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The Conflict Between Haiti and the Dominican Republic
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Why is Haiti so Poor?
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Peace.
Michael Santomauro
Editorial Director
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Words could never explain or convey the magnitude of such catastrophe
However one is tempted to cast aside conventional thinking when contemplating the plight of this much tortured country and ask: just what is Haiti? Much as Dubai is an artificial city, Haiti is an artificial country, created by a rapacious western nation: France.
This is a country that has no natural resources, no minerals, no energy sources (no oil, gas, hydro), little arable land (it is very mountainous)
Perhaps it has the potential for tourism if such service industry could be developed.
The French crammed hundreds of thousands of slaves, imported for such agro-industries as plantations of coffee, sugar cane, cacao and rum. That is, nothing that can be used as a source of food.
Haiti proved to be very successful at the production of these agricultural commodities, and as long as it was in a position to sell them in Europe for great profit, it thrived earning for itself the name of "Pearl of the Antilles" and the envy of other colonial powers. Of course, the slaves did not enjoy the fruits of such success.
Once France had been expelled from the island in 1804 (owing in part for the abominable treatment of the slaves), Haiti lost its markets but was left with hundreds of thousands of mouths to feed and nothing to eat. It should be noted that Haiti, being the second country in this American continent to have gained its independence (only second to the US), such was not recognized by the United States until 1869.
The French left no educated middle class or any class of educated people, except for a few hundred Europeans who stayed behind to continue work on the plantations with the new freemen, citizens of Haiti. This did not help Haiti to diversify or attempt the development of alternate industries or economy.
During its convoluted history, Haiti has been ruled by an endless succession of operetta characters with generals uniforms, peacock feathers and all; it has suffered the occupation by the US military* (sometimes as brutal as the French had been) and finally the "Doc" two-whammy dynasty of the Duvaliers, followed by a few more military tin pots with a tiny sprinkling of democracy. Even so, commendable as it may be, democracy alone does not put food on the table.
*As hard as this may be to believe, the US had concerns because there were some 200 German nationals living in Haiti. These Germans were contributing to much of the economic activity in the country and were fully integrated into society. The concern was about a potential German threat to the approaches to the Panama Canal. When some US Banks voiced concern to Wilson about possible Haiti loan defaults, the future Nobel Peace Prize winner ordered the Marines in. They would not leave for some 29 years. Some cynics may say, paraphrasing Colin Powell, "we broke it, we own it", even though it was already broken.
All along the economics did not work. They still do not work.
Haiti still earns its meager subsistence from the exportation of some agricultural products such as mangoes and coffee and some manufactures namely garments, much as the maquiladoras south of the border except that everything must be imported including the energy to run the sweatshops.
Due to deforestation for cooking fuel, the impact of natural disasters is greater than otherwise should be.
Perhaps this is not the best time to say this, but Haiti under the best of circumstances does not seem to be a viable country. Perhaps if the population were a fraction of what it now is, the country would be able to sustain itself. Perhaps it would be better for the country to join France as a department and receive what it needs from the forgetful motherland. Perhaps it would be best for the whole population of Haiti to migrate to France (like baby-doc did) , and say to the French: here we are. You forgot us behind!
Manuel Sotil
Words could never explain or convey the magnitude of such catastrophe
However one is tempted to cast aside conventional thinking when contemplating the plight of this much tortured country and ask: just what is Haiti? Much as Dubai is an artificial city, Haiti is an artificial country, created by a rapacious western nation: France.
This is a country that has no natural resources, no minerals, no energy sources (no oil, gas, hydro), little arable land (it is very mountainous)
Perhaps it has the potential for tourism if such service industry could be developed.
The French crammed hundreds of thousands of slaves, imported for such agro-industries as plantations of coffee, sugar cane, cacao and rum. That is, nothing that can be used as a source of food.
Haiti proved to be very successful at the production of these agricultural commodities, and as long as it was in a position to sell them in Europe for great profit, it thrived earning for itself the name of "Pearl of the Antilles" and the envy of other colonial powers. Of course, the slaves did not enjoy the fruits of such success.
Once France had been expelled from the island in 1804 (owing in part for the abominable treatment of the slaves), Haiti lost its markets but was left with hundreds of thousands of mouths to feed and nothing to eat. It should be noted that Haiti, being the second country in this American continent to have gained its independence (only second to the US), such was not recognized by the United States until 1869.
The French left no educated middle class or any class of educated people, except for a few hundred Europeans who stayed behind to continue work on the plantations with the new freemen, citizens of Haiti. This did not help Haiti to diversify or attempt the development of alternate industries or economy.
During its convoluted history, Haiti has been ruled by an endless succession of operetta characters with generals uniforms, peacock feathers and all; it has suffered the occupation by the US military* (sometimes as brutal as the French had been) and finally the "Doc" two-whammy dynasty of the Duvaliers, followed by a few more military tin pots with a tiny sprinkling of democracy. Even so, commendable as it may be, democracy alone does not put food on the table.
*As hard as this may be to believe, the US had concerns because there were some 200 German nationals living in Haiti. These Germans were contributing to much of the economic activity in the country and were fully integrated into society. The concern was about a potential German threat to the approaches to the Panama Canal. When some US Banks voiced concern to Wilson about possible Haiti loan defaults, the future Nobel Peace Prize winner ordered the Marines in. They would not leave for some 29 years. Some cynics may say, paraphrasing Colin Powell, "we broke it, we own it", even though it was already broken.
All along the economics did not work. They still do not work.
Haiti still earns its meager subsistence from the exportation of some agricultural products such as mangoes and coffee and some manufactures namely garments, much as the maquiladoras south of the border except that everything must be imported including the energy to run the sweatshops.
Due to deforestation for cooking fuel, the impact of natural disasters is greater than otherwise should be.
Perhaps this is not the best time to say this, but Haiti under the best of circumstances does not seem to be a viable country. Perhaps if the population were a fraction of what it now is, the country would be able to sustain itself. Perhaps it would be better for the country to join France as a department and receive what it needs from the forgetful motherland. Perhaps it would be best for the whole population of Haiti to migrate to France (like baby-doc did) , and say to the French: here we are. You forgot us behind!
Manuel Sotil
Yemeni Jews refuse to leave for Israel
Wed, 06 Jan 2010
http://www.presstv.
Jews in Yemen prefer to stay in the impoverished Arab nation rather than relocate to Israel amid mounting speculations that the US might launch a new war in the country.
An official at the World's Jewish Congress Foundation, Moshe Nahum, said they have tried in vain in the past three decades to convince Yemeni Jews to move to Israel.
He said the foundation has even dispatched teams from New York and London and promised money and benefit to lure the tiny community to migrate.
"But they are afraid of losing what they have," Nahum said in an interview with the Israeli daily Yediot Ahronot, published on Tuesday.
Yemen has a small community of two to three hundred Jews who mostly reside in the capital Sana'a, while dozens of them have chosen to convert to Islam.
Devastating offensives backed by US and Saudi militaries have been plowing through the Arab nation, mostly targeting the north where the Shia Houthi fighters are prey to regular attacks by Yemeni-Saudi warplanes.
In December, the US joined Sana'a in pounding the southern part of the country to weed out what Washington claims is a cell of al-Qaeda operating in the Arabian Peninsula.
Local officials and witnesses maintain that scores of civilians have been killed in operations confirmed by US media as being directly carried out by the American army.
On Tuesday, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton described insecurity in Yemen as a threat to regional and global stability, saying Washington was working closely with its allies on deciding "the best way forward" to address the issue.
Clinton said the Yemeni government had to take measures to restore stability or risk losing Western support.
January 14, 2010 at 11:36 am (Deceit, DesertPeace Editorial, Israel, zionism)
Possibly related posts: (automatically generated)
January 14, 2010 at 5:10 pm
It is certainly the picture of a terrified Palestinian girl and not that of a "hungry Jewish child". See link below:
January 14, 2010 at 7:58 pm
This psychpathic humiliation of the Gazans with the cruel use of this photo was deliberate and it is just kind of like a running joke with the Israeli Jews. It is sport to them to harm non-Jews with the pleasure coming from a creative use of cruelty. About this type of evil behaviour, I haven't heard much protest from "humanitarian" Jews, which is also telling. Israel is truly a ruthless culture of psychos eager to inflict pain upon others. Could a human being possibly sink any lower than doing exactly what's been done here?
January 14, 2010 at 8:37 pm
John,
Consider THIS post as a protest from a Humanitarian Jew!
Don't be so quick to generalise.
Israeli police said on Thursday they have arrested a sect leader suspected of enslaving and sexually abusing 17 women and the 40 children he had with them.
Goel Ratzon, 59, is accused of keeping at least 57 women and children in cramped apartments in several locations in the Tel Aviv area, police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld said.
In one case, police raided a three-bedroom apartment where 10 women and 17 children were found in a "terrible state", living in "horrible conditions", he said.
Ratzon has been known for several years to head a sect of women who were said to adulate him, have sex with him and raise his children.
Police suspect that Ratzon also raped and impregnated his own daughters.
The grey-bearded, long-haired man, who was arrested on Monday following a lengthy undercover investigation, held the women under his strict control, enforcing a draconian book of rules that specified behaviour and punishments.
Police said Ratzon had instructed the women and children to commit suicide "if anything happened to him".
Speaking to reporters in court, Ratzon's lawyer Shlomtzion Gabai denied all charges and insisted the women were not held against their will.
AFP
Help Haiti: The Unforgiven Country Cries Out
WRITTEN BY CHRIS FLOYD | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
WEDNESDAY, 13 JANUARY 2010 22:36 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
I. Exactly two hundred years ago, Haitian slaves overthrew their French masters -- the first successful national slave revolt in history. What Spartacus dreamed of doing, the Haitian slaves actually accomplished. It was a tremendous achievement -- and the white West has never forgiven them for it. Indeed it does. The 2004 piece detailed Washington's latest long, bipartisan squeeze play on Haiti, which culminated in a coup engineered by the Bush Administration -- the second time in which a U.S. president named George Bush had ousted the democratically- Although the [2004] Haiti coup was widely portrayed as an irresistible upsurge of popular discontent, it was of course the result of years of hard work by Bush's dedicated corrupters of democracy, as William Bowles of Information Clearinghouse reports. Bushist bagmen funded the political opposition to President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, smuggled guns to exiled Haitian warlords, and carried out a relentless strangulation of the county, cutting off long-promised financial and structural aid to one of the poorest nations on earth until food prices were soaring, unemployment spiked to 70 percent, and the broken-backed government lost control of society to armed gangs of criminals, fanatics and the merely desperate. Meanwhile, Haiti was forced to pay $2 million a month on debts run up by the murderous (U.S.-backed) dictatorships that had ruled the island since the American military occupation of 1915-1934. ...
Bill Clinton restored Aristide to office in 1994 - but only after forcing him to agree to, yes, "market reforms." In fact, it was Clinton, the privateers' pal, who instigated the post-election aid embargo that Bush II used to such devastating effect. Aristide's chief failing as a leader was his attempt to live up to this bipartisan blackmail. As in every other nation that's come under the IMF whip, Haiti's already-fragile economy collapsed. Bush family retainers like Apaid then shoved the country into total chaos, making it easy prey for the warlords whom Bush operatives - many of them old Iran-Contra hands - supplied with arms through the Dominican Republic, the Boston Globe reports. ...
Obama and his "superstar" secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, are loudly championing the latest egregious, brutal farce that Washington and the West have foisted upon the uppity natives of Haiti. It is certain such dirty work will soon be afoot once more -- and we must fight it, call attention to it, and not let Haiti disappear in the imperial shadow yet again. But at this moment, the most pressing concern is the human suffering in Haiti. So again, do look into the relief efforts noted above, or any others you might prefer. Set as favorite Bookmark Email this Comments (6) Debbie Kimlin said:
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