War Haiti’s freefall into an abyss can only be prevented if gangs are allowed to be part of a new government

Source: https://theconversation.com/haitis-...allowed-to-be-part-of-a-new-government-226999
Archive: https://archive.ph/vpJgk
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The poorest nation in the western hemisphere, Haiti, finds itself in a catastrophic situation. For close to a month now, the country has been lurching from one crisis to another. The underwriters of the anarchy are armed gangs.
Among their achievements are the removal of a sitting government, a near total takeover of the capital, Port-au-Prince, orchestrating a grinding humanitarian crisis, and generally stirring up mayhem across the country.
At the same time, however, Haiti’s freefall into an abyss can only be prevented if the gangs are put in the driver’s seat of governance.
For generations, Haiti’s gangs have received power, patronage and privileges from the country’s political establishment, the opposition and businesses. Militia gangs were formalised as power brokers under the leadership of the country’s former dictator, François “Papa Doc” Duvalier, in the late 1950s.
Although disbanded in the late 1980s, their legacies live on. The 200 or so marauding gangs that are currently terrorising Haitians can be traced back to the dreaded Tonton Macoute, a paramilitary and secret police force that Papa Doc implanted in the country’s political culture.
The de-facto head of a consortium of gangs that have brought Port-au-Prince to a standstill, Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, has proposed that he (and the gangs he represents) would consider laying down weapons if armed groups were allowed to take part in talks to establish a new government.
In an interview with Sky News, he said: “If the international community comes with a detailed plan where we can sit together and talk, but they do not impose on us what we should decide, I think that the weapons could be lowered.”
The gangs’ demand that they be given a frontline role in Haiti’s future political landscape is not audacious. It is borne out of an astute reading of the realities on the ground.
Gangs are a permanent fixture in the country’s socioeconomic and political processes, and getting rid of them under the current circumstances is wishful thinking. Perhaps it is time the international community acknowledged this fact and devised a plan that can realistically address Haiti’s problems.

Spoilers​

The reason why many peace plans fail is due to the fact that they often refuse a place at the negotiating table to the groups that perpetrated the conflict in the first place.
The logic behind this is simple. It is considered unethical to give voice to the very elements responsible for past ills. And most peace plans consider the voice of the “moderators” as legitimate and not that of the “extremists”.
But such exclusive peace plans gives birth to another set of challenges. Those who are pushed out of negotiations and power-sharing arrangements become “spoilers”.
Spoilers are leaders who hold the view that any change in status quo undermines their interests. Nervous for their future, they set out to undermine any plan that seeks to establish normalcy in the society.

Savimbi’s spoiler war​

The Angolan civil war (which began in 1975) went on for years even after the signing of a peace agreementin 1991. The key architect of the civil war, Jonas Savimbi, had begun fighting for independence in the 1960s when Angola was still a colony of Portugal.
But Savimbi, billed as an anti-communist during the height of the cold war, was actually no more than a power-hungry opportunist. The rebel leader refused to accept the outcome of UN-monitored elections in 1992 in which his party Unita lost both power and influence, and embraced the role of a spoiler by choosing war over peace.
Between 1992 and 2002, he initiated a pointless and personal guerrilla war against the elected government. Hundreds of thousands of peasants were killed, wounded, displaced or starved to death.
Whatever the nature, character and past of the adversaries may be, any credible peace plan must incorporate provisions to accommodate the spoilers in order to have a fighting chance of success. Sponsors of any peace plan, external or homegrown, need to be vigilant and sensitive to the management of spoilers.

Lessons for Haiti​

Haiti’s collapse into anarchy has exacted a terrible human price. But there is no hiding the fact that gangs will remain the architects of Haiti’s future, no matter the colour and shape of the future government. There are three critical arenas where gang cooperation is indispensable.
First, an international peacekeeping force cannot be deployed to restore order without gang cooperation. The alternative to that would be body bags as the external force confronts hardened criminals well-versed in urban warfare. Chérizier has made no secret that plans for an international peacekeeping force led by Kenya in Port-au-Prince will lead to more violence, whoever is in charge.
Second, Haiti currently does not have a political elite capable of shouldering the responsibilities of an interim government. Thus, anyone harbouring political ambitions will require the support of the gangs to establish legitimacy. It is in this context that the active participation of gangs over tacit co-option in the political process is vital to ensure stability.
Third, in a country of non-existent or broken institutions, ironically it is the gangs who have a semblance of a command structure capable of getting things moving – be it water supply, the transport of goods, or the reopening of neighbourhoods. Whether you like it or not, it is the gangs who hold the key to Haiti’s future stability.
The armed gangs of Haiti have a very clear assessment of their power as movers and shakers of the country’s future. These demands should not be ignored. The alternative, as Chérizier has eloquently predicted, is “an escalation of violence” in a ruined polity with a terrified population already on its knees.
 
Let Barbeque sort them out.

Haiti isn't the source of the world's only cancer cure, or magic dirt that saves pandas or whatever.

There is zero reason why troops of any kind need to be dying there, be they Kenyan, or American or Russian.

Even if you want Minutemen/Sarmat/Belt and road chineseum port there, the Dominicans would likely be a better host for enough money.

It ain't worth the price of bombs, the lives of soldiers, reinforce the Dominican border instead.
 
But there is no hiding the fact that gangs will remain the architects of Haiti’s future, no matter the colour and shape of the future government. There are three critical arenas where gang cooperation is indispensable.
First, an international peacekeeping force cannot be deployed to restore order without gang cooperation
"We can't stop them unless they allow us to. We have to ask their permission."

The armed gangs of Haiti have a very clear assessment of their power as movers and shakers of the country’s future. These demands should not be ignored.
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"We have to let the gangs exist. They're unstoppable."

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Amalendu Misra

A Vote for the World’s “Coolest Dictator”​

With the bulk of gang members behind bars, there was a sharp fall in the crime statistics. During his presidency, Bukele is credited to have transformed El Salvador from “a country infamous for its record on murder and gangs to a nation with one of the lowest homicide rates in the Americas.” To put things in perspective, in the year 2015, El Salvador was the most violent country in the Western Hemisphere, with a murder rate of 103 per 100,000 inhabitants. By 2022, following Bukele’s crackdown, that figure had fallen to just 7.8. A miracle of sorts even by the most conservative estimates.
Many critics with their nose close to the ground realities in Bukele’s El Salvador are at pains to highlight the wrongful use of criminal justice system, emasculation of the judiciary, routine abuse and torture of those incarcerated. Most worrying of all, thousands of those arrested and now languishing in its prisons for years have little or no criminal background or links with the gangs.
As Ana Piquer, Amnesty International’s regional director for the Americas recently put it: “What we are witnessing in El Salvador [under Bukele’s state of exception] is a tragic repetition of history, where state violence is gradually replacing gang violence, leaving the same vulnerable communities trapped in an endless cycle of abuse and despair.”
So the tard who penned OP research is familiar with Bukele. And his sympathies lie with the gangs, of course. Is he just a good team player or a deranged moron?
 
Just kill them all and give the land to the Dominican Republic
No ship them to France, they shouldn't leave a job undone.
DGSE glowies, all I want is them to share their culture , the crates of machetes are just for preparing new cuisine.
They are a lot less black than Haitians, though.
And a lot more Black than Gypsies or Yemenese or Albanians.
 
If I was the President of the USA, I'd call up the President of DR and ask how strongly does he want to unify his island. Just name a fancy hotel resort after me, and the western half of your island will be subjected to deep cleaning.
 
And a lot more Black than Gypsies or Yemenese or Albanians.

Yes, and the Dominican Republic and Albania look civilised and orderly compared to turboblack Haiti. But less compared to, say, Switzerland or Taiwan. The ape-genes has been diluted more in different populations, except in Haiti you get the almost pure original jungle sauce proto humans.

That's why Haiti is so dysfunctional. The genetic stock is bad.
 
Or we airlift a shitload of guns, ammo, basic equipment and supplies to the masses. And let them decide how they want to move forward. Give the people an actual voice in this!

Maybe we should supply the gangs with guns, charcoal amd barbecue sauce. And bananas for dessert.
 
Or we airlift a shitload of guns, ammo, basic equipment and supplies to the masses. And let them decide how they want to move forward. Give the people an actual voice in this!

/totally serious


We can also stop caring and seal off the country completely?
I mean the masses are already zerging gang members when they see the chance and burning them alive
 
I see Haiti continues to check items off the modern intersectional left's wishlist. They already did total 'decolonization' & white genocide, indulged in further race warfare between the tar-black niggers and slightly lighter skinned mulattoes, had Voudoun black ultra-nationalist dictators with a very (literally) bloodthirsty death squad, were a playground for similarly degenerate globalist elites & the UN and a great harvesting ground for kids to supply Epstein & Hillary, openly practice just about every form of degeneracy known to man up to & including public cannibalism (dick first even), and now they're going to take 'defund the police' to its logical conclusion by just straight up having a government comprised of gangsters.

It's really too fucking bad for that half of Hispaniola that Leclerc and Rochambeau's attempt at enacting TND didn't work out.
 
Oh yeah, no way this will end badly at all. Once gangs get their foot into government you will never, ever get them out short of literally killing them all, which they'll have to do sooner or later
its haiti, they need a dictator to thrive. whether its the duvaliers or BBQ, haitian cant function in a democracy
 
Dominicans are Black too and worlds more civilised. Race isn't the reason Haiti is fucked up, but it may be a factor why it is politically infeasible for the USMC to go and crack warlord skulls.
Hey, we did it to Grenada when the Commies took over, we can do it to Haiti. That place was at least as fucked as Haiti considering they were a checks notes Unitary Marxist-Leninist one-party parliamentary socialist constitutional monarchy.
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