Americas

Haiti

Hobbled by foreign interventions, political instability, and natural disasters, the former French colony is paralyzed by multiple crises.
Jun 25, 2024
Hobbled by foreign interventions, political instability, and natural disasters, the former French colony is paralyzed by multiple crises.
Jun 25, 2024
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  • Americas
    Trade, Anticorruption, and Elections at the Start of 2016
    As a new year begins, trade is slower, the drive against corruption continues, and electoral struggles shape fragile democracies. Here are three issues the Civil Society, Markets, and Democracy (CSMD) program will be following in 2016: International Trade Slows After two decades of trade growing twice as fast as GDP, the two are now even at best. With government spending largely stagnant and consumption fragile, this decline further diminishes prospects for economic growth. To revive this vital element of GDP, policymakers and economists often turn to Free Trade Agreements (FTAs), one of the most effective tools to boost international commerce. Yet these will face challenges in 2016. The recently-signed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) still requires ratification by its twelve member countries. In the United States, despite fast-track legislation and vocal support from business leaders, opposition in both parties will likely push the TPP vote to a “lame duck” session in November. Meanwhile the China-led Free Trade Area of the Asia Pacific (FTAAP), a TPP alternative, failed to gain traction at the recent APEC meeting, and the U.S. and European Union’s Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) remains stalled over regulatory disagreements and European political opposition. As for multilaterals, members left the most recent World Trade Organization (WTO) Doha Round of negotiations without renewing its mandate, though they did promise to eliminate agricultural export subsidies. Policymakers will likely have to find other tools to promote global growth in 2016. Corruption Prosecutions Continue Anticorruption efforts triumphed in many places in 2015. Guatemalan prosecutors brought down President Otto Pérez Molina and Vice President Roxana Baldetti for their roles in a customs fraud scheme. Brazilian prosecutors indicted or convicted eighty business leaders and politicians, including a sitting senator, in the widening Petrobras scandal. In Nigeria, new President Muhammadu Buhari (who campaigned heavily on anticorruption) began investigations into billions of missing defense and oil funds, leading to fraud and money laundering charges against former national security advisor Sambo Dasuki and the UK arrest of former oil minister Diezani Alison-Madueke. And a U.S.-led investigation into FIFA uncovered a culture of “rampant, systemic and deep-rooted” corruption in soccer’s governing body, resulting in the indictment of thirty officials and forcing out its powerful president, Sepp Blatter. The international momentum looks to keep pace in 2016. Nigeria’s anticorruption crusade persists, as its Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) marked the new year by bringing charges against another former national security advisor, accused of diverting $1.5 million in defense funds from the fight against Boko Haram. The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) is signaling that FIFA was just the start, ramping up its Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) staff and plans for high-profile prosecutions. Elections in Fragile Democracies Presidential runoff votes in the Central African Republic (CAR) and Haiti appear headed in opposite directions, highlighting the often-present tensions between stability and democratic legitimacy in fragile states. In CAR, opposition candidates rescinded previous fraud allegations and now support a runoff election scheduled for January 31, paving the way for a democratic transition after years of religious violence. In Haiti, Jude Célestin, the runner-up in a disputed presidential vote, announced he will not participate in an already-delayed runoff. Célestin joins other opposition candidates in questioning the capacity of Haiti’s Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) to administer a free and fair vote on January 24, after an independent commission uncovered evidence of first-round fraud and irregularities. With increasing doubts about an upcoming vote’s credibility, the Obama Administration stressed the importance of a peaceful transfer of power before a February 7 constitutional deadline. Ultimately, in CAR and Haiti’s elections—as well as those to come in 2016— citizens rather than foreign observers will need to accept the results of any outcome.
  • Dominican Republic
    Deportations in the Dominican Republic
    Recent immigration actions  by the Dominican Republic are not likely to result in mass deportations of Haitians, as some fear, but could exacerbate already difficult conditions in Haiti, says expert Michele Wucker.
  • Haiti
    Haiti’s Reconstruction Struggles
    Five years after a devastating earthquake, Haiti remains plagued by a weak political system and flawed reconstruction process, says former correspondent Jonathan M. Katz.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
    Guest Post: ICT, Africa, and the 90/10 Rule
    Asch Harwood is the Africa program research associate at the Council on Foreign Relations. Last week, SAIS hosted a conference on information and communication technology (ICT) and political participation in Africa. Participants explored the potential of ICT to improve governance in Africa by promoting dissent, organizing opposition, enabling large groups to express shared concerns, and reducing communication transaction costs; as well as improving government effectiveness by streamlining administrative functions (bureaucratic listservs or mobile courts for example), opening channels of communication with constituents, and improving service delivery. Speakers also presented challenges, expanding the “digital divide” between those who have access to technology and those who don’t, which takes many forms: rural/urban, male/female, old/young, or working within difficult political contexts.   One theme came through in particular: “ICT-enabled, not driven.” Pretty obvious, right? Turns out it’s not. As speakers as well as audience questions attested to, it is easy to get caught up in the ICT component of a project and allow it to overshadow the desired outcomes. The existence of a deployment becomes the measure of success. One speaker brought up the oft-cited Ushahidi crisis mapping initiative during Haiti’s devastating earthquake in 2010 to crowdsource information for “disaster-affected populations.” They were able to roll out and promote an SMS short code that Haitians affected by the earthquake could text to report problems in their vicinity, yielding a large amount of data plotted on a map. A major challenge Ushahidi Haiti organizers encountered, however, was the difficulty international responders had integrating this crowdsourced information into their own operating procedures so they could actually use it. This isn’t all that surprising. It’s tough to get large organizations to change the way they operate. And the Ushahidi project was reportedly set up within two hours of the earthquake, seriously limiting the available preplanning stage. The impact of citizen monitoring using mobile phones and crisis mapping platforms in the 2011 Nigerian elections, which I have a written about previously, was also limited, in a different sense. While electoral failures were recorded and reported, weak institutions and/or lack of political will has, so far, undermined the judiciary’s ability to prosecute electoral malfeasance. Another speaker echoed this point, that after the elections, there was no one to hold accountable. So how do we ensure these tools are being used to their full potential? The rule of thumb, espoused by more than one presenter, was the 90/10 rule: 90 percent on planning and 10 percent on the technology. Excellent advice and an important guiding principle to ensure that thought is first put into the desired outcome—helping first responders do their jobs better, making governance more transparent, reducing information transaction costs—and then figuring out how ICT tools can help achieve those outcomes. (And finally, if your desired outcome happens to be to educate about ICT projects on the African continent, then I think the Africa Technology and Transparency Initiative and Hubs in Africa have a done a good job. I found this interactive break down of the Nigerian budget particularly useful.)
  • Development
    Haiti’s Redevelopment Obstacles
    One year after Haiti’s earthquake, a contested presidential election, the return of Baby Doc Duvalier, and problems with redevelopment hobble the country’s efforts to rebuild, says Haitian philanthropist Jacques-Philippe Piverger.
  • Development
    How to Rebuild Haiti after the Quake
    Can Haiti rebuild better, with improved stability and prosperity? Four top experts stress different approaches to enable Haitians to rebuild and sustain their economy and public sector.
  • Haiti
    Haiti’s Year of Living Miserably
    The cholera epidemic that has added to the list of Haiti’s post-earthquake miseries is a reminder that what Haiti needs more than anything else is good governance that would lead to better infrastructure and safe water.
  • Haiti
    Fighting Cholera amid Haiti’s Debris
    Haiti’s cholera outbreak is exacerbated by unclean water and a subpar sanitation system, and lagging infrastructure repairs highlight the inadequate global response to the country’s earthquake in January, says CFR’s Laurie Garrett.
  • Development
    Spending So That Haiti Is ’Built Back Better’
    The $9.9 billion pledged toward Haitian reconstruction at last week’s donors’ conference will be ineffective without insisting that funding for housing and jobs be wedded to overall goals for Haitian political and economic stability, says CFR expert Kara McDonald.
  • Foreign Aid
    Beyond Relief: Helping Haiti
    Play
    Related Readings: The Road to Recovery What Haiti Needs
  • Foreign Aid
    Beyond Relief: Helping Haiti
    Play
    Watch experts discuss the political and economic challenges facing Haiti and the role foreign aid can play in the country's recovery and development.
  • Haiti
    Rebuilding Haiti: The Work of Decades
    Haiti’s earthquake created a need for a tremendous short-term relief effort but also long-term reconstruction that could take decades and cost billions, says former Peace Corps director Mark L. Schneider.
  • Global Governance
    Tragedy and Opportunity for Haiti
    Haiti’s earthquake lays bare woeful political and economic dysfunctions, but in the global disaster response, there is a chance to get aid right, writes CFR’s Kara C. McDonald.
  • Haiti
    Garrett: HIV/AIDS Still Poorly Measured
    On the annual occasion of World AIDS day, CFR health expert Laurie Garrett points to problems in tracking and addressing the disease.
  • Haiti
    UN Must ‘Stay the Course’ in Haiti, says UN Undersecretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations Jean-Marie Guéhenno
    Jean-Marie Guéhenno, undersecretary-general for UN peacekeeping operations and former French ambassador to the European Union, says real progress has been made in Haiti. The poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, Haiti has been wracked by violence since the February 2004 ouster of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and elections there have been postponed four times because of instability. But Guehenno says Haiti is moving “closer to a key milestone,” the rescheduled elections February 7, and most of the country “is more or less...stabilized.” For real progress to be made, however, the United Nations must be clear it is ready to “really stay the course.” He spoke with cfr.org’s Mary Crane January 9, 2005.Let’s start by summing up the United Nations’ presence in Haiti since the departure of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide two years ago. Can you tell us what the status of UN peacekeeping forces is in Haiti? Maybe I should start by saying that the United Nations has been involved in Haiti several times in the past, and I think when we were requested to come back to Haiti after the departure of President Aristide, it was clear, I think to everybody, that this time the international community should really stay the course and learn from past failures.The main lesson from the past failures is that there was never a sufficiently comprehensive effort in Haiti. An election is an important event, but an election is the beginning of something, not the end, and it has to be complemented by a much broader effort to rebuild the state. And that’s why in Haiti today we want to address the situation on a number of fronts. First, of course, is to bring security to Haiti. The beginning of the mission, as you know, was difficult because the troops were not necessarily prepared for the challenges they encountered.And where are most of the troops from?Most of the troops come from Latin America. We have troops from Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Guatemala—there are a number of Latin American countries. These are the main countries. The leadership of the mission is also from Latin America. Since the tragic death of [UN mission commander] General [Urano Teixeira da Matta] Bacellar this weekend, we will certainly have another Brazilian commander and we are in touch with Brazil to identify a suitable force commander. It’s really our intention to keep a Brazilian force commander and Brazil has made a major commitment to the mission.So when I look at the strategy of the mission, [the] first [priority is] to bring a measure of security. Everyone is focused on what is not yet right—that is, the disarray in [the capital] Port-au-Prince. But what I see is the progress that has [been made] in the rest of the country. When you look at what the situation was even a few months ago, when [there were] road-blocking attempts in the northern part of the country, that has stopped. Myself, I was in Port-au-Prince earlier this year in June and I wanted to visit some of the tough places and one of them was Bel Air. The only way I could visit Bel Air was in an armored personal carrier with a blue helmet and jacket, and now you can walk in Bel Air.Today, there is one place that remains a very tough spot indeed and that is [the Port-au-Prince suburb of] Cité Soleil, which is a focus of our attention. We are not going to let the situation in Soleil fester. This is a touchy situation because it’s a slum, an urban environment with a high-density population. It’s the kind of place that’s very difficult to operate a military force. We are looking at ways to strengthen our posture there so we can stop the activity of the gangs and at the same time not hurt civilians.The gangs that are conducting the kidnappings?The gangs that are conducting the kidnappings and that sometimes participate in drug trade and the proliferation of weapons in Haiti. This is a serious threat. In one part of Haiti—the road that is alongside the Soleil slum—that is where most of the kidnappings happen, as well as in the slum itself, which is a very dangerous place at this stage. We’ve been discussing that with our military and our police and we’re going to intensify our operations in that part of Port-au-Prince. What I’m driving at is when you look at Haiti today, six months ago there were many spots which were “no-go” spots. Today there is one place that is a no-go spot—that is Soleil—but the rest of the country is more or less quite, or being stabilized. Now, I think Soleil is tough, also, because we are getting closer to a key milestone in the life of Haiti after the departure of President Aristide, and that is the election. I think now the election is becoming a reality. It has been postponed several times, and now we are told we are going to have a firm date in early February and I’m very pleased. We’ll have to stick to that date. I think the prospect of the elections is making a number of spoilers nervous.What needs to change between now and the February 7 elections for the vote not to be postponed again?I think the main difficulties for the election so far have been logistical. It’s been a major effort of the Organization of American States. They have put a lot of work there. There have been difficulties in producing the cards and then distributing them and making sure that everybody will collect the cards and that they will vote. So for that, you need enough time to inform the people so that they are in a position to vote on the day of the election. We are now quite convinced that there is no major technical impediment to the election.The only real threat is the people who do not want an election, because in an election, there will be winners and there will be losers. Haiti has been really afflicted by this sort of winner-take-all culture, where people feel that they can’t afford to lose.  Our message is, “Yes, there will be winners and losers but it will be in a fair and transparent election.” We will make sure that is the way the election happens. We will also make sure the winners respect the losers and that Haiti after the election will not sideline all the people who lost election. I think that is very important and that Haiti has to move beyond that culture of winner-take-all. One of the reasons for the mission to be strong in Haiti is precisely [to help] get over that.Now, that is not a message that appeals to everybody and I think, to be frank, our voice has not always been strong enough on that. We haven’t been heard as much as we should have been. We have to be very clear that we will really stay the course, supporting a police that is respected by every Haitian; a judiciary system that is a fair judiciary system; basically supporting a state of all Haitians, not a particular group of Haitians. And that way I think people will be much better prepared to accept the result of the election, whatever that result may be.These challenges touch on my last question, which is that the challenges Haiti poses are similar to challenges the UN faces in other peacekeeping operations. What conditions are necessary for peacekeeping success? And what reforms are you considering that will ensure future operations are successful, as part of Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s larger reform plans for the United Nations?Well, Haiti is a very good example of the need to connect peacekeeping and peace-building. In a peacekeeping mission, the troops with the blue helmets, they can stabilize the situation. But really, the foundation for long-term success is to have a state that can deliver the basic services of a state, starting with security and the rule of law. If that doesn’t exist, any success is very precarious indeed. And that has been the past experience of Haiti, where the international community focused on one part of the equation and forgot about the other part. And I do hope that this time we will be consistent and coherent enough to focus as much on the peace-building as on the peacekeeping side of Haiti. That’s really for me what success would mean.What specific actions do you plan to take to combine the peacekeeping and the peace-building processes in Haiti?It’s not just the policing, for instance, which has been done in the past. You also need to look at the judiciary and at the basic structures of the state. Because if you have a police force that is not paid; if you have a leadership that is not transparent; and then if you do not have a judiciary, effective corrections very quickly start to unravel. That is what has happened in the past. So you need to have a much more holistic strategy. You need to be much more comprehensive in your approach. That is usually the case.The particular challenge of Haiti is that it is a very proud country. It was one of the first independent countries [in the region] and it has been independent for 200 years, now. So it’s a very fine line for the international community to tread on. We have to be strong, we have to be forceful, but we have to be respectful so that, on the one hand, we make it clear we are not going to support anything that is corrupt or doesn’t support the interest of all the Haitians. On the other hand, we do understand that this is not our country; this is a country where we are guests and where we have to help and support.