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Council On Hemispheric Affairs Monitoring Political, Economic and Diplomatic Issues Affecting the Western Hemisphere Memorandum to the Press 04.94 Thursday, 9 December 2004 Word Count: 1500 Haitis Ship Sails on Without a Captain and With a Very Disreputable Crew:Kofi Annan, Roger Noriega, Colin Powell and Lula of Brazil have much to answer for failing to implement the UNs Stabilization Mission Embroiled in the oil-for-food scandal and amidst calls for his resignation, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has failed to give MINUSTAH, the Brazilian-led UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti, the necessary military and political direction required to halt the post-coup violence plaguing the country. Annan apparently made a decision earlier this year to dispense with fair play and side with Secretary of State Colin Powells slanted script for engineering Aristides exodus from the country and refusing to denounce the human rights violations, lack of rectitude and the gross incompetence of interim-Prime Minister Gerard Latortues regime. Powell, Annan, Latortue, Haitian Justice Minister Bernard Gousse, U.S. Ambassador to Haiti James Foley, Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega along with President Luis Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil are each, in their own way, culpable of grievously harming Haiti and its people. If the Secretary-General continues to lack the will to uphold the integrity of the UNs peacekeeping mandate (even if by doing so means further alienating Washington), then it may be time for him to step down, if there is to be any hope to restore the good name of the institution he once so admirably served. Regarding MINUSTAH, by sometimes ignoring and sometimes abetting the Haitian police in their raids on pro-Aristide neighborhoods, Lulas forces have allowed the UN mandate to support Latortues corrupt regime and its lawless actions.
The increasing violence being unleashed on the streets of Port-au-Prince and the squashing of political dissent by Gousses goons has ranged from the incarceration of Aristide supporters (including the countrys just-released and most highly revered priest, Father Gerard Jean-Juste, as well as former Prime Minister Yvon Neptune, former Interior Minister Jocelerme Privert, Senator Yvon Feuille and former Deputy Rudy Herivaux) to shooting protestors in the street without even the pretense of professional restraint. For such abuses, among others, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) all along has refused to restore normal relations with Latortue, while the Organization of American States (OAS) Inter-Commission on Human Rights has condemned the ongoing abuses now occurring throughout Haiti with frightening regularity. As one international human rights monitor has observed, The contrast between the Haitian government's eagerness to prosecute former Aristide officials and its indifference to the abusive record of certain rebel leaders could not be more stark." Yet, despite the growing international condemnation of the Latortue governments kid glove treatment of the countrys armed rebels - the same cabal that Secretary Powell originally described before the coup as a gang of thugs - neither the arbitrary actions of the armed ex-militias nor the repeated violations of due process perpetrated by Gousse have attracted the attention of MINUSTAH, the UN, or the denunciation of the international community. Greenlighting the Coup This statement was tantamount to green-lighting the coup because even though Aristide agreed to every stipulation made by Powell and the CARICOM states, the main opposition party, the Group of 184, would not budge from its rigid commitment to the zero-option policy, defined as a refusal to negotiate, at any cost, with the beleaguered Haitian President. Therefore, the anti-Aristide opposition knew that once the U.S. took this stand, it would be in de facto control of the country. For his part, even after Aristides ouster, Annan would still not denounce the violent opposition and found it difficult to describe the coup detat by its rightful name. In Annans language, Haiti was a peculiar situation, but the change in leadership there was not a coup d'etat...It was a deteriorating situation. Annans Deliberate Disregard and Lulas Complicity As for Lula Lacking the political will to go after the rebels, MINUSTAH bears an uncanny resemblance to the ineffective blue helmets of the UN in the early 90s during the Bosnian crisis. In Haiti, as in Bosnia, the so-called peacekeeping force, far from living up to its mandate, actually made things worse by bestowing a patina of legitimacy over the status quo. Though the Haiti mission increases Brazils status as a rising regional star, Lula has in effect given Powell or, in this case, the real puppeteer behind Powells Haiti policy, Assistant Secretary of State Roger Noriega, an escape hatch; for it is now the responsibility of the Brazilians to deal with the wretched mess that characterizes daily Haitian life and, as of yet, they do not seem to be up to the job. This commentary was authored by COHA Director Larry Birns and COHA Senior Research Fellow, Seth R. DeLong, Ph.D. December 9, 2004 The Council on Hemispheric Affairs, founded in 1975, is an independent, non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt research and information organization. It has been described on the Senate floor as being "one of the nation's most respected bodies of scholars and policy makers." For more information, please see our web page at www.coha.org; or contact our Washington offices by phone (202) 223-4975, fax (202) 223-4979, |
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