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Haiti: The Benefits of a Weak State
by Darren Ell
This article assumes that Western nations have an option.
In the past, they invested in their own people in the midst of economic depression; they rebuilt the economies of entire nations following World War II; they now have unprecedented resources to invest elsewhere.
Instead, their governments and the international financial institutions they control are bankrupting countries like Haiti in order to satisfy the selfish interests of a tiny foreign and domestic business elite.
HIP Special Report - A key tactic in their policies is to weaken foreign central
governments. As Peter Hallward states in Damming the Flood, the most
comprehensive book written about recent Haitian history, both the
domestic elite and its foreign patrons have a vested interest in the
weakness of the state and the instability of its government. A weak
government means minimal taxes or tariffs, minimal regulations, minimal
interference in the exploitation of labor, trade or contraband
And
so it has gone for all progressive governments in Haiti since 1990:
dramatic reductions in foreign aid have been used to cripple the
governments ability to deliver on its promises; aid has been taken
from the government and given to foreign NGOs; forced tariff
reductions have ruined indigenous economic activity, driven up
unemployment and destroyed Haitis tax base; and coup détats have been
financed whenever governments have tried to collect corporate taxes,
raise the minimum wage or implement desperately needed social spending.
Aside from local business elites and their foreign partners, the only
other group to benefit from the pillage has been foreign NGOs who are
now in charge of developing the country, the government lacking the
resources to do it itself.
This, in a nutshell, has been the
international communitys vision for Haiti since Haitians sacrificed
their lives throwing off dictatorship: destroy local economic
competition, weaken the state, then send in charities and NGOs to pick
up the pieces.
The Government of Haiti has conveniently been
blamed for the countrys problems. Canada even claimed that the
International Community had to protect Haiti from its own
democratically elected government in 2004. Meanwhile, Canada - whose
citizens enjoy world-class government-subsidized transportation,
education, health care and social security - had been working to
undermine the state apparatus in Haiti since 2000. Whatever mistakes
elected Haitian governments may have made since 1990, they pale in
comparison to the wrecking ball unleashed on them by foreign powers.
As
political activist and member of Haitis Sovereignty Commission Patrick
Elie recently stated:
- "Every progressive government in Haiti since 1990
has found itself in the position of trying to fix a collapsing house
while assassins are trying to break down the back door. People looking
at the house later blame the government, but it was busy the whole time
keeping the assassins you guys from breaking in with your machine
guns. People always leave out that part the constant aggression, the
constant sabotage."
How cash-starved is the government of
Haiti? In 2000, ten years of sabotage had left the Aristide government
with a miniscule $600 million budget, half of it derived directly from
foreign aid. After the US and Canada cut aid or diverted it away from
the government into NGOs, Hallward points out:
- "the total
government budget was reduced to the risible sum of just $300 million.
To put this in context, this amount is roughly equal to the municipal
budget of a small US city with around 100,000 inhabitants."
Note that
the $300 million also had to cover the annual $60 million payment on
the national debt, 45% of which was incurred by the Duvalier
dictatorships. In other words, while the municipal government of a US
city had $3,000 to spend on each of its 100,000 citizens, Aristide had
$29 to spend on each of his 8.5 million citizens. As Canadian freelance
journalist Anthony Fenton has shown, Canadian policy dovetailed with US
policy, and aid skyrocketed as soon as the popular progressive Fanmi
Lavals (FL) regime was overthrown in 2004 and Gerard Latortues
interim government began murdering and jailing thousands of FL
supporters.
Whats more, unlike Lavalas governments, which had a
consistent record of investing in social and material infrastructure of
the country, Latortue weakened the states influence by bringing
constructive investment to a full stop, cancelling literacy, land
reform and subsidized meal programs, the collection of corporate taxes,
price controls and import regulations, and firing thousands of public
sector workers. Today, in 2008, the UN spends the equivalent of twice
Haitis national budget policing frustrated unemployed Haitians.
What
does a weak state mean for the people of Haiti?
Lets start with people
who in Canada or the US would belong to the middle class.
A part-time
teacher in Port-au-Prince told me he was deciding which of his children
had to miss a year of school because he couldnt afford the fees; a man
from Cap Haitian with diplomas in French and Economics had been looking
for employment for 2 years and was living off his parents; full-time
hospital workers in Port-au-Prince were complaining about not being
paid for four months; the teachers in a Pétionville school expressed
their relief that a foreign donor had come through with their unpaid
$112 a month salaries; the leader of a Haitian national union
organization said he occasionally pockets $300 a month, but was putting
his children through school thanks to his wifes job; a former member
of the Haitian Parliament, illegally imprisoned for three years, stated
that he lost his possessions in 2004 when anti-Lavalas thugs ransacked
his home, and that he has not found work since his release from jail;
unionized dock workers in Port au Prince said that after 15 years of
struggle they negotiated one of the most lucrative agreements in Haiti:
$440 a month salaries. However, their achievement was about to be
crippled by a mass firing: 70% of Port-au-Princes 1,300 dock workers
are about to lose their jobs in a privatization scheme.
None of
these people could guarantee that their children would finish high
school. 96% of Haitian children never do. Yet they are the lucky ones,
being employed and earning more than the minimum wage, which sits at $2
a day. For the 70% of Haitians who have no employment at all, life is a
matter of survival.
At the back of the Cap Haitien slum, Shada, I met a
woman sitting despondent outside her home which was situated next to a
2,500 square meter pile of toxic trash. She had four children under the
age of 7. Her sons had light colored hair, a sign of the chronic
malnutrition gnawing away at a quarter of all Haitian children. Her
husband had left her and she was living off handouts from community
members. Around the corner, another woman sat with three young
children, her breastfeeding son bathed in a terrible sweat, his face
covered with sores and his hair showing signs of malnutrition.
A
26-year-old man named Wilfrid was repairing a metal cooking pan.
Poverty forced him from school in grade 3. He said he was suffering
from terrible chronic headaches. He was depressed and despondent ,
never looked at us, and didnt know how much he earned by repairing
pans.
Twenty meters from his home, a young boy was defecating in the
middle of a pool of garbage, next to a community latrine that drained
into the water beside him. I was told one of the principle occupations
of men in Shada is pushing a wheelbarrow, backbreaking work that nets
them 50 cents a day, enough to buy one cup of rice. Men who dont work
stay home and sleep, depressed. People here eat a full meal every
second day.
Citizens in the developed nations who are
undermining Haitis government are protected against this scale of
insecurity by publicly funded programs: unemployment insurance,
welfare, and pension plans. Not so in Haiti. Some support comes from
the diaspora whose remittances account for 30% of Haitis GDP, but
state support is minimal. Even the private sector has little to offer:
staff at Haitis largest private pension plan company, the Office
National dAssurance Vieillesse, told me that 60% of Haitians have no
social security whatsoever, and that the most lucrative retirement
package they offer is $42 a month. They acknowledge that not working in
Haiti is a sentence to misery.
This economic insecurity is taking a
toll on peoples health. Eating two meals or less a day is the norm
even for the employed of Haiti. There are hollow-eyed youth and adults
throughout the country. Children in school have difficulty
concentrating because of inadequate nourishment. One rarely sees an
elderly person in Haiti (the average lifespan is 53 years). Haitians
who have travelled to Canada described their astonishment at how many
elderly people they see there.
They are probably equally
surprised by the quality of public health care from which Canadians
benefit. Marie Michelle Jean-Baptiste, head of a new health care
workers union in Port au Prince, explained that the General Hospital
(Hôpital de lUniversité de lÉtat) is one of only two functioning
public hospitals in the capital. Everything else in the city aside from
the Tuberculosis sanatorium is private. Because of a lack of resources,
the General Hospital provides only basic consultations, medications and
lab work, a few x-rays, and essential surgery.
All other services
medications, x-rays, lab tests, ultrasounds, major surgeries and so
forth are run through the multitude of private clinics and pharmacies
that line the streets surrounding the hospital in every direction as
far as the eye can see. Very few Haitians can afford to eat regularly
and health care has become a luxury only the wealthy few can afford.
The
hospital staff copes with low or unpaid salaries, random firings and
serious material shortfalls. The hospitals two public ambulances,
donations from Taiwan, have been broken down since mid-2005 with no new
funds to repair them. By contrast, ten new Red Cross ambulances paraded
through the crowds of the recent Carnaval festivities.
Because of
material shortages, the hospital laboratory is able to provide basic
tests only: essential blood, urine, and faeces analysis. Anything else
has to be paid for in private clinics. The hospitals only ultrasound
machine is broken. Since the spring of 2005, there has been no food
service for patients in the hospital. Missionaries provide this
service.
Numerous sources confirmed that doctors have been robbing the
hospital of its instruments and most prized technology in order to
establish and maintain their own private clinics. Part of the problem,
Marie Michelle Jean-Baptiste tells me, is that the state only pays
doctors $420 a month.
The hospital pharmacy, intended to provide
subsidized medications to Haitians, has been gutted and closed for 18
months. The sign lies broken in the yard. The medications room has a
small number of drugs on half-empty shelves.
The radiology department
is no different. A frustrated technician pointed out that only one of
the hospitals five x-ray machines is functional. A second x-ray
machine donated by Japan has been broken for a year and no one is able
to repair it. A third machine is broken down sitting in a dusty room. A
fourth lays broken on the floor in a hallway.
One x-ray room is empty,
apparently once containing a machine stolen by the director of the
department for his private clinic. In other words, the radiology
department is one breakdown away from being irrelevant. Unfortunately
for the public, x-ray services in the private sector, like all other
services, cost 4 to 5 times what they do in the General Hospital.
Numerous
sources confirmed that Haitians have a habit of only consulting the
health care system when they are desperate, when their illnesses are
life-threatening or holding them back from functioning in society.
Usually they stop after the consultation, unable to afford medications
or surgeries. This partly explains the multitude of terrible ailments
one sees in Haiti as well as the 53-year lifespan of Haitians
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out a total of 31 students from Cap Haitian that had been sent home
from school in January 2008 because their parents couldn't afford
school fees. Madame Bwa, the community activist fighting for them,
estimates a third of children in her community never go to school at
all.
The state of Haitian education is equally troubling. Patrick
Elie points out that 85% of Haitian schools are private and cost four
to five times as much as public schools. A case in point is Haitis
second largest city, Cap Haitian. With a population of over 500,000,
children there only have access to 2 publicly-funded high schools. The
rest are private.
Students stop and start school constantly, depending
on their parents ability to pay. It is common to meet 20-year-olds in
grade 8 and 12-year-olds in grade 3. When I visited the Cap Haitien
slum of Shada, a community activist presented me with a list of 31
students ranging in age from 4 to 18 who had been sent home from school
in the previous two weeks because their parents were unable to pay
their school fees.
Many students are inadequately nourished and cant
concentrate. Almost no one can afford glasses in Haiti, so many
students cant read whats on the blackboard. Many cant afford
notebooks or pencils. Because of a lack of curricular resources,
teachers often resort of rote strategies.
Patrick Elie notes that
regulation a key function of a healthy government is virtually
absent in Haitis education system:
- "The state doesnt impose rules on
schools. There is no regulation regarding the number of students in a
class, nothing about student evaluation, teacher qualifications or
curriculum. People send their kids to schools run by a French
organization and their exams are graded in France, not Haiti. You can
open a two-room building with one teacher and call it a university. You
can call anything an institute. Nobody will come and look at what
youre doing."
Darren Ell is a photojournalist from
Montreal, Canada who contributes to the Haiti Information Project
(HIP). His previous work, interviews with Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine,
Mario Joseph, and Brian Concannon Jr., focused on the violation of
civil and political rights following the 2004 coup détat. This article
looks at the international communitys violation of the social and
economic rights of Haitians. His photographic work on the impact of the
2004 coup détat will be presented in a public exhibition in Montreal
in the last two weeks of September 2008.
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More photos and short clips of efforts to provide WORK and collaborate with teachers and parents in rural Haiti are on Facebook and Bebo.
Randy Mont-Reynaud
mcsolaar@aol.com