The Attack On Haiti’s Homeless -Bill Clinton loves Black people.

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And Step
And Step Members Posts: 3,726 ✭✭✭
edited September 2011 in The Social Lounge
Attacking Haiti's Homeless

by Jemima Pierre

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For poor people in occupied Haiti, life is a state of siege. Seventeen months after the earthquake, many owners of land on which 1,356 displaced persons camps are located are resorting to force to evict their countrymen. Meanwhile, the cash-rich Haitian reconstruction fund overseen by former presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush is building a luxury, seismically-safe hotel for western visitors.

Kafou Ayopo is a camp housing several hundred earthquake survivors located near Port-au-Prince’s Aeroport Toussaint L’Ouverture. On May 23, 2011 – a year to the day that Jamaica’s security forces massacred the citizens of Tivoli Gardens – Kafou Ayaopo’s residents were violently evicted. According to observers who live-tweeted the events as they occurred, the Haitian National Police, along with agents from the office of the Mayor of the city of Delmas, an urban community on the outskirts of the capital, came into the camp while most people were away and began destroying the makeshift tents. Some of the occupants were beaten with batons and pushed out. And when some residents attempted to stage an impromptu protest, police fired shots into the crowd. By the end of the operation, the camp was mostly destroyed and the former inhabitants were left without belongings or a place to go.

Is this what it means, in the words of former U.S. president Bill Clinton, to “build back Haiti better?” Or is it the fastest way for Haiti to “open for business,” as the new president, Michel “Sweet Micky” Martelly, declared? According to official counts, there are approximately 1356 camps scattered throughout the areas affected by the earthquake, housing Haiti’s poor and internally displaced persons (IDPs). These people survived the earthquake with very little and settled temporarily on public and private lands, making homes under tarps, in donated plastic tents, or in makeshift structures of wood, cardboard and scraps of fabric. Seventeen months after the earthquake – and in light of the near complete failure of reconstruction efforts – these camps have become semi-permanent settlements. Yet the more time passes, the more private owners are aggressively retaking their lands.

“In some cases, it has been the Haitian government itself that has destroyed the camps as a way to force people into its few ‘legitimate’ camps.”

The events at Kafou Ayopo were not isolated – and they offer an ominous sign for the future of Haiti’s homeless. Since the January 12, 2010 earthquake killed an estimated 300,000 people and displaced between 1.3 and 1.5 million, numerous other evictions have occurred. The Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), alongside activist journalists such as @mediahacker and @brikouri, reported on evictions occurring as early as 2 months after the earthquake. The methods of these evictions have been appalling. In some instances owners of private land have barricaded camp walls with barbwire and broken glass, and have locked camps to prevent residents from leaving or entering. Property owners have allegedly threatened to send armed gangs to evict residents in Camp Immaculée in Cité Soleil. There have been demands that aid agencies discontinue their provision of food and services to the camps, effectively starving their denizens. In some cases, it has been the Haitian government itself that has destroyed the camps as a way to force people into its few “legitimate” camps. There are cases where residents were forcibly removed only to see a new “legitimate” camp set up nearby and provided with social and economic services that exclude them. At times, powerful foreign NGOs selectively provide aid, bypassing certain communities.

“In some instances owners of private land have barricaded camp walls with barbwire and broken glass, and have locked camps to prevent residents from leaving or entering.”

But with this systematic state-sanctioned process of forced removal from public and private lands, who looks out for the rights of Haitian citizens? It certainly is not those given the mandate to reconstruct Haiti. The thousands of heavily funded foreign NGOs work independently from the Haitian government (and in some cases against the Haitian government) while their response to the earthquake has been, at best, lethargic and selective. In April 2010, Haiti’s neocolonial government allowed the creation of an Interim Haiti Recovery Commission co-chaired by Bill Clinton and then-Haitian Prime Minister, Jean-Max Bellerive. By late 2010, it was clear that the Commission hadn’t completed any major projects and had no clear plan. Clinton’s oversized role in Haiti is obvious with the Clinton-Bush Fund, a major, non-profit fundraising effort authorized by President Obama after the earthquake. But the Fund’s biggest splash was its announcement two weeks ago that it was investing $2 million in a major commercial $29 million hotel project—the Oasis Hotel.

So, on the one hand we have forced evictions that have once again rendered poor earthquake survivors homeless. On the other, we have the construction of a multimillion-dollar hotel, with collected non-profit funds, for westerners. Paul Altidor, the Clinton-Bush Fund’s vice president argued that this gross and inhumane disparity is necessary because: “For Haiti’s recovery to be sustainable, it must attract investors, businesses and donors all of whom will need a business-class, seismically-safe hotel.”

And while the Haiti’s elite and the rich, white westerners can luxuriate in clean, upscale earthquake-safe hotels, Haiti’s poor remain homeless.

Jemima Pierre can be reached at BAR1804@gmail.com

Comments

  • Madbeats
    Madbeats Members Posts: 544
    edited September 2011
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    This is tragic! The Haitians deserve better and I don't know why we aren't making sure they get something better.
  • needmorecash
    needmorecash Members Posts: 253
    edited September 2011
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    i just want to throw up. . . ..

    what can we do though, we cant help ourselves .. .
  • toomy
    toomy Members Posts: 369
    edited September 2011
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    eddie2time wrote: »
    i just want to throw up. . . ..

    what can we do though, we cant help ourselves .. .

    obviously somebody is selling the Haitians out. Maybe it's the bi-racials that live there. I heard that most of them belong to the upper class in Haiti and often look down on the Blacks and force there children into a type of indentured servitude.
  • The Lonious Monk
    The Lonious Monk Members Posts: 26,258 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    Come on people, are ya'll serious? Whether it seems politically correct or not, if you want investers and other people that could possibly bring revenue in the country to actually visit the country, you're going to have to make it appealing. Let's be real, these rich white people wouldn't be caught dead staying in a Holiday Inn, so they aren't about to go to Haiti and spend a week in some ? roach motel. It's just business. If you want people to give you their ear and eventually their money, you have to first at least make it so they'd actually want to come listen.
  • toomy
    toomy Members Posts: 369
    edited September 2011
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    They got a Billion dollars in Aid from people around the world and they're still people sleeping on the ground in the dirt?

    Something is definitely wrong here.
  • desertrain10
    desertrain10 Members Posts: 4,829 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    its been reported that 21 BILLION in aid was raised. despite that, millions of Haitians are still going hungry, sleeping on the ground, the homeless are being ? , nothing is being built – so what has happened to the money?... smdh. once again the money feathers the pockets of large organizations / corrupt officials etc and does not get used as it was intended nor as it was asked for.
  • BelovedAfeni
    BelovedAfeni Members Posts: 8,647 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    eddie2time wrote: »
    i just want to throw up. . . ..

    what can we do though, we cant help ourselves .. .

    true

    or wont help

    like antwan said they ? everybody out here
  • BelovedAfeni
    BelovedAfeni Members Posts: 8,647 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    did yall see the peanut butter packs they give them for the babies
    smh
    the are surrounded by water and have good land and they are being given peanuts
  • And Step
    And Step Members Posts: 3,726 ✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    Come on people, are ya'll serious? Whether it seems politically correct or not, if you want investers and other people that could possibly bring revenue in the country to actually visit the country, you're going to have to make it appealing. Let's be real, these rich white people wouldn't be caught dead staying in a Holiday Inn, so they aren't about to go to Haiti and spend a week in some ? roach motel. It's just business. If you want people to give you their ear and eventually their money, you have to first at least make it so they'd actually want to come listen.

    This is ? .

    The ? didn't work in Cuba during Batistas time. The ? is not working in Jamaica and the the Carribean right now. These crackers don't give a ? about building anything for the Haitian people's sake. They want Haiti to become the playground it once was. Oh, did we mention that they found oil in Port au Prince?

    They are using the Haitians to generate funds for their ventures. They are building prisons with some of that money. They got people eating good food and fresh water less than a couple hundred yards away from refugee camps where people are drinking cholera infested waters, while these "missionaries" are prostituting Haitian women for food and water.


    FOHWTBSS
  • And Step
    And Step Members Posts: 3,726 ✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    What most don't understand is that when you give money to organizations like the red cross they are not obligated to spend the money on what you intend it for. Most of it never sees the cause they advertising for. You give money and it could end up going to a bunch of millionaires whose vacation house was damaged in a mud slide.

    That is why they came down on Wyclef so hard because he was messing with their money. Ask the Red Cross and the rest of them crackers where their money went.

  • one_manshow
    one_manshow Members Posts: 4,591 ✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    I wonder much fraud is committed with these agencies after there is no way of tracking if money is actually arriving to those in need of it.

    Catastrophism has led to corporations/agencies taking peoples hard earned money and claiming that they are actually contributing to the recovery phase when in reality they are not.

    There will be natural disasters but people will continue being sheeps and donating money as long as "governments" claim they will match every donation.
  • The Lonious Monk
    The Lonious Monk Members Posts: 26,258 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2011
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    And Step wrote: »
    This is ? .

    The ? didn't work in Cuba during Batistas time. The ? is not working in Jamaica and the the Carribean right now. These crackers don't give a ? about building anything for the Haitian people's sake. They want Haiti to become the playground it once was. Oh, did we mention that they found oil in Port au Prince?

    They are using the Haitians to generate funds for their ventures. They are building prisons with some of that money. They got people eating good food and fresh water less than a couple hundred yards away from refugee camps where people are drinking cholera infested waters, while these "missionaries" are prostituting Haitian women for food and water.


    FOHWTBSS

    I'm not saying that they are properly using all the fund, and I'm not saying their plans are going to work. However, that article largely railed against the usage of money to build upscale hotels. Clearly, those hotels are to be used to attract investors and other people with money to spend. That is not a bad investment. You speak about what doesn't work in the Caribbean, but you're wrong. A large portion of the income for a lot of Caribbean countries comes from tourism. Jamaica for instance has a lot of crime and poverty, yet they can still attract thousands of people every year. Why? Because they have a ton of nice resort areas that pretty much insulate the tourists from the social problems on the island. Do you really think any of those islands would get as much tourist or international action if everyone that visited had to live like the locals while they stayed there? Cuba is also an especially bad example being that much of that islands' problems come from embargos and the insistence of America to be adversarial towards the island.
  • rapbizla
    rapbizla Members Posts: 86
    edited September 2011
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    I'm sure there is a descent amount of fraud going on, but the Monk makes a good point. There has to be a way to draw people into the country in order to rebuild it. Resorts create revenue that in turn helps the economy rebuild! Simply building houses for the refugees isn't going to create the flow of money over there.