Haitian Crisis - Organized Crime, Cannibalism, Election Problems And Foreign Interventions

Breadbassket

True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Nov 22, 2021
Haiti is having some issues lately, gangs are fighting the government in the capital and the current Prime Minister can't land his plane since gangsters attacked and closed the country's main airport. There was also a jailbreak. The country was supposed to have elections a year ago but they were postponed by the Prime Minister (the aforementioned one who can't land his plane) who also dissolved the electoral commission of Haiti.

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There is also a claim a cannibal gang is going around Port-au-Prince eating people they've killed.

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Talks of foreign intervention in the country have taken place, especially the possibility of a UN-backed Kenyan intervention. The Kenyans are running into domestic roadblocks on this issue though which lowers the likelihood of them intervening at all.

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There is a good chance this will get worse before it gets better for the average citizen of Haiti.
 
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Haitian Gangs Torch Ministry as Nation Descends Into Lawlessness​

Gangs in Haiti set the Interior Ministry ablaze overnight and attacked police stations and government offices in the capital as the Caribbean nation descends further into chaos.

Le Nouvelliste and other local media reported intense fighting in downtown Port-au-Prince, as more than a week of violence aimed at toppling the government of Prime Minister Ariel Henry reached a new peak. The fire at the ministry was first reported by the Miami Herald.

The 15-member Caribbean Community, or Caricom, has called for an emergency meeting in Jamaica on Monday to address the crisis in the nation of almost 12 million people.

In a statement late Friday, Caricom Chairman Mohamed Irfaan Ali said the group had been talking to stakeholders, including Henry, but there was no agreement on how to move forward.

“We are acutely aware of the urgent need for consensus,” Irfaan Ali said. “We have impressed on the respective parties that time is not on their side in agreeing to the way forward. From our reports, the situation on the ground remains dire, and is of serious concern to us.”

Henry, who left Haiti on Feb. 25 to build support for a multinational security force led by Kenya, has been unable to return to the country, as gangs have attacked the capital and closed the main airport.

He was last seen in Puerto Rico as he faces growing pressure — both domestically and from abroad — to resign and make way for a transitional government.
Read more: UN Security Council Weighs Urging Haiti Elections as Chaos Grows

Amid the power vacuum there are also growing attempts to install a new government.

Among those vying for power is Guy Philippe, who led a coup in 2004 and spent several years in US prison on money laundering charges. On Friday he told Reuters that he intended to become president, and that Henry should resign.

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US pushes Haiti PM to speed transition as gangs threaten civil war​

The United States said on Wednesday it was calling on Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry to expedite a political transition as armed gangs seek his ouster amid a collapse in security and a humanitarian crisis in the Caribbean nation.

Henry, Haiti's unelected interim leader, has been in the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico since Tuesday, apparently unable or unwilling to return to his strife-torn country after traveling to Kenya to rally security backing.

A State Department spokesperson said the U.S. was not pushing for Henry to resign, but the U.S. wanted him to "expedite" a transition of political power.

The United States also said it is not helping Henry return home.

"We are not providing any assistance to help the prime minister return to Haiti," White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre said. Haitian gangs have warned that if Henry does not resign and countries continue to back him, that it could lead to civil war.

The Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, said that as late as Tuesday the U.S. had been seeking to have Henry make an "indefinite stopover" on its territory, a request it denied, prompting Henry's plane, which had already departed from New Jersey, to land in San Juan, the capital of Puerto Rico.

Henry had traveled abroad to secure Kenya's proposed leadership of a long-delayed U.N.-ratified security mission he first requested in 2022 to help fight the increasingly powerful gangs, but countries have been slow to volunteer support.

There is no set deployment date and questions remain on who will staff it and how it will operate. The U.S. ambassador to the U.N., Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said on Wednesday that Washington hoped "that action will take place quickly."

Jimmy Cherizier, alias Barbeque, who leads a broad alliance of criminal gangs that have been fueling a dire humanitarian crisis in Port-au-Prince, Haiti's capital, has signaled the gangs could fight the proposed mission as a united front and that the city's international airport is no longer secure.

Local rights group RNDDH said that at least nine police stations had been torched while 21 public buildings or shops had been looted, and over 4,600 prisoners escaped in the past week.

"If Ariel Henry doesn't step down, if the international community continues to support Ariel Henry, they will lead us directly into a civil war that will end in genocide," Cherizier said at a press conference on Tuesday.

He added that a broad alliance of gangs known as Viv Ansanm (Living Together) were fighting to annex strategic areas to allow them to oust Henry "as quickly as possible," and that his international backers would be to blame for Haitians who die.

NO CONSENSUS​

Henry, who has been in power but unelected since the assassination of President Jovenel Moise in 2021, has postponed promised elections, saying security must first be established for a free and fair vote.

Leaders from the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) have been meeting with Haitian government officials and opposition figures from the private, civil and religious sectors "around the clock" for three days, CARICOM Chair Irfaan Ali, who is also the president of Guyana, said in a video statement.

Ali said they had not been able to reach "any form of consensus" between key Haitian players and said it was essential to establish one as countries prepare to deploy troops in Haiti.

"They're all aware of the price of failure," Ali said. "The fact that more people have died in Haiti in the early part of this year than in Ukraine must give everyone serious pause."

A small number of protesters were outside a Puerto Rican hotel believed to be hosting Henry on Wednesday, calling for his resignation and for an external body to help administer elections.

"We ask that this great murderer resign," said Leonard Prophil, 51, a Haitian who has lived in Puerto Rico for 18 years and said his niece had been a victim of kidnapping in Haiti. "I don't know why they allowed him in Puerto Rico."

A U.N. spokesperson on Wednesday reiterated calls for donations to the security force and aid campaigns, saying the main hospitals were overloaded with wounded civilians and there was an urgent need for supplies of blood.

'BEYOND UNTENABLE'​

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk called for the "urgent deployment, with no further delay" of the planned security force, saying there was no realistic alternative to protect lives: "This situation is beyond untenable for the people of Haiti."

According to the U.N., some 360,000 people are internally displaced while close to 1,200 have been killed and nearly 700 injured since the start of this year, with widespread reports of rape and torture, and access to basic supplies and services blocked.

"Each passing day brings new deprivations and horrors," the head of the U.N.'s children agency, Catherine Russell, said. "The Haitian population is caught in the crossfire."

An association of private hospitals in Haiti on Wednesday said that due to the conflict many hospitals had been victims of violent attacks and were facing severe shortages of medical essentials such as fuel and oxygen.

The Dominican Republic has upped security on its border with Haiti. Last year it deported tens of thousands of Haitian migrants and has said it will not allow Haitian refugee camps in its territory.

Responding to questions on refusing Henry's plane, Dominican authorities said while they planned to cooperate to help restore normalcy to Haiti, "it is imperative that any action taken does not compromise our national security."

Haitian news outlet Vant Bef reported that Guy Philippe, a former coup leader who was recently deported from the United States after serving a prison term on drug trafficking charges, was seeking to become leader.

He is backed by a rogue environmental brigade that has evolved into a paramilitary group known as BSAP. Local media reported the group is staffed with former soldiers who fought with Philippe in 2004 to oust ex-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

The U.N. Security Council is holding a closed door meeting on Haiti on Wednesday.

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‘They messed it up': Biden’s backing for Haiti’s unpopular leader digs US into deeper policy hole​

When Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry filled the void left by the assassination of the country’s president in 2021, he did so over the protest of wide segments of the population but with the full-throated support of the Biden administration.

Now, almost three years later, Henry’s grip on power is hanging by a thread, and Washington is confronted by even worse choices as it scrambles to prevent the country’s descent into anarchy.

“They messed it up deeply,” James Foley, a retired career diplomat and former U.S. ambassador to Haiti, said in an interview about the Biden administration’s support for Henry. “They rode this horse to their doom. It’s the fruit of the choices we made.”

The embattled prime minister left Haiti 10 days ago and has since crisscrossed the world — from South America to Africa to New York and now Puerto Rico — all while staying silent as he tries to negotiate a return home that seems increasingly unlikely.

The power vacuum has been exacerbated by the almost complete withdrawal of police from key state institutions and a mass escape of hundreds of murderers, kidnappers and other violent offenders from the country’s two biggest prisons over the weekend.

Haiti remained paralyzed Thursday after another night of attacks on police stations and other targets by armed groups that have vowed to force Henry’s resignation. The country’s acting prime minister, filling in for Henry while he is abroad, extended a poorly enforced nighttime curfew through Sunday.

Stubborn U.S. support for Henry is largely to blame for the deteriorating situation, said Monique Clesca, a Haitian writer and member of the Montana Group, a coalition of civil, business and political leaders that came together in the wake of Jovenel Moïse ‘s murder to promote a “Haitian-led solution” to the protracted crisis.

The group’s main objective is to replace Henry with an oversight committee made up of nonpolitical technocrats to restore order and pave the way for elections. But so far, Henry, who has repeatedly promised to hold elections, has shown no willingness to yield power.

While in Guyana last week for a meeting of Caribbean leaders, he delayed what would be Haiti’s first vote in a decade yet again, until mid-2025.

“He’s been a magician in terms of his incompetence and inaction,” said Clesca. “And despite it all, the U.S. has stayed with him. They’ve been his biggest enabler.”

By any measure, Haiti’s perennially tenuous governance has gotten far worse since Henry has been in office.

Last year, more than 8,400 people were reported killed, injured or kidnapped, more than double the number reported in 2022. The United Nations estimates that nearly half of Haiti’s 11 million people need humanitarian assistance.

But even as Haiti has plunged deeper into chaos, the U.S. has stood firmly by Henry.

“He is taking difficult steps,” Brian Nichols, assistant secretary of state for Western Hemisphere affairs, said in October 2022, as Haitians poured into the streets to protest the end of fuel subsidies. “Those are actions that we have wanted to see in Haiti for quite some time.”

When demonstrations resumed last month demanding Henry’s resignation, the top U.S. diplomat in Haiti again rushed to his defense.

“Ariel Henry will leave after the elections,” U.S. chargé d’affaires Eric Stromayer told a local radio station.

But the Biden administration isn’t the only U.S. administration that failed to get Haiti right.

The country has been on a downward spiral for decades as rampant poverty, corruption, lawlessness and natural disasters overwhelm any effort to rebuild the economy and democratic institutions. Factionalism among political elites, some with ties to the flourishing criminal underworld, has also taken its toll, making it especially hard for the U.S. to find partners it can trust.

“It’s an occupational hazard with Haiti,” Foley said. “It’s just too hard, too complicated, too insoluble.”

The Biden administration has defended its approach to Haiti. White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre, without specifically endorsing Henry, said the U.S. long term goal of stabilizing the country so Haitians can hold elections hasn’t changed.

But in what may be a telling slip that speaks to the neglect Haiti has suffered in Washington of late, Jean-Pierre confused the Haitian president, the country’s top elected official, with the prime minister, who is picked by the president and subject to parliamentary approval.

“It’s the Haitian people — they need to have an opportunity to democratically elect their prime minister,” Jean-Pierre, whose parents fled Haiti, said Wednesday. “That’s what we’re encouraging. But we’ve been having these conversations for some time.”

Nichols said he and Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with Henry on Thursday and urged him to broaden his political coalition. He said the U.S. would work to speed up the deployment of a multinational security mission to combat the gangs led by Haiti under the auspices of the United Nations but that other countries needed to step up their support in the way the world is working together to address humanitarian needs in Ukraine and Gaza.

“We’ve got to do more, we’ve got to do more urgently,” Nichols said at an event hosted by the Council of the Americas in Washington. “The crisis in Haiti has the humanitarian proportions that demand a global response.”

The U.S. bears much of the blame for the country’s ills. After French colonizers were violently banished in 1791, the U.S. worked to isolate the country diplomatically and strangle it economically. American leaders feared a newly independent and free Haiti would inspire slave revolts back home. The U.S. did not even officially recognize Haiti until 1862, during the Civil War that abolished American slavery.

Meanwhile, U.S. troops have been an on-and-off presence on the island, dating from the era of “gunboat diplomacy” in the early 20th century when President Woodrow Wilson sent an expeditionary force that would occupy the country for two decades to collect unpaid debts to foreign powers.

The last intervention took place in 2004, when the administration of George W. Bush diverted resources from the war on terrorism in Afghanistan and Iraq to calm the streets following a coup that removed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

Foley said he sees many parallels between the Aristide crisis he had to navigate as ambassador and the one confronting the Biden administration. Then, as now, Haitian political leaders have proven incapable of consensus and state authority has collapsed, even if the magnitude of the security and economic free fall is far deeper. Re-engineering democracy will take years of painstaking work.

Neither the White House nor the Pentagon wants to send troops into Haiti with a proxy war taking place in Ukraine against Russia, the Israel-Hamas conflict at risk of spreading and the growing rivalry with China in the Indo-Pacific.

Politically, any such move just months from the U.S. presidential election would be seized on by Biden’s likely opponent, Donald J. Trump, as another example of futile nation building by the U.S.

But Foley said the situation is deteriorating so fast that the Biden administration may have no choice. He’s pushing for a limited troop presence, like the one that in 2004 handed off to U.N. peacekeepers after only six months. Unlike the U.N. peacekeeping mission, which was hastily organized, Kenya has been working for months on a multinational force to combat the gangs.

“I completely understand the deep reluctance in Washington to have U.S. forces on the ground,” Foley said. “But it may prove impossible to prevent a criminal takeover of the state unless a small U.S. security contingent is sent on a temporary basis to create the conditions for international forces to take over.”

But whether yet another U.S. intervention helps stabilize a desperate Haiti, or just adds more fuel to the raging fire, remains an open question. And given the recent American track record, many are doubtful.

“The U.S. for too long has been too present, too meddling,” said Clesca. “It’s time for them to step back.”

Article Link
 
It seems the US government wants the UN and Kenya to intervene for public perception and optical purposes. Would just be one big campaign talking point if American soldiers were sent in I guess. 3 interventions (Operation Uphold Democracy, the 2004 coup d'état and potentially another one in the near future) in 30 years is absurd.
 
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It seems the US government wants the UN and Kenya to intervene for public perception and optical purposes.
let's not kid ourselves here, we could've pacified haiti with our own police action at the start of this recent civil war. but our government wouldn't be able to withstand blm 2.0 protests as video of white and latino marines killing haitians came out. having jackbooted kenyans take the lead would've been the right move in Sept/Oct of last year but now we might have to ask for a coalition army to end the civil war. we still don't know who killed Jovenel Moise or why other than accusations from his political opponents.
Could it be US State fucking shit up? No one really knows.
 
The thing I like the most about the inevitable end of the American empire is that the US won't have any problems minding it's own fucking business if there isn't a US at all:



Even Bill’s U.N. Office of the Special Envoy couldn’t track where all of [it] went—and the truth is that still today no one really knows how much money was spent “rebuilding” Haiti. Many initial pledges never materialized. A whopping $465 million of the relief money went through the Pentagon, which spent it on deployment of U.S. troops—20,000 at the high water mark, many of whom never set foot on Haitian soil. That money included fuel for ships and planes, helicopter repairs and inscrutables such as an $18,000 contract for a jungle gym… Huge contracts were doled out to the usual array of major contractors, including a $16.7 million logistics contract whose partners included Agility Public Warehousing KSC, a Kuwaiti firm that was supposed to have been blacklisted from doing business with Washington after a 2009 indictment alleging a conspiracy to defraud the U.S. government during the Iraq War.





"The industrial park is considered a very big flop by the US. Worse still, several hundred farmers were evicted from there in order to make way for the 600-acre park. Too much emphasis was placed on “outside players” instead of the Haitian government to effect change."

"As such, the jobs that Caracol was expected to make fall far below the reality on the ground. The post-earthquake efforts by the Clintons, particularly Caracol, was a damning failure that did nothing to lift the Haitians out of their misery but only lined the pockets of big firms. South Korean textile giant Sae-A Trading Co, which is the main employer at Caracol, gifted the Clinton Foundation with donations between $50,000 and $100,000."

 
It's "starting" to look like Papa Doc did nothing wrong.
Papa Doc and Baby Doc were incompetent. Besides having a secret police force with an interesting aesthetic, both were corrupt and inept and caused a brain drain. The son was clearly worse then the father though.

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LMAO!

The U.S. bears much of the blame for the country’s ills. After French colonizers were violently banished in 1791, the U.S. worked to isolate the country diplomatically and strangle it economically. American leaders feared a newly independent and free Haiti would inspire slave revolts back home. The U.S. did not even officially recognize Haiti until 1862, during the Civil War that abolished American slavery.

Yes, clearly what’s happening now is because of what some white guys did over two centuries ago, and not you know nogs being nogs.
 
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