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Book by John Maxwell
How to Make Our Own News: A Primer for Environmentalist and Journalists
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Killing them softly …
By John Maxwell
Many
people speak of poverty as if it is a sacred
responsibility to be assumed by certain people in the same way
the British ‘nobility’ assume their titles and honorifics at
birth. Some of us, it seems, are called to poverty, as holy men
are called to the service of God. This concept has made its way
into a hymn about “All things bright and beautiful “–
“The rich man in his castle, the poor man at his gate, God
made them each and every one. And ordered their estate.”
We know better. And the church now knows
better. It has erased that verse from modern hymn-books.
Even if we have never heard of Karl Marx, the
annual reports of the IMF and World Bank make it plain that
poverty is the result of deliberate policy and action by people
who have seized the power to extract tribute from the rest of
us. Structural Adjustment Programmes, overseen by the IMF and
the World Bank, are the main engines of this unjust reallocation
of resources from poor to rich. The theory behind this
malignant behaviour is that ‘wealth’ will trickle down from
‘investors’ to those lucky enough to catch the crumbs which
escape the rich man’s grasp.
But since wealth is created by labour, why is
it that it has to go up before it comes down?
In the long run, we are told, wealth will
trickle down so well that poverty will disappear.
In the long run, as Lord Keynes said, we are
all dead. But most of us will not perish in miserable slavery to
utopian fantasies.
‘God made them – every one…’
“For most of its history, the Haitian
state, its military and a small elite class have ruthlessly
extracted what wealth they could from the country's poor
majority. The result is massive inequality, with one percent of
Haitians controlling 50 percent of the country's wealth and over
75 percent of the population living in severe poverty. The
burden of inequality has fallen particularly hard on the
agricultural sector, where 70 percent of the population makes
its living. … more than 80 percent of government revenue has
historically been drawn from the peasant farmer, while over 90
percent of government expenditures have been made in the capital
city, Port-au-Prince” ("Structural Adjustment &
the Aid Juggernaut in Haiti," Lisa McGowan, The Development
Gap, 1997).
As McGowan points out in her paper, the
foreign programmes of aid to Haiti, when they were actually
working, made it impossible for the Preval government to respond
to the expressed (and obvious) needs of the poor people of
Haiti. The result in 1997, before Aristide’s return, was that
“popular frustration and cynicism are palpable and the
deepening polarisation of Haitian Society increasingly
evident.”
Now, under Aristide, the trickle of aid
has been stanched, because the Haitian government is unable to
provide the US State Department and foreign investors with the
level of comfort and confidence they require in order to go
to the rescue of the only people who managed to abolish
slavery on their own and make themselves into free men.
As I have said before, they have never been
forgiven for their temerity and their military success, and the
Western capitalist democracies have spent the last 200 years
re-ordering their estate and putting them, explicitly, outside
the gated community of modern democracy.
Ira Lowenthal, an authority on Haitian voodoo
and politics, explains the problem as seen by the Opposition
(which he advises): “… a populist demagogue, his cronies and
his clients--all apparently quite willing to pervert the
nation's fledgling transition in the interest of consolidating
their own personal powers and privilege--emerged as the greatest
threat to Haitian democracy.… Surely, there is precious little
comfort to be drawn from noting that at least, this time, the
leader of this ongoing assault has been ‘duly elected’.” (
"The US. Policy Imperative in Haiti, and How to Achieve It,"
Ira Lowenthal, wehaitians.com)
Democratic Convergence leader and Aristide
opponent, Evans Paul recently declared “We are willing to
negotiate through which door he [President Aristide]
leaves the palace, through the front door or the back door.”
(This vulgar sentiment should be eerily familiar to
Jamaicans who lived through the 70s.)
Of more immediate concern is the fact that
the recent insurrection by armed gangs has cut off important
sectors of population from the rest of the country. Haiti’s
infrastructure is almost non-existent. The few roads are hellish
obstacle courses even without the gangsters.
A Jamaican Red Cross plan to deliver food to
Cap Haitien has been aborted and the United Nations a few
days ago issued a warning that the violence was shutting off
deliveries of necessities to thousands of needy Haitians,
threatening a broad humanitarian crisis. Bertrand
Ramcharan, the acting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights in
Geneva, urged ``all concerned to stop the violence and resolve
the political crisis in a peaceful and constitutional manner.''
This warning will, like most others, fall on
deaf ears.
After all, the North Atlantic powers have
been perfectly at ease watching Haiti starve, watching the
rapacious progress of AIDS as it decimates the Haitian
population, and perfectly happy to wait until starvation,
violence, and abject misery force the Haitians to capitulate to
the American Imperative, which is after all, more important than
Haitian lives and welfare.
‘ … and ordered their estate’
The result of the failed Structural
Adjustment Programmes, combined with the embargo on further
financial aid, has had predictable results. “Nutt’n naw
gwaan” as I've pointed out before, and, as might be
expected, many who thought that Aristide heralded a new day for
Haiti have been turned against him and his government because
they cannot deliver the goods. “Old-time people used to sey
you cyan mek brick widout straw” You can’t provide drinkable
water without filter plants and pipes.
Unfortunately for Democratic Convergence, the
Committee of 184 and their associated gangs, their patron,
the illustrious President George Bush, has new troubles of his
own which seem to preclude his making any new adventures in the
area of nation building.
If confidence in Aristide has dropped in
Haiti, confidence in Bush has plummeted in the United States.
And while Aristide began from a much sounder electoral
base and good title to his Presidency, President Bush’s
legitimacy is questionable and his fellow citizens no
longer overwhelmingly consider him a trustworthy person,
according to the latest polls.
There is no way of measuring support for
Aristide except by the wholly empirical evidence that the
Opposition has been unable to hold a rally in Port au Prince
because of the ‘intimidation’ of pro-Aristide people.
Since both sides depend on ‘gangs’ it
should be easy for the majority to impose its will.
In Gonaives, where a small but well armed
gang ousted the public administration recently, people are
reported to have fled from the tender mercies of the Opposition
forces. A website sympathetic to the Cannibal
Army, (since renamed) was displaying pictures this past week
of rebels brandishing the severed leg of a dead policeman and
another of a dinner plate on which lay the severed ear and
thumb of another dead policeman
So much for civil disobedience.
All Things Bright and Beautiful …
Meanwhile, it is reported that the
pro-Aristide militias are retaking some of the towns interdicted
last week by the rebels.
The American Secretary of State was forced on
Wednesday to hurriedly deny his underlings’ promise that
Aristide must go. Instead, like the true,
sea-green incorruptible democrat he is, Powell
affirmed that usurpation of authority was not, just now,
on the democratic order paper.
The Democratic Convergence, and the Group 184
financed by the European Union and USAID, now appear to be
gradually disabusing themselves of the idea that they might be
rescued by the intervention of the US Marines. Instead, they are
seeking terms of surrender for their supporting cast in the
countryside, as Powell retreats and the militias of Aristide
advance.
But, no matter who comes out on top in the
latest skirmish, the war against Haiti’s poor will continue
despite, as Ira Lowenthal contends, a convergence of interest
between the US and the Haitian poor in getting rid of
Aristide: “Not incidentally, of course, such progress is
expected to relieve the pressure of illegal emigration to the
United States, whether by economic or political refugees, and to
reduce the threat of another mass exodus, as occurred in the
early 1990s. Yet this US interest also broadly (and happily)
coincides with that of Haiti's poor majority, for whom the
delivery of even minimal government services and a marginal
increase in real incomes would be an enormous advance over their
current desperate--and deteriorating--straits.”
Meanwhile, Haitians can wait for democracy,
while happily dying (in their own best interest, of course) from
officially sanctioned starvation, AIDS, and communal violence.
And the English speaking Caribbean people will
‘wait for Grandma to cough’.
The US, obeying the Precautionary Principle
enunciated in Agenda 21, is preparing Guantanamo Bay for a
reprise of the 1994 exodus from Haiti, just in case some
Haitians resume the habit of 'chopping off other people’s
faces' – as Bill Clinton graphically described it ten
years ago.
In these circumstances It may be instructive
to remember that –
“Deliberately inflicting on [any] group
conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical
destruction in whole or in part” is one of the definitions of
genocide enunciated in the Convention Against Genocide.
That convention, not incidentally, was signed the day before the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights was promulgated by the
United Nations.
Copyright 2004 John Maxwell
maxinf@cwjamaica.com * *
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update 16 June 2008 |