The former president's record on Haiti exemplifies the past and current failures of foreign aid that at turns neglects and harms the Haitian people.
More than four months after the January 12 earthquake, hundreds of thousands of Haitians are without shelter, food and medical care. As the seasonal rains fall, grave threats of infectious disease epidemic hover over the earthquake zone. Despite the hundreds of millions of dollars at their disposal, aid from foreign charities and NGOs has not reached many, perhaps a majority, of earthquake victims. A recent study by CBS News of five top U.S. charities raising funds for Haiti reveals they have spent only a fraction of funds raised. The Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund and the Clinton Foundation are among the most delinquent; they have raised $52 million and spent only $7 million.
As the calamity in Haiti continues, growing numbers of observers are noting the same patterns of neglect of the basic needs and rights of Haitians, coupled with foreign interference in Haiti's politics and economy, that marked the pre-earthquake period. One glaring example is the fact that the Interim Haiti Reconstruction Commission, responsible for allocating much of the $14 billion dollars promised by the world for Haiti relief, is in its majority run by non-Haitian appointees.
By his own admission in March of this year, President Clinton's past record in Haiti is one of failure. In 1994, his U.S. administration sponsored the restoration to power of Haitian President Jean Bertrand Aristide, who had been overthrown in a 1991 military coup. It set conditions on Aristide's restoration the presidency, including agricultural import policies that destroyed a large part of Haiti's food-producing capacity and ruinous privatization of the precious few public enterprises in the country.
The current prescriptions for Haiti by the former president and the Interim Commission he heads follow similar failed themes, including promoting sweatshop factory investment as a panacea for the country's economic ills. Additionally, since the second overthrow of President Aristide, on February 29, 2004, the U.S., Canada and other foreign powers have consistently failed to follow through on promises of aid spending in Haiti.
Half of the $220 million in aid promised by the Canadian government to "match" donations made by Canadians to charities in the calamitous aftermath of the earthquake will not go to Haitians at all, but instead to international financial institutions to retire Haiti's foreign debt. Another $65 million is promised to the Red Cross and other international agencies. The federal government and Canadian International Development Agency have allocated an additional $44 million for prison construction and equipping the Haitian National Police, a notorious human rights violating agency.
Meanwhile, the Haitian government has received next to nothing of the funds raised internationally in Haiti's name.
For several months now, Canada's print and broadcast media have all but fallen silent on the perilous situation still facing most earthquake victims and what, if anything, Canadian aid money is accomplishing. When Canada's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lawrence Cannon, visited Haiti for three days in early May, not a single English-language news outlet in Canada reported on his visit. The same media has steadfastly avoided any serious examination of Canada's participation in the 2004 overthrow of President Aristide.
Haiti Solidarity BC reiterates here the principles of Haiti reconstruction that its affiliated organization, the Canada Haiti Action Network, voiced in a February 28 statement:
* Relief and reconstruction must respect and promote the sovereignty of Haiti's government and social and political institutions.