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Isabel Macdonald

Isabel Macdonald

Posted: November 28, 2010 07:39 AM

In the midst of a cholera epidemic that has killed a reported 1,300 Haitians, the U.S., Canada and the United Nations insisted that Haiti's elections go ahead today, as scheduled.

However elections might not be the most accurate term for the process by which a new Haitian president and lawmakers will be selected at the polls today.

The ruling party's hand-picked electoral council has banned the most popular Haitian political party, Fanmi Lavalas (FL), from the presidential election. FL leader Jean Bertrand Aristide, who was elected as Haiti's president in 2000, has been exiled in Africa since a coup d'etat in 2004, when he was removed by the U.S., and warned, in the words of Donald Rumsfeld, not to "come back into the hemisphere."

Meanwhile, the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti is warning that the presence of troops from the UN "stabilization" mission in Haiti (also known as MINUSTAH) at polling stations "is more likely to trigger violence than prevent it."

UN troops and Haitian National Police killed two demonstrators at anti-MINUSTAH protests in the city of Cap Haitien on November 15 and 16. And over the following two days, they tear-gassed Haitians participating in a march in Port-au-Prince, which as journalist Kim Ives reported for Haiti Liberte, "seriously sickened many women and children in the tent camps on the Champ de Mars in front of the collapsed National Palace."

Calls for the withdrawal of the UN troops have been escalating amidst accusations that UN soldiers' fecal matter, dumped into a waterway that feeds into Haiti's Artibonite river, was the likely source of the cholera.

Prior to last month, there had never been a documented case of cholera in Haiti, and as late as March the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was saying that the illness was "extremely unlikely" to occur in Haiti. Today, the Pan-American Health Organization is projecting that 200,000 people may be infected within a year, and that "we may have 10,000 dead."

On October 27, Associated Press reporter Jonathan Katz broke the story of the suspected source of the cholera--an overflowing septic tank behind a UN base housing the Nepalese peacekeeping troops, who had arrived in Haiti just after a summer of cholera outbreaks in Nepal.

After visiting the site of the UN base, Katz reported that

a tank was clearly overflowing. The back of the base smelled like a toilet had exploded. Reeking, dark liquid flowed out of a broken pipe, toward the river, from next to what the soldiers said were latrines. U.N. military police were taking samples in clear jars with sky-blue U.N. lids, clearly horrified.


At the shovel-dug waste pits across the street sat yellow-brown pools of feces where ducks and pigs swam in the overflow. The path to the river ran straight downhill.

According to Harvard University microbiology chair John Mekalanos, the cholera "very much likely did come either with peacekeepers or other relief personnel." "I don't see there is any way to avoid the conclusion that an unfortunate and presumably accidental introduction of the organism occurred," he recently told AP.

However the cholera epidemic sweeping the country raises a bigger question about the role of countries such as the U.S., Canada and France, that have boasted for years about all the "aid" they've provided to Haiti.

With all this international "help," why on earth doesn't Haiti have the basic infrastructure that could have prevented the cholera outbreak?

Independent journalist Isabeau Doucet recently offered some very relevant context in a commentary for the Guardian, pointing out that

A decade ago, money was in place to address the country's failing water system. In 2000, a $54m (£34m) loan from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) should have given the Haitian government means to rehabilitate its urban and rural water systems."

However, "US foreign policy objectives of destabilising the democratically elected Aristide government got in the way," Doucet stated.

In a 2004 article for the London Review of Books, Harvard medical professor Paul Farmer, who is now the UN's Deputy Special Envoy for Haiti, specified that "Haitian and American sources have confirmed to me that the US asked the bank to block the loans."

At a UN donors' conference in March 2010, the international community promised $5.3 billion to rebuild Haiti after the January 12 earthquake. (A sum that is considerably less than the tens of billions of dollars Haiti is owed for the illegitimate debts that have been extorted from Haitians by Western governments and financial institutions since 1825.)

Nearly eight months after these pledges, an estimated 1.7 million people are still living under tarps in unsafe makeshift camps.

MINUSTAH recently issued a statement calling the organizers of recent protests in Haiti "the enemies of stability and democracy."

But protest seems the most reasonable response to the present situation.

Not least for those of us whose governments promised a bright future for a "New Haiti" just nine months ago.

UPDATE--Index of Disenfranchisement

It is still too early to know the results of Haiti's "elections," which took place yesterday amidst ballot stuffing and reported voter intimidation, according to the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. However, for anyone who wants to know what happens when the shock doctrine meets demonstrations elections, the numbers are already in:

  • Amount UN member countries had provided to the UN by Nov. 25, in response to a Nov. 12 emergency UN appeal for funds to address the cholera epidemic: $6.8 million
  • Amount the UN needs, in order to address this "situation of extreme urgency," according to the UN's Office of Humanitarian Affairs: $164 million
  • Maximum number of Haitians that U.S. Senator and doctor Bill Frist has estimated will be infected by cholera: 800,000
  • Number of presidential candidates who alleged fraud and demanded the cancellation of Sunday's poll: 12
  • Number of "ghost" voters on the electoral council's voter lists: 71,039
  • Number of Haitians who were still waiting for voter ID cards less than 2 weeks before the vote: 344,000
 

Follow Isabel Macdonald on Twitter: www.twitter.com/isabelmacdo

 
 
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09:50 AM on 12/02/2010
Sounds like Iraq's phoney elections.
07:44 PM on 11/29/2010
when exactly has haiti ever had an honest anything?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wrabbitt
Soylent Green IS People.
05:55 PM on 11/29/2010
I guess God isn't done with Haiti.
07:40 PM on 11/29/2010
And, God is watching YOU ... and what you do about it? Disaster after disaster and what are YOU doing to help?
04:31 PM on 11/29/2010
I simply do not see the logic of spending $27.8 MILLION DOLLARS on an Election in the midst of a CHOLERA EPIDEMIC.
04:28 PM on 11/29/2010
UN sent out a plea for $164 MILLION DOLLARS to fight the CHOLERA Epidemic. And, only $6.8 MILLION has been realized so far, well I guess CANADA's given the bulk of that funding with an announcement of $1 MILLION early on in the epidemic and then another $4 MILLION when the UN appealed for the $164 Million. So, CANADA's given $5 MILLION of the $6.8 MILLION.

Where is everyone else??????
01:16 PM on 11/29/2010
Haiti has 10,000,000 people. The fact that a few have cholera is no reason to postpone an election. Lack of viable ideas to solve the endemic problems would be, if delay could bring forth candidates more able and/or willing to propose solutions. Overpopulation probably is the biggest generator of problems. Intransigence by religious leaders on promoting effective birth control methods is self-serving dogmatic cruelty. Failure to teach English and Spanish as basic tools for industrial employability is another problem; speaking, reading and writing only French or Creole is stifling. If public employees at all levels do not earn a living wage, to give them the basis for avoiding corruption, then the rule of law cannot prevail, and so another element of industrialization is forfeit. That is key, because other countries with low-wage populations have dependable law enforcement, even if by military rule. Maybe solar power in several forms would begin to provide cheap reliable electricity. But the incessant demands of a growing, inadequately-educated population, which already has too little potable water and no functioning sanitary sewer system, and no reserves to cope with predictable disasters like earthquakes and cholera, is a recipe for continued failure. Connect the dots to see Haiti's place in the future. Data source: https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/ha.html
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11:53 AM on 11/29/2010
These fluffy feel good stories about 'elections', wether in Iraq or Afganistan or Haiti mean NOTHING.

The so-called government in Iraq is not legit and both in Afganistan or Haiti might as well be voting for Mickey Mouse.

The ones with tons of paper money and guns are the ones with true power in these countries and until this bankrupt system is buried and gone for good, no 'election' or government will ever be close to what truly represents the people.
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Nicolas Rossier
Filmmaker & Reporter from Brooklyn, New York
10:45 AM on 11/29/2010
Good article!
It's highly unlikely that yesterday's election will not be challenged and maybe cancelled.
Even if these elections had been going well the continued and planned exclusion of a major party in Haiti cannot create long-term stability. We can keep pouring millions into NGOs, the UN, USAID and others but it will not happen.
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Isabel Macdonald
02:54 PM on 11/29/2010
Yes, it's very telling that the exclusion of FL seems to be one of the first orders of business in the elections planning process. Quite revealing about the undemocratic model of "democracy" that is being envisioned by the elections' sponsors.

By the way, I've long admired your work...

best,
isable
07:45 PM on 11/29/2010
it will be here soon
10:23 AM on 11/29/2010
The CBC (Canadian Broadcasting Corp) is reporting documented MASSIVE FRAUD in yesterday's Haitian Election.

Follow their excellent coverage of the election & the cholera epidemic. They've been there since November 21 & will be there 10 days in total.

This HAITIAN Election should NEVER have gone forward.

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2010/11/28/haiti-election-candidates457.html
10:17 AM on 11/29/2010
What was it?.. close to a billion raised for HAiti in the earthquake aftrmath?
What have they got to show for it?? Where are the progress reports??
Wheres the media now??
11:34 PM on 11/28/2010
If it doesn't get controlled Haiti just might disappear.
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Alexandra Mandelis
Occupy.
11:10 PM on 11/28/2010
Wow, I hadn't yet read about the link between relief personnel and the source of the cholera outbreak in Haiti. Another tragic turn for the Haitian people :(
10:59 PM on 11/28/2010
Wow, you paint a pretty gloomy picture. Current failures on top of the historical failures: it predicts a pretty grim future. It's an unfortunate theme repeated in a lot of US international relations. The recent Wikileaks has brought that into stark relief.