the campus.  Hired guards were young with little or no training or evaluation, bore no identification badges, and some were armed with sticks and pipes in a climate of intimidation perhaps not seen since dockworkers strikes of the 1940s.  Many of the guards had been recruited from marginalized Afro-Puerto Rican communities, such as Villa Cañona in Loíza, which has been the site of documented police abuses, lending a disturbing dimension of institutionalized racism, according to community leaders there.

Several violent incidents were reported, including a student who was seriously beaten and injured by guards.  One video purportedly of students breaking security van windows was repeatedly aired in the local media as the justification for the police occupation of the campus, just as students had peacefully concluded the two-day walkout last Wednesday evening.

"UPR has a long history of infiltrators and saboteurs involved to instigate such incidents," said William Ramírez, Executive Director of the Puerto Rico chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union.  The purported incident capped off a series of provocations.  Gov. Luis Fortuño in a televised appearance openly declared that leftists would no longer be tolerated on the campus.  His Chief of Staff Marcos Rodríguez Ema publicly taunted that students and professors who dare protest will get their asses kicked out ("vamos a sacarlos a patadas").

The university administration has also designated areas limiting protests to outside the campus, and on Monday Chancellor Ana Guadalupe formally prohibited all protests or group activities of any type on the campus through January 15.  The chancellor also issued an edict this week requiring all students to carry their student identification cards at all times.

According to Ramírez, Fortuño's public statements targeting leftists, designated protest areas off campus, and protest prohibitions are violations of constitutionally-protected First Amendment rights.  The police presence and heavily-equipped riot squads also create a climate of intimidation that restricts expression, he added.

"Rather than responding to violence, they have created a violent environment," Ramírez said, adding that under such conditions, in which a police occupation is deployed as a preemptive measure, "it is almost guaranteed that violence will occur."

In response to the campus police presence, a majority in a meeting of about 300 professors Thursday voted to refuse to hold classes on campus while under siege, with senior professors recalling the trauma of deadly campus police violence during the last occupation in 1981.  On Saturday, Police Chief José Figueroa Sancha announced plans for a permanent police precinct on the campus, using drug interdiction as the justification despite common knowledge that drug puntos or selling points operate a steady business a short distance from the university.  Normally the campus operates with its own contingent of security guards.

Some student leaders who are not pro-strike have also voiced complaints about the police takeover of campus.  Omar Rodríguez, Student Council president for the College of Education and founder and editor of the 30,000+ member-strong Facebook page Estudiantes de la UPR Informan, reported that he was attacked without provocation by private security guards and that the police stood by and laughed when he pleaded for their intervention.

"The exaggerated police presence is unnecessary and intimidating," he said, adding that it was pedagogically absurd to expect students to concentrate properly on their studies in such an environment.

Making the best of these tensions, student strike leader Giovanni Roberto reached out to dialogue with Capitol Security guards in working-class solidarity.  "They brought us the youth who are precisely the reason we are struggling, so that they could have access to the university," he said.

It is estimated that the new $800 fee will force 10,000 UPR students to leave the university, though the state legislature and the Fortuño government have enacted last-ditch efforts to create funds for student jobs and scholarships.  Numerous proposals from credible sources detailing fiscal alternatives to the fee seem to fall on deaf ears.

The strike itself has yet to build broad support, however.  Widespread concern that a strike will jeopardize the institution's survival has mobilized some against the strike, including students, despite majority opposition to the $800 fee.  While students from some UPR campuses held walkouts or approved strikes, yet other campuses recently voted down such measures.  And non-striking students at the Río Piedras campus, including previous strike leaders, signed a public proclamation to keep the campus open and classes running normally.

Nevertheless, strike organizers are gambling that the blunders of the administration will win support for the students as well as mobilize other groups.  The largest professors' organization, Asociación Puertorriqueña de Profesores Universitarios, and the non-teaching staff union, La Hermandad de Empleados No-Docentes, issued standard calls to members to respect pickets.  And president of the UTIER electrical workers union, Ángel Figueroa Jaramillo, issued a public call for support from Tuesday's campus demonstration.

Whether or not this current conflict has the potential to destabilize the Fortuño administration depends in part on a broader context of economic wellbeing.  Fortuño and a legislative majority from the extreme right came to power with a broad mandate to punish the previous party in power for the worst economic downturn in decades, with no mid-term or recall elections in Puerto Rico as a check on current policies.

A self-described Reaganite, Fortuño has become a darling of the Republican Party for imposing highly unpopular austerity measures through legislation called Ley 7 (Law 7), laying off 20,000 public sector employees; targeting government agencies, including UPR, with crippling cuts aimed at perceived ideological enemies; and declaring null and void all public sector labor contracts for three years.  Such a move, reminiscent of President Reagan's firing of striking air traffic controllers, should have stateside unions wary of Republican Party policy interest.

It has also been reported that the Fortuño administration has already begun negotiations to sell off -- or long-term lease -- UPR campuses to private colleges, including those owned by major contributors to his campaign.  And this just as a student loan default crisis associated with mediocre private colleges in the United States threatens to spiral into as costly a mess as the mortgage crisis.

The events unfolding cohere with the popular thesis of Canadian author Naomi Klein, known as "disaster capitalism."  However, students are mobilizing in Puerto Rico and worldwide around deep cuts to public higher education and subsequent privatization, in movements that may just be getting their first wind.

"From San Diego to Rome, from San Juan to London and Amsterdam, 2010 will be remembered as the year of student protests internationally," commented Antonio Carmona Báez, Ph.D., a political science lecturer at the University of Amsterdam.  "Not since 1968 have university students stood up around the globe -- simultaneously -- against authority, this time to save public education."


Maritza Stanchich, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Puerto Rico.  This article was first published in the Huffington Post on 15 December 2010; it is reproduced here for non-profit educational purposes.

 

NEW ORLEANS: Orleans Parish Prison holds almost as many state inmates as local prisoners | NOLA.com

Orleans Parish Prison holds almost as many state inmates as local prisoners

Published: Sunday, December 19, 2010, 6:03 AM

 

 

In the mid-1970s, when singer Johnny Cash pleaded with Orleans Parish Prison in song to release his green-eyed son, the jailhouse held about 800 prisoners.


In February 2009, Orleans Parish Criminal Sheriff Marlin Gusman shows off the holding cells during a tour of the newly reopened Orleans Parish Prison, the jail building located directly behind the courthouse.  

 

Three decades later, the prison, known to locals as OPP, consistently ranked as one of the 10 biggest jails in the country, far out of proportion to the city's size.

What made it possible for OPP to balloon to more than 7,500 inmates?

The answer is that the state Department of Corrections paid the sheriff to house state prisoners in nearly half of the jail's beds.

It's an arrangement that's unique to Louisiana.

"No other state has done it the way we do it in Louisiana," said Burk Foster, a former criminal justice professor at the University of Louisiana-Lafayette who has written extensively about the state's correctional history. "Most other states may house prisoners in jails temporarily, until they build more prisons or turn more people loose," he said. "But in Louisiana, we've done it so long, the practice has been institutionalized."

But now the city may have to pare down the number of state prisoners to few or none, if it hopes to get by with the 1,438-bed, stand-alone jail recommended by a mayoral working group and endorsed by Mayor Mitch Landrieu.

In some ways, it's an easy decision. Sheriff Marlin Gusman basically has the discretion to take as few or as many prisoners as he wishes. That can cause broad fluctuations in the jail's population.

For instance, today, despite the jail's hobbled, flood-damaged condition, it is the 34th largest jail in the nation, in a city that ranks 53rd by population. The jail's higher ranking is largely due to state prisoners, whose numbers had dropped to almost nothing in 2008 but have climbed back up past 1,000. They now make up about one-third of the jail's 3,200 or so occupants.

Today's numbers, however, are a pittance compared with those commanded by Gusman's predecessor, Sheriff Charles Foti. By 2003, the last year of his 30-year tenure, Foti controlled hundreds of jobs and received about $20 million in "rent" from the state.

The sheriff reigned over a fiefdom of good will that included a Halloween haunted house, holiday dinners for the elderly, a Cajun Christmas village at City Park's Celebration in the Oaks, tents emblazoned with the sheriff's logo for any charitable event that called, and yellow-shirted inmates who swept the streets after Carnival parades and emptied trash at local festivals.

The Mid-City jail complex between Tulane Avenue and Interstate 10 grew to include 12 buildings, including a retrofitted former motel, school and firehouse.

"Everything Foti took, he turned into a jail. And by the time he finished his building binge, the jail had grown nearly tenfold to about 8,000" prisoners, said Norris Henderson, head of VOTE-NOLA, which has advocated for a drastically downsized jail.

Last month, the group's correctional expert, James Austin, presented one jail-size projection with 950 prisoners and others that included between 125 and 250 state prisoners enrolled in re-entry and work-release programs.

Gusman didn't respond to repeated requests for information and comment on this topic.

opp-construction.jpg
In September, construction continues on the Orleans Parish Prison expansion. The city may have to pare down the number of prisoners to few or none, if it hopes to live with the 1,438-bed, stand-alone jail recommended by a mayoral working-group and endorsed by Mayor Mitch Landrieu.  

 

The sheriff is part of the mayoral working group, which has only peripherally discussed how many state prisoners should be held in New Orleans. But no one in the group has expressed interest in making space for the 1,000-plus prisoners that the sheriff now holds. And some in the group -- including Judge Ernestine Gray, chief judge of the city's Juvenile Court -- have said they believe the city has no business spending FEMA money to basically build prison space for the state.

Once an Orleans Parish judge sentences a defendant to the state prison system, the Department of Corrections has two weeks to take custody of the prisoner, Gray noted during a recent meeting.

"Why would we keep them any longer than that?" she asked.

The system of farming out state prisoners to local jails had many of its roots in a 1971 lawsuit brought by five prisoners protesting overcrowding and poor living conditions at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola, then the biggest and one of the most notorious prisons in the nation.

A few years later, a federal judge halted all admissions to Angola. OPP and other parish jails began to overflow with prisoners.

At first, sheriffs objected. In 1980, Foti drove nearly 150 prisoners to a state prison and dropped them off in the parking lot after a local judge ordered him to reduce the number of inmates in his jail despite the federal order saying that the state's prisons were overcrowded.

The state began building prisons. Between 1976 and 1991, the state opened a series of new prisons, Foster said. But during the 1980s and 1990s -- largely the same time period -- state legislatures like Louisiana's were busy passing laws intended to lock away more people for longer sentences.

Construction couldn't keep up with demand, so the state made it standard practice to keep its excess prison population in local jails, Foster said.

So while other states spent the entire "get-tough" era building new state facilities, Louisiana hasn't built a new state prison since 1991, he said.

In recent years, Department of Corrections Secretary Jimmy LeBlanc has supported a moratorium on any additional construction at local facilities. "But moving everyone to the state level would require building more state prisons, and the state's fiscal reality prevents that from happening," said DOC spokeswoman Pam LaBorde.

Despite a tight budget, Louisiana still incarcerates more people per capita than any other state, federal officials say, partly because it gets the parish beds for cheap.

In a recent presentation, the department said it costs Louisiana an average of $54.49 per day to house an adult inmate in a state facility, more than twice the $24.39 per day that the state pays most local sheriffs.

The state pays the Orleans Parish sheriff slightly more, $26.39 per day per inmate, because of the higher need for mental health care for Orleans prisoners. But one reason parish prisoners cost less is because, generally, sheriffs send long-term and dangerous prisoners to the state. Sex offenders and inmates with behavioral, medical or mental health issues also go to state prisons.

One of the reasons local jails are cheaper is because they're not set up to provide long-term care for inmates, Foster said, echoing the concerns raised in a 2000 report by then-Louisiana legislative auditor Dan Kyle, which questioned whether inmates held in local jails suffered from subpar screening, services and oversight.

"There's a lack of programming, a lack of medical, mental health care, a lack of education, a lack of vocational training, lack, lack, lack," Foster said. "The sheriffs provide more or less secure care of prisoners. They don't provide much beyond that."

In the past, Gusman has touted his work-release and pre-release training programs as examples of why the community benefits from having state prisoners in the local jail.

In the face of high recidivism rates, though, LeBlanc, the DOC secretary, has expanded pre-release programs statewide, in order to prepare offenders to transition back to their communities by helping them to prepare for jobs, get identification and plug into local mental health and substance-abuse treatment programs as needed.

Corrections Department spokeswoman Cathy Fontenot demurred as to the ideal number of state prisoners that should be assigned to Orleans Parish Prison, saying that the decision should be made by Gusman and the working group. But she noted that once the secretary's regional pre-release program in Orleans is fully operational, it will involve 225 prisoners returning to the region, which includes Orleans, St. Bernard, Jefferson and Plaquemines parishes.

"And we do expect the facility to reach those numbers," Fontenot said.

Gusman has said there is an advantage to having state prisoners from New Orleans in his jails, closer to their homes and families.

But Henderson of VOTE-NOLA contends that there's little value to being close to family because OPP jail visits are conducted via telephone, with glass between the inmate and the visitor. The conversations are typically limited to 15 or 30 minutes.

So even though the closest state prison may be an hour's drive away, prisoners would rather be there, where they can take academic and vocational classes and have more meaningful visits, Henderson said. In the state system, he said, visits can last between two and five hours and no glass barrier separates the prisoner from the visitor.

"You can hug your mama," he said, " and hold your kids while you talk."

 

Katy Reckdahl can be reached at kreckdahl@timespicayune.com or 504.826.3396.