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- From: ww%nyxfer%igc.apc.org@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (Workers World Service)
- Subject: Clinton Dashes Haitian Hopes
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.232006.8314@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 23:20:06 GMT
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- Via NY Transfer News Collective * All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
-
- CLINTON DASHES HAITIANS' HOPE OF FAIR TREATMENT
-
- By G. Dunkel
-
- When Bill Clinton was running for president, he appealed to broad
- progressive sentiment in the U.S. when he repeatedly promised to
- reverse George Bush's "cruel policy of returning Haitian refugees
- to a brutal dictatorship."
-
- The reactionary and racist double standards of the U.S.
- government are nowhere more glaring than in the way it handles
- immigrants from the Caribbean: opening its arms to Cubans who
- have succumbed to the economic pressure of the U.S. blockade (it
- calls them political refugees and gives them asylum), while
- incarcerating and sending back those fleeing the bloody
- dictatorship in Haiti (they are called economic refugees and are
- excluded).
-
- Now Clinton himself is guilty of the same cruel policy.
-
- He has supported the sending of a U.S. flotilla to the waters
- around Haiti, where these 18 to 20 ships, a dozen airplanes and
- helicopters are now stopping Haitian boats as soon as they reach
- the high seas.
-
- Clinton even gave a speech announcing his support of this naval
- action in order to have the Voice of America beam it to Haiti to
- discourage any Haitians who might be considering fleeing their
- country.
-
- At the same time, these U.S. ships are doing nothing to enforce
- the UN embargo that is supposed to be aimed at convincing the
- Haitian generals to allow back the popular elected president they
- overthrew, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Reports from Haiti indicate
- that the harbor at Port-au-Prince is full of commercial vessels
- delivering all manner of goods, including the strategic energy
- source, petroleum, in violation of the embargo.
-
- HAITIANS ANGRY
-
- "The Haitian community in New York was very upset" at Clinton's
- reversal, says Maude LeBlanc, acting director of the paper Haiti
- Progres and a leader of the Tenth Department, which represents
- 600,000 Haitian exiles. She feels that press reports on thousands
- of boats being readied to sail to Miami in time for Clinton's
- inauguration were probably exaggerated in order to give Clinton
- an excuse for changing his position.
-
- According to LeBlanc, "Stopping ships on the high seas, removing
- their passengers, then destroying the ships and returning the
- passengers against their will is an act of war." It is an act of
- war that the biggest, most powerful country in the world, the
- United States, is carrying out against the poorest country in the
- Western Hemisphere, Haiti.
-
- In Haiti, the reaction is even stronger. A Haitian taxi driver
- told a reporter, "I'm still angry. That Clinton guy is just a
- macoute." (The macoutes are the armed paramilitary thugs who
- terrorize the people.)
-
- RACIST EXCLUSION
-
- Many Haitians have been held for months and even years in the
- Krome Detention Center in Miami. A number have been on a hunger
- strike, protesting the racist nature of their continued
- imprisonment. By contrast, Cubans who illegally flew into Miami
- recently on a hijacked plane were almost immediately released.
-
- LeBlanc pointed out that in the seven months President Aristide
- was in power, only a few hundred Haitians tried to flee to the
- U.S. In the 18 months since the military coup, 35,000 to 40,000
- Haitians have tried to make the voyage, and 25,000 more have fled
- to the neighboring Dominican Republic. It wasn't the economy that
- suddenly went bad, it was the political situation.
-
- Those leaving take enormous risks, worsened by their fear of
- being apprehended by U.S. Coast Guard and Navy vessels. A few
- survivors picked up by Cuban ships told of a shipwreck of a
- freighter the first week in January in which over 400 Haitians
- are believed to have died.
-
- Ever since the dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier was forced to flee
- after turbulent mass struggles five years ago, the U.S. has been
- trying to re-establish the status quo. Its front man, the banker
- Marc Bazin, lost the election to Aristide and, despite all kinds
- of backroom maneuvering, hasn't been able to establish a stable
- government.
-
- So-called elections were just held for the Haitian senate and
- turned out to be a complete bust. With the vast majority of the
- people boycotting this exercise in political deception, many
- polling sites were deserted.
-
- -30-
-
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