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From: Sultan Ibrahim <sultanofpe...@yahoo.com>
Date: Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 9:29 AM
Subject: [issuesonline_worldwide] Haiti: A Creditor, Not A Debtor (THe west
stands exposed in Haiti, once again)
To: arki <arkitectin...@yahoogroups.com>, ihro <i...@yahoogroups.com>




Haiti: A Creditor, Not A Debtor
By Naomi Klein
12 February, 2010

The Nation

If
we are to believe the G-7 finance ministers, Haiti is on its way to
getting something it has deserved for a very long time: full "forgiveness"
of its foreign debt.
In Port-au-Prince, Haitian economist Camille Chalmers has been watching
these developments with cautious optimism. Debt cancellation is a good
start, he told Al Jazeera English, but "It's time to go much further.
We have to talk about reparations and restitution for the devastating
consequences of debt." In this telling, the whole idea that Haiti is a
debtor needs to be abandoned. Haiti, he argues, is a creditor-and it is
we, in the West, who are deeply in arrears.
Our
debt to Haiti stems from four main sources: slavery, the US occupation,
dictatorship and climate change. These claims are not fantastical, nor
are they merely rhetorical. They rest on multiple violations of legal
norms and agreements. Here, far too briefly, are highlights of the
Haiti case.
The Slavery
Debt. When Haitians won their independence from France in 1804, they
would have had every right to claim reparations from the powers that
had profited from three centuries of stolen labor. France, however, was
convinced that it was Haitians who had stolen the property of slave
owners by refusing to work for free. So in 1825, with a flotilla of war
ships stationed off the Haitian coast threatening to re-enslave the
former colony, King Charles X came to collect:
90 million gold francs-ten times Haiti's annual revenue at the time.
With no way to refuse, and no way to pay, the young nation was shackled
to a debt that would take 122 years to pay off.
In
2003, Haitian President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, facing a crippling
economic embargo, announced that Haiti would sue the French government
over that long-ago heist. "Our argument," Aristide's former lawyer Ira
Kurzban told me, "was that the contract was an invalid agreement
because it was based on the threat of re-enslavement at a time when the
international community regarded slavery as an evil." The French
government was sufficiently concerned that it sent a mediator to
Port-au-Prince to keep the case out of court. In the end, however, its
problem was eliminated: while trial preparations were under way,
Aristide was toppled from power. The lawsuit disappeared, but for many
Haitians the reparations claim lives on.
The
Dictatorship Debt. From 1957 to 1986, Haiti was ruled by the defiantly
kleptocratic Duvalier regime. Unlike the French debt, the case against
the Duvaliers made it into several courts, which traced Haitian funds
to an elaborate network of Swiss bank
and lavish properties. In 1988 Kurzban won a landmark suit against
Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier when a US District Court in Miami found
that the deposed ruler had "misappropriated more than $504,000,000 from
public monies."
Haitians,
of course, are still waiting for their payback-but that was only the
beginning of their losses. For more than two decades, the country's
creditors insisted that Haitians honor the huge debts incurred by the
Duvaliers,
estimated at $844 million, much of it owed to institutions like the IMF
and the World Bank. In debt service alone, Haitians have paid out tens
of millions every year.
Was
it legal for foreign lenders to collect on the Duvalier debts when so
much of it was never spent in Haiti? Very likely not. As Cephas Lumina,
the United Nations Independent Expert on foreign debt, put it to me,
"the case of Haiti is one of the best examples of odious debt in the
world. On that basis alone the debt should be unconditionally canceled."
But
even if Haiti does see full debt cancellation (a big if), that does not
extinguish its right to be compensated for illegal debts already
collected.
The Climate Debt. Championed by several developing countries at the climate
summit in Copenhagen, the case for climate debt is straightforward.
Wealthy countries that have so spectacularly failed to address the
climate crisis they caused owe a debt to the developing countries that
have done little to cause the crisis but are disproportionately facing
its effects. In short: the polluter pays. Haiti has a particularly
compelling claim. Its contribution to climate change has been
negligible; Haiti's per capita CO2 emissions are just 1 percent of US
emissions. Yet Haiti is among the hardest hit countries-according to one
index, only Somalia is more vulnerable to climate change.
Haiti's
vulnerability to climate change is not only-or even mostly-because of
geography. Yes, it faces increasingly heavy storms. But it is Haiti's
weak infrastructure that turns challenges into disasters and disasters
into full-fledged catastrophes. The earthquake, though not linked to
climate change, is a prime example. And this is where all those illegal
debt payments may yet extract their most devastating cost. Each payment
to a foreign creditor was money not spent on a road, a school, an
electrical line. And that same illegitimate debt empowered the IMF and
World Bank to attach onerous conditions to each new loan, requiring
Haiti to deregulate its economy and slash its public sector still
further. Failure to comply was met with a punishing aid embargo from
2001 to '04, the death knell to Haiti's public sphere.
This
history needs to be confronted now, because it threatens to repeat
itself. Haiti's creditors are already using the desperate need for
earthquake aid to push for a fivefold increase in garment-sector
production, some of the most exploitative jobs in the country. Haitians
have no status in these talks, because they are regarded as passive
recipients of aid, not full and dignified participants in a process of
redress and restitution.
A
reckoning with the debts the world owes to Haiti would radically change
this poisonous dynamic. This is where the real road to repair begins:
by recognizing the right of Haitians to reparations.
The
interview with economist Camille Chalmers was conducted by my partner
Avi Lewis for an in-depth report that aired today on Al Jazeera
English. The piece, Haiti: The Politics of Rebuilding, offers a deeply
compelling portrait of a people who are brimming with ideas about how
how to rebuild their country based on principles of sovereignty and
equity -- far from the passive victims we have seen on so many other
networks. It was produced by my former colleague Andréa Schmidt, one of
the main researchers on The Shock Doctrine, and is crucial viewing for
anyone concerned with avoiding a disaster capitalism redux in Haiti.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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