[HaitiReport] Haiti Report for October 21, 2007 Date: Sun, 21 Oct 2007 21:24:28 -0500 (CDT) Haiti Report for October 21, 2006 The Haiti Report is a compilation and summary of events as described in Haiti and international media prepared by Konbit Pou Ayiti/KONPAY. It does not reflect the opinions of any individual or organization. This service is intended to create a better understanding of the situation in Haiti by presenting the reader with reports that provide a variety of perspectives on the situation. To make a donation to support this service: Konbit Pou Ayiti, 7 Wall Street, Gloucester, MA, 01930. IN THIS REPORT: - Campaigning Against the EU Economic Partnership Agreement - UN and Activists Call for Renewed Investigation into Disappearance of Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine - US Customs Discovers $852k Hidden in SUV Headed for Haiti - President Preval Calls for Constitutional Amendment - CARICOM Office Reopens in Haiti - UN Extends Haiti Peacekeeping Mission with Additional Police - Flooding Follows Heavy Rains - STRIKING WHILE THE IRONY IS HOT: Acknowledging Haitis aid during the American Revolution Campaigning Against the EU Economic Partnership Agreement: Haitian development and human rights organizations are campaigning against the signing of a new trade relationship with the European Union (EU) that they say will strike a further blow against the countrys already ailing economy. An Economic Partnership Agreement (EPA) between the EU and the 16 Caribbean nations grouped together as Cariforum is due to be signed by the end of this year. The Haitian government has indicated that it is ready to sign, but Haitian organizations, including those representing peasant farmers, say the agreement which will eliminate tariffs on goods traded between signatory nations will destroy the countrys agricultural sector, which provides a livelihood for around two-thirds of the countrys 8 million people. Campaigners stress that the Haitian economy needs more protection, not less. The EU has been negotiating these trade agreements for five years with groups of mostly former European colonies in Africa, the Caribbean and Asia. The EPAs are set to replace the existing trade structure, the Cotonou Convention that expires on Dec. 31 of this year. EU negotiators state that the agreements will help these countries to develop their economies, many of which rely on basic commodity exports, and will help foster regional markets by attracting foreign investment. But a newly-formed coalition of nine Haitian organizations and networks, Bare APE in Creole, or Block the EPA, disagrees. On Sept. 26, the coalition, which includes the Tht Kole peasant movement and the Platform to Advocate for Alternative Development, launched a campaign of demonstrations, workshops, and meetings with government entities and international organizations. This mobilization will allow various sectors of our nation to continue to consider thebest ways to arrive at an alternative, sustainable development by protecting the vital sectors of national production, and to prevent the European Union from mortgaging this countrys chances of development, the coalition said in a statement on the eve of the campaign launch. One of the driving forces behind the campaign is Camille Chalmers, director of the Platform to Advocate for Alternative Development. He points to the case of rice, the staple diet of the vast majority of Haitians, stating that the reduction of protective tariffs on imported rice and the absence of state support for rice farmers over recent decades have already taken their toll. Haiti was self-sufficient in food until 1972. In 1985 we produced 123,000 metric tons of rice, but the latest figures for 2006 indicate we produced just 76,000 metric tons and imported 342,000 metric tons, he said. We have the most outrageous situation. Haiti, the poorest country on the American continent, is one of the top four importers of rice from the United States. If the trend continues, we will witness the disappearance of rice production, and 120,000 people will become unemployed. Another critic of the proposed EPA is Jean- Baptiste Charles, the director of the dairy production program of the Veterimed organization that helps peasant farmers to improve production. Veterimeds dairy production program has revitalized milk production, but Charles laments the fact that theoretically we have enough milk to supply national demand, yet we are continuing to import milk to the cost of around US$30 million a year. Charles says his organization sees the industrialized countries subsidizing their producers and then their cheaper products invade the markets of countries like Haiti. The result is that Haitian farmers are forced out of business. We see four basic areas of Haitian agricultural production: sugar cane, rice, chickens, and chicken eggs and over recent years we estimate that 830,000 jobs have been lost. Chalmers says the impact of the EPA and the total opening of the Haitian economy to foreign imports will hit not just the agricultural sector but the whole countrys chances of development. The EPAs will deliver multiple blows to the economies of poor countries like Haiti. There will be a budgetary blow because the elimination of import tariffs will reduce the resources that each state needs to finance development and public services, thus creating an even greater dependence on the international finance institutions. The Haitian government itself has taken little interest in the EPA negotiation process and until recently had mandated the CARICOM regional body of which it is one of the 15 members to negotiate on its behalf. In one of the few public statements about the EPA process, in late April at a meeting convened by the United Nations Industrial Development Organization, the Minister of Commerce and Industry, Maguy Durci, appeared to embrace the EPA, stating, The moment has come for us to set to work, to evaluate our strengths and weaknesses, and in particular to face up to the competition from regional and European companies, and especially the requirements of reciprocal engagements. With the Haitian government dependent on loans and grants from international finance institutions that are, in turn, disbursed on condition that the government refrains from erecting protective trade barriers, there appears little likelihood that the anti-EPA campaigners can stop the process. However, as the Dec. 31 deadline approaches, the failure of European and Caribbean trade negotiators to agree on many matters of principle and detail, despite years of discussion, has cast a shadow over the EPA. The Haitian campaigners will be hoping for more time to pressure their government to reconsider the agreements implications. (Latin American Press, 10/17) UN and Activists Call for Renewed Investigation into Disappearance of Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine: UN peacekeepers called Thursday for a renewed police investigation into the disappearance of a Haitian human rights activist and senate candidate who was reported missing more than two months ago. Since his abrupt disappearance, scant information has emerged about Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine, a high-profile activist and member of ousted president Jean-Bertrand Aristide's Fanmi Lavalas party. The UN mission is "concerned to note that we have still not received news about a person of stature, a political activist, who disappeared two months ago," said spokesman Mamadou Bah. He added that Haitian police have not responded to UN offers to assist with the investigation. Police spokesman Frantz Lerebours said there was no new information on Pierre-Antoine, and would not provide further details. Pierre-Antoine, a leader of the pro-Aristide September 30 Foundation and critic of both UN and U.S. involvement in Haiti, was last seen leaving his Port-au-Prince home shortly before midnight Aug. 12, said Ronald Saint-Jean, leader of a coalition called the Group Initiative to Save Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine. Saint-Jean and other supporters say Pierre-Antoine had received threats because of his ties to Aristide, and they believe he was abducted because a rented SUV he was using at the time was found abandoned outside his home. No ransom note was ever issued, Saint-Jean said. "We are putting pressure on the authorities to give us an answer," he said. (Canadian Press, 10/19) After the disappearance of Haitian human rights activist Lovinsky Pierre-Antoine more than two months ago, his supporters are pressing the government of President Rene Preval, along with the governments of the United States, Canada and Brazil and the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti (Minustah), to step up efforts to locate his whereabouts. Mounting evidence suggests that Lovinsky (who goes by his first name) was kidnapped for political reasons. Lovinsky, 41, went missing on Aug. 12 while leading a joint U.S.-Canadian human rights delegation in Haiti. Since then, a criminal gang has claimed responsibility for Lovinskys abduction and has demanded a ransom for his release. The Haitian government and police have released little information about their efforts to free the human rights activist, leading to charges that authorities are not truly interested in finding him. Roger Annis of the Canada-Haiti Action Network, who was a member of the delegation, said that when they first reported Lovinskys disappearance on Aug. 13, police showed no interest in the case and did not even bother asking them any questions. Lovinskys supporters inside and outside Haiti have mounted protests to force the Haitian government and its backers to make a serious effort to secure his release. Lovinskys two teenage children, Stiphane and Olivier Pierre- Antoine, have released an open letter urging the Haitian government and the international community to help find their father. According to Brian Concannon Jr. of the Oregon-based Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, Lovinsky made many enemies in the course of his work. Lovinsky earned the enmity of almost everyone responsible for human rights violations in Haiti, including Haitis conservative business elite, the right-wing politicians, the Duvalierists, the interim government and the international community, including the U.S., Minustah and international financial institutions, Concannon said. Lovinsky makes them uncomfortable because he will follow human rights violations to their source, and fearlessly condemn whomever he finds is involved in the violation, Concannon said. He manages to keep human rights and justice issues on the radar screen through public rallies and demonstrations, web- based analyses, press releases and interviews. Lovinsky is also the most outspoken and effective opponent to the resurrection of the Haitian army, Concannon said. He organizes photo exhibits to remind Haitians of the militarys atrocities and brutality, and speaks out directly against the armys return in the press. Although his views on the army are widely shared, many people decline to express those views in public for fear of retaliation. The foundation for Lovinskys effectiveness is the fact that his analysis and his advocacy are rooted among Haitis poor, he continued. Noting that Lovinsky has a masters degree in psychology and could simply play the role of expert in a comfortable office if he wanted to, Lovinsky instead takes his education and skills to the street, working directly with poor people, using his skills to carry their voice to places it otherwise would not be heard. Concannon, a lawyer and member of the UN human rights mission in Haiti from 1995-96, said the evidence suggests that Lovinsky was likely kidnapped for political reasons. The elapse of seven weeks since the last communication suggests that the original ransom demand may have been a ruse to hide a politically motivated abduction, he said. He noted that in Haiti it is very uncommon for kidnappers to hold a person so long. More ominously, Concannon noted that Lovinsky also frequently criticized groups with a history of killing their opponents, including the countrys political and economic right wing, the army and paramilitary groups. However, Concannon cautioned that he has not seen any information that points to one group or individual who might be responsible for kidnapping Lovinsky. Supporters say Lovinsky is still presumed to be alive. (Workers World, 10/20) US Customs Discovers $852k Hidden in SUV Headed for Haiti: U.S. Customs officials found $852,000 hidden in the bumper of a sport utility vehicle leaving from Palm Beach and bound for Haiti, police said. According to a press release, U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers were performing random inspections of vehicles destined for Haiti Wednesday, utilizing a newly acquired X-ray vehicle, the Z Backscatter Van, nicknamed "the ice cream truck" by CBP officers. Officials said the officers noticed an unusual density in the rear quarter panel and bumper of a red 1997 Toyota RAV-4 that was awaiting export. Upon physical inspection, investigators found bundles of cash wrapped in plastic bags and black tape that were tightly packed into the small spaces. CBP Director of Field Operations Harold Woodward said the money was being smuggled out of the U.S. illegally and was likely linked to "serious criminal activity." U.S. Customs and Border Protection is an agency within the Department of Homeland Security which is charged with the management, control and protection of U.S. borders at and between official ports of entry. The CBP is charged with keeping terrorists and terrorist weapons out of the country while enforcing hundreds of U.S. laws. (Yahoo News, 10/18) President Preval Calls for Constitutional Amendment: Haitian President Rene Preval on Wednesday called for a constitutional amendment to allow presidents to serve consecutive terms a change he said would bring more stability to a country frequently mired in political chaos. Preval, in a speech at the National Palace, proposed overhauling the country's entire constitution to give the government more flexibility to promote development and fight corruption. He suggested holding all national and local elections on the same day every five years, and recommended creating a constitutional court to interpret the nation's laws. He also said the president should have the power to dismiss the prime minister who is now appointed by the executive, but can only be ousted by parliament. Current rules limit Haitian presidents to two terms, with at least a five-year break in between. Preval's initial proposal, which spokesmen said he would refine before submitting to parliament, would allow future presidents to serve those terms back- to-back. Preval, who won his second nonconsecutive term last year, assured legislators he could not, and would not, seek office again. "I know that as soon as the president asks to reflect on the constitution, it gives rise to suspicion," Preval said. "I repeat once again for everyone: My tenure comes to end on Feb. 7, 2011, period." Haiti's current constitution was signed in 1987 after 29 years of dictatorship and was intended to impede any return to authoritarian rule. Preval urged lawmakers to work with him to overhaul the document, which he called the single greatest threat to Haiti's long- term stability. Preval said the amendment process is slow, needing the approval of two-thirds of the Senate and Chamber of Deputies and requiring they then wait until the next session of parliament to implement the changes. (AP, 10/17) CARICOM Office Reopens in Haiti: President Reni Prival is expected to deliver the feature address at the re-opening of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Representational Office in Haiti on Friday, according to a CARICOM statement issued here. It said that the ceremony will take place at the new office in the heart of the capital, Port au Prince and that the Parliamentary Secretary in the Ministry of Finance of Barbados Senator Tyrone Barker will represent Prime Minister Owen Arthur, the present CARICOM Chairman. CARICOM Secretary General Edwin Carrington and Dennis Robert, who is representing the Ambassador of Canada to Haiti, will also address the function. "The CARICOM Representational Office (CRO) is being re-opened with the support of the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), three years after it was closed following the interruption of democratic governance in 2004," the CARICOM statement said. "The office was then located in the Embassy of The Bahamas and had been established at that time with the support of the government of the Kingdom of Norway. The statement said that Ambassador Earl Huntley, a St. Lucian diplomat and administrator with wide experience, will be in charge of the CRO. CARICOM said that the CRO is being established to facilitate more speedily the integration of Haiti into the regional integration grouping "with particular emphasis on the Single Market and Economy; identify and mobilise domestic, financial and other resources; promote relations with the media; and undertake public education programmes". "The ratification by the Haitian Parliament of the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas including the Single Market and the Economy and the re-opening of the Representational Office within two weeks of each other augur well for the quickening of the pace of the fuller integration of Haiti into CARICOM," Carrington said. Deputy Secretary-General of CARICOM, Ambassador Lolita Applewhaite, said that CIDA's assistance regarding the CRO is part of the wider CARICOM Trade and Competitiveness Project. "Among the goals of the project is to assist Haiti to prepare itself for full participation in the CSME. This is being done within the context of the wider goal to provide more and better opportunities for the people of CARICOM to participate in and benefit from the CARICOM Single Market and Economy (CSME). "It also should enable all CARICOM citizens to understand, participate and actively engage in economic activities," she added. (Caribbean News, 10/19) UN Extends Haiti Peacekeeping Mission with Additional Police: The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Monday to extend the U.N. peacekeeping mission in Haiti for a year, noting significant improvements in security in recent months but saying the situation remains fragile. Haiti experienced relative calm after President Rene Preval's election in February 2006, but violence flared several months later. A U.N. crackdown on gangs launched late last year has led to a sharp reduction in shootings, but many people still live in squalor and are in desperate need of jobs, hospitals and schools. In Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, some political leaders and residents of the country's largest slum seemed to welcome the extension, saying a crackdown earlier this year has made life easier in a neighborhood previously run by gangs. "Last year we couldn't have sat here playing dominoes" because it was so dangerous, 27-year-old construction worker Jean-Baptiste Venel said in the seaside slum of Cite Soleil. "If the U.N. is here for another year it's a good thing for the country and Cite Soleil." Resisents say that Cite Soleil where people live in rows of bullet-scarred hovels with no electricity or running water is currently safer than it has been since Aristide's departure. Senate President Joseph Lambert praised the U.N. resolution but said Haiti must restore its national sovereignty after years of security provided by U.N. troops. In its resolution, the Security Council acknowledged significant improvements in the country's security situation in recent months, but noted it remains "fragile," in part because of continuing drugs and arms trafficking. Ban said in a report to the council following his visit to Haiti in August that despite "marginal improvements," the Haitian police force "remains unable to undertake crucial security tasks" without help. The force's mandate covers mainly Haiti's security needs, but Preval's government has been pressuring the U.N. to funnel more resources into development projects. The resolution urged the U.N. country team and all humanitarian and development organizations in Haiti to complement security operations by undertaking activities to improve living conditions in the country. (AP, 10/15) United Nations officials have agreed to extend the peacekeeping mission in Haiti as part of a plan to add more international police. VOA's Brian Wagner recently visited the Caribbean nation, where officials say the renewed efforts will help improve policing on Haiti's borders and in their national waters. More than three years into their mission, United Nations officials in Haiti are seeking to reform their 9,100-member peacekeeping team to better address ongoing criminal and security problems. The Security Council agreed unanimously Monday to extend the U.N. mission another year, as it works to strengthen Haiti's government. The resolution calls on the mission to reduce the number of military troops and deploy an additional 140 international police officers, increasing the size of the police contingent to nearly 2,100. U.N. military forces have been credited with restoring peace to even some of the most violent parts of Haiti, by carrying out raids and other military operations. In a recent interview, J. Carter, head of civil affairs for the U.N. mission, says the focus now is on conducting more police operations. "Particularly with regard to border control, customs, immigration, things of that nature," he said. "That's one of the insecurities that remains, is Haiti's lack of control of its own borders and territories." Illegal drug networks have been able to take advantage of weaknesses in Haiti's security forces in recent years to ship contraband from South America to traffickers in the United States and elsewhere. Also, insecurity along Haiti's border with the Dominican Republic has been a source of tension between the neighbors on the island of Hispaniola. Carter says cooperation between international police and Haitian officers already has produced results, such as the arrest of several alleged drug kingpins this year. He says such efforts are helping to restore confidence in the nation's government. "The people are beginning to see results too, and that counts," he said. "Because that provides a certain conviction and imbues credibility to the [Haitian] government's efforts." Some Haitian lawmakers, however, have criticized the joint police efforts, especially agreements that have allowed U.S. anti-drug agents to make arrests on Haitian soil. They say such operations violate Haiti's sovereignty. But deputy Jean Dorsonee Verrettes from the northern Artibonite region, says international support is needed until Haiti's police force can function on its own. He says Haiti's police force still has some weaknesses and lacks key resources. Verrettes says the support of international partners may help overcome some of those problems. For months, the U.N. mission has been working with Haiti's police force to rebuild its infrastructure and reform its training program for new officers. The top U.N. police official, Richard Warren, says one major goal is to combat the perception of corruption that has plagued Haiti's police for decades. "The change in reality is to move the orientation of the police service from one that serves the state to one that serves the people," he said. "If we can do that and it can be sustainable in Haiti, I think we have a bright future for the police." Warren says 1,400 Haitian police officers have completed the new training program, and officials hope to graduate classes of similar size each year through 2011. The current mandate of the U.N. mission in Haiti allows it to operate until next October, and it is unclear if officials will extend it further. Haiti's President Rene Preval has praised the assistance from the U.N. and other international partners. In a speech last month at the United Nations, he noted that the presence of foreign troops remains difficult for many Haitians to accept, and he suggested the U.N. mission cannot remain forever. (VOA, 10/16) Flooding Follows Heavy Rains: Cars crossing Gonaives Avenue shoot plumes of murky water from their rears. Men on motorcycles stick to the shoulder of the road, dodging large puddles. As the flooding in this coastal city begins to slowly recede, residents are starting to assess the measure of destruction. Scattered thunderstorms are still drenching Haiti, which remains on "yellow alert", with persistent threats of overflowing rivers, floods and landslides -- always a danger in a country that has lost 90 percent of its forest cover. Haitians of all classes dread hurricane season. A week of hard rain in areas like Les Cayes, a seaport in the southwest, means residents must trudge through feet of water. And many feel abandoned to the mercy of the elements. One couple carrying plastic cans down a street in Gonaives asked, "Where is the state? Why do they wait for the catastrophe before intervening?" Residents of this city, the capital of the department of Artibonite, which was especially hard-hit, say that local forecasting committees should be formed to help communities avoid the worst. For more than a week, people in Les Cayes, Hinche, Port-De-Paix, Gonaives, Nippes and Grand'Anse have reported that the roads are impassible, or nearly so, due to the floods. The rains began in earnest late last month. And since the first week of October, Gonaives, a city of about 100,000 people, has been literally underwater. The horror of Hurricane Jeanne is still alive in the memories of its residents, and many complain that they see no sign of the hundreds of thousands of dollars that international donors gave after that monster storm in 2004 left some 3,000 people dead -- 2,000 in Gonaives alone -- with bodies floating for days. One Gonaivian remarked, "Only the good Lord can save us." The Haitian government has released funds to send food and beds to the stricken areas, and the United Nations has also offered to help. However, residents here appear to be highly sceptical of the international community's involvement in Haiti, choosing instead to work together to do the best they can. According to the International Organisation for Migration, 700 homes have been completely destroyed and more than 4,000 seriously damaged, "leaving around 4,000 families in distress and 3,000 persons living in temporary shelters." Areas in southern Haiti were also devastated, according to radio reports. There have been 37 confirmed deaths, but some press reports indicate that up to 50 people may have perished in the flooding. A mounting number of climatologists believe that global warming, caused in large part by the industrialised north, has increased the intensity and frequency of bad weather during the Caribbean's storm season from June 1 to November 30. This is a particular problem for Haiti because much of the country's topsoil is precarious and exposed due to the clear-cutting of forests to make charcoal for cooking and heating water. More than 70 percent of the energy usage in Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, is derived from wood and other biomass. Secretary-General Paul Loulou Chiry of the Confidiration des Travailleurs Haitiens (CTH), a national trade union confederation, says the situation is desperate. He has heard from numerous people living in the flooded areas who have faced severe weather for weeks. Chery said the CTH is trying to provide support to the many trade unionists living in the affected departments, but has few resources to do so. He explained that rising costs of living for the poor exacerbate the crisis. "The people of all these departments need solidarity at once," Chery said. (Caribbean Net News, 10/19) STRIKING WHILE THE IRONY IS HOT: Acknowledging Haitis aid during the American Revolution Napoleon once said that nothing could be as insulting as adding irony to injury. For more than a quarter century, Haitian boat people have been making headlines in our country risking their lives to escape the crushing poverty of theirs. Many, if not most, have been arrested, placed in detention centers, deported, interdicted at sea by the U.S. Coast Guard, repatriated to Haiti, or have drowned in their desperate attempts to reach our shores. That is the injury. The irony is that the first Haitian boat people sailed north from what was then the French, slave colony of Saint Domingue to fight for our independence during the American Revolution, twelve years before their own. Two hundred and twenty-eight years later, their contribution has been officially acknowledged. On October 8th, the city of Savannah, Georgia, along with the Haitian American Historical Society, unveiled a monument in the citys Franklin Square commemorating the courage and sacrifice of Les Chasseurs Volontaires. The ceremony was attended by local and regional politicians including Savannah mayor, Otis S. Johnson; former mayor, Floyd Adams, Jr.; congressmen John Barrow (D-Georgia) and Miami-based Kendrick Meeks (D- Florida). Representing the Haitian government were several members of its senate and Jean V. Geneus, Minister of Haitians Living Abroad. It had to take a special vision to fight for the political independence of a slave holding society, announced Rep. Barrow. For men of color from another country to fight alongside the cause of American freedom required vision and far sightedness exceeding most men and women of that time. On August 16, 1779, a militia of five hundred and forty-five, free blacks and mulattoes from Saint Domingue accompanied their former governor, Vice-Admiral Charles-Henri Le Comte dEstaing, more than three thousand French troops, and an additional contingent of white and volunteers of color from the other French West Indian colonies: Grenada, Martinique, and Guadeloupe. The mission was to render military assistance to American insurgents, led by General Benjamin Lincoln, attempting to regain the British-held port of Savannah. It was Frances initial, land-based foray in a war that would reach its ultimate conclusion, and victory, at Yorktown. The British were not expecting them. Nothing seemed further from Savannah than Englands hereditary enemies, wrote Alexander A. Lawrence in his 1951 book, Storm over Savannah, those giddy opportunists who had taken the side of the Americans for no better reason than to avenge Britains rape of the Bourbon Empire. For twenty-three days, the combined forces laid siege to the city while the British gained reinforcements and fortified their defenses. On October 9th, the allies, including some but not all of the chasseurs, finally attacked what they thought was the weak point of the British fortifications, the Spring Hill Redoubt. The attack failed. In less than an hour, hundreds were killed or wounded. Retreat was sounded. Attempting to demolish the enemy, the British mounted a counter attack. The balance of chasseurs, as part of the French reserves, came between them, stood their ground, and repulsed the onslaught. Their courage saved thousands of French and American lives allowing Lincoln to regroup and eventually push north. Franklin Square is a small park nestled in Savannahs historic district surrounded by pecan trees and live oaks festooned with Spanish moss. The monument is an octagonal, granite pillar, six feet high by sixteen feet wide. Each facet of the octagon is engraved with a portion of the story of the Siege of Savannah focusing on the chasseurs contribution. Crowning the pillar are four, life-size, bronze statues depicting the chasseurs in action: a young drummer boy represents Henri Christophe, who would one day become Haitis first king; a wounded soldier kneels clutching his chest; a third soldier fires a musket while the fourth reloads. Two additional statues have yet to be installed once the final $250,000 has been raised through additional, private contributions. Rep. Meeks praised Chairman Daniel Fils-Aime, Sr. and other members of the Haitian American Historical Society for mortgaging their homes for us to be here on behalf of pride and commitment, to telling a story the way it should be told. The chasseurs mission was far more daunting. To members of Georgias slave-holding society, seeing this corps of free blacks and men of color, marching with rifles on American soil, must have been nerve wracking; a threat to their very existence. Among the French regulars, the idea of fighting beside the rebel army was so distasteful they arrested any American who dared set foot in their camp. As for the men of Saint Domingue, dEstaing felt compelled to issue orders stating the people of color would be treated at all times like whites. They aspire to the same honor and they will exhibit the same bravery. Upon leaving their island home, they had been told only that they would be joining American insurgents in their war for independence. The exact destination had been kept a secret by dEstaing, as was his custom. Geographically, Savannah was approximately six hundred and fifty miles west but eight hundred miles north of Saint Domingue, nearly half way to Canada. For men who had spent the entirety of their lives in the tropics, their tolerance to Georgias cooler climate proved remarkably resilient. It is extraordinary, wrote dEstaing soon after the battle, that there were so few sick among the three thousand men who came from the islands and Saint Domingue, who were constantly at arms for nearly a month, most of them without tents, dressed only in linen, suffering from heat in the daytime and freezing to death at night. (Muskets, Cannon Balls & Bombs: the Revolution in Georgia, Benjamin Kennedy, Ed.) The chasseurs heroics have been largely ignored by American historians since the revolution. Except for a few advocating the patriot cause, like The Boston Gazette and The Charleston Gazette, most newspapers at the time were tools of propaganda controlled by the Crown. Reports on important events, such as the siege of Savannah were repressed for political reasons. Regardless of which side a paper supported, however, the agenda rarely included discussion of blacks except as slaves or criminals. Students in Haiti still learn of Les Chasseurs Volontaires in grammar school although no firsthand documentation from Saint Domingue has survived. Haitis historical archives were destroyed by a series of fires and explosions in the National Palace and other ministry buildings during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Limited accounts of the chasseurs that did survive first appeared in the journals of a few military men present at the siege, nearly all of whom were French, American, or English. None were chasseurs. At the ceremony, Jean V. Geneus, Minister of Haitians Living Abroad, reiterated what students in Haiti have always been taught. In 1849, Sir Richard Rush, the American minister to Paris, wrote that blacks and mulattoes saved the French and American troops that day at Savannah; covering themselves with glory. Ultimately, the chasseurs returned to Saint Domingue bearing something far more valuable than glory. They brought back first hand knowledge of how the French made war: their hubris, the petty jealousies within the ranks, poor provisioning, and strategic blunders. All this knowledge gleaned from Savannah would serve the men of Saint Domingue during their own revolution twelve years later. By 1802, Thomas Jefferson had become deeply concerned that if Napoleon could quell the rebellious slaves, he might afterwards shift his troops to the Louisiana territory. A master manipulator, Jefferson promised not to infringe on French sovereignty in Saint Domingue while simultaneously turning a blind eye toward private merchants delivering contraband arms, ammunition, and provisions to the rebellion behind Frances back. Saint Domingue defeated the French, declared its independence in 1804, and changed its name to Haiti. With his war chest near depletion, Napoleon had already sold the Louisiana territory to the U.S. the year before. No longer threatened by France, Jefferson responded to pressure from Americas slave-holding states poised to expand into the nations vast, new real estate. Fearing its influence, Jefferson chose not to recognize the fledgling, black republic. His decision, which remained the official, U.S. position until1862, established the exclusionist and paternalistic policies toward Haiti that persist to this day. As for Haitis boat people, according to a report from the Congressional Research Service, their mass migration by sea threatens our national security because it diverts the Coast Guard and other resources from their homeland security duties. Fortunately, the Haitian boat people who came to fight for our freedom in 1779 were not turned away. Had they been, said Floyd Adams, We might all be speaking with an English Accent. (Elliot Kriegsman, 10/16) _______________________________________________ HaitiReport mailing list HaitiReport@haitikonpay.org http://lists.haitikonpay.org/mailman/listinfo/haitireport