home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
/
TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
/
1990
/
93
/
jan_mar
/
02019936.000
< prev
next >
Wrap
Text File
|
1994-02-27
|
9KB
|
180 lines
<text>
<title>
(Feb. 01, 1993) Lives on Hold
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Feb. 01, 1993 Clinton's First Blunder
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
HAITI, Page 50
Lives on Hold
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Thousands still hope Clinton will allow them to come to the
U.S., but he plans to stem the refugee exodus by bringing back
democracy to the troubled island
</p>
<p>By J.F.O. MCALLISTER/WASHINGTON - With reporting by Cathy Booth
and Bernard Diederich/Port-au-Prince
</p>
<p> Bill Clinton's Inauguration Day was much like any other in
Haiti, full of hunger, fear, gunfire and, most of all,
uncertainty about the future. In the slums of Port-au-Prince,
there were high hopes for "the democrat Clinton" with a small
d. Deep in a warren of concrete hovels without running water or
sanitation, a voodoo priest sat beneath the corrugated tin roof
of his temple. The people of his neighborhood, he said, had
supported Clinton despite reprisals from the army that rules the
country. "A lot of people were beaten up here because we
believed in Clinton, and the Haitian authorities wanted Bush
re-elected," he said. "We couldn't talk about Clinton, but we
believed. We still believe."
</p>
<p> Virtually none of the Haitian boat people brought back by
the U.S. Coast Guard that day had even heard of Clinton, much
less his decision to continue Bush's policy of returning boat
people by force, without checking if any were fleeing
persecution by the thugs who run Haiti. Batteries for radios are
hard to come by in the countryside where these people had lived.
Elias Volcaire, a 24-year-old farmer from St. Marc, just stared
blankly when asked if he was angry at Clinton's change of
policy. "Clinton? Who's that?" he asked. Only one of the
returnees seemed to know. "Before he was President, Clinton said
he wasn't going to turn us back," he said. "But I can't be mad.
That's life." A priest outside the capital was not so resigned.
"We don't know what Clinton stands for," he said. "It's
unbelievable that he changed his mind about the refugees."
</p>
<p> Hundreds of boats--some still unfinished--that were
reportedly being readied to transport thousands of refugees to
the U.S. after Jan. 20 stood idle at docks all over the island
last week as Haitians tried to figure out what to do. A
barricade of 17 U.S. Coast Guard cutters and five Navy ships
offshore has temporarily halted the threatened exodus inspired
by Clinton's campaign promise to ease asylum rules. When
Haitians took his election victory as a guarantee of Uncle Sam's
embrace and began to build more boats, Clinton quickly announced
he would follow Bush's policy of forced return "for the time
being."
</p>
<p> The Clinton team has sought to dampen expectations in
Haiti while it works out a new policy. To soften criticism that
the U.S. was violating international law by forcing refugees
back into the arms of their persecutors--a practice candidate
Clinton had denounced as "a blow to America's moral authority
in defending the rights of refugees"--the new Administration
said it would open up new refugee-processing centers around the
country. But Clinton recognizes that no mere modifications of
asylum rules, however humanely intended, can permanently stop
the wave of immigrants to U.S. shores. It is much harder--and
much more essential--to improve the basic economic and
political conditions in Haiti that cause its citizens to flee.
</p>
<p> Many Haitians are hungry for quicker solutions. Rumors
persist in Port-au-Prince that the American ships offshore
harbor U.S. Marines who could land, just as they did in 1915 to
restore stability and protect American investments following
racial clashes between the country's mulatto and black citizens.
Forgetting that the subsequent occupation lasted 19 years--and
was not always a happy one--Haitian nationalists whisper that
U.S. intervention may be the only answer. "You have to impose
a solution. You can't negotiate," says one, who never thought
he would welcome U.S. troops.
</p>
<p> Such a prospect is unlikely. Clinton and most people in
Haiti are pinning their hopes on a political settlement that
will make Haitians want to stay home. For the first time since
last February, diplomats are finding signs of life in the talks
the U.N. and the Organization of American States are sponsoring
in an effort to restore democracy and reinstate Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, the democratically elected President who was ousted in
a September 1991 coup.
</p>
<p> As a first step, Lieut. General Raoul Cedras, leader of
the armed forces, and his Prime Minister Marc Bazin have agreed
to accept up to 400 international observers who are supposed to
deter human rights violations and create a climate for free
political activity. The first batch is slated to arrive in
Port-au-Prince early next week. Negotiators hope this will
eventually lead to a pardon of the coup plotters, a new Prime
Minister agreed upon by Cedras and Aristide, and an end to the
trade embargo that has crippled an already weak economy. At this
point the sanctions are punishing the poor while sustaining the
rich monopolists who conspired with the army to get rid of the
populist Aristide.
</p>
<p> What really matters to most Haitians is Aristide's return.
Many of those who are building boats to flee say they will stay
home if he comes back, as he urged them in a special Creole
broadcast on Voice of America. "The people will not leave now,"
said a Haitian man in the slum of Cite Boston. "We are waiting
for him--for Aristide." While conceding that he was not the
perfect President, Haitians like the priest in the town of
Jeremite say "restoring Aristide to power is restoring the
democratic process." The exiled President, however, has been
less popular in Washington, where Bush officials thought him too
radical and mercurial to do business with. They often alluded
to the inflammatory rhetoric, poor command and crime under his
administration.
</p>
<p> The plan being brokered by U.N. and OAS envoy Dante Caputo
is far from completion, and Aristide's return is months away--if ever. Many suspect the military is only playing along to get
the international community off its back. Hard-liners within the
army, furious at the prospect of international monitors, tried
to mount a coup two weeks ago, and a group of young soldiers at
the Freres army camp outside Port-au-Prince mutinied on Jan. 20.
The 8,400-man army is dangerously riven: its rank and file fear
that its leaders will cut and run into comfortable exile,
leaving subordinates to face the people's anger. Aristide too
suspects the army is bargaining in bad faith, but he is
cooperating because there is no other way to rope the Clinton
Administration into supporting his cause.
</p>
<p> The chances of a peaceful transition to civilian rule
under Aristide are slim. A similar peace plan collapsed a year
ago after all sides had signed on. So far, the international
observers have secured only $1 million in funds, enough to
support 50 people for three months.
</p>
<p> That will not do much to help the thousands of poor
Haitians who live in fear and oppression. The current 16-member
OAS monitoring team has been bottled up in the capital since
September: they have no credentials, no cars and no permission
to venture into the countryside. When people seeking asylum
venture into the U.S. center for processing refugees in
Port-au-Prince, they can see the army headquarters just two
blocks away. Some are risking their life by even crossing the
threshold. When they leave, informers loitering downstairs--some posing as money changers--are waiting to report their
names to the police.
</p>
<p> Aristide supporter Pierre Fequiere, 29, was one of the
lucky ones who won the right to seek asylum in the U.S. Arrested
after the 1991 coup, he was bound with a cord around his neck
and marched off to jail. He lost two teeth when an officer hit
him with the butt of a gun. Released provisionally, he fled
into the wilderness like the slaves of old. When he returned
home, the police tried to gun him down. Days before he got his
exit visa to the U.S., soldiers stopped him and kicked him. "If
Aristide comes back," he says, "I will return. People aren't
leaving Haiti because of food. We leave because they beat us."
</p>
<p> Stories like these will force the Clinton Administration
to put Haiti near the top of its agenda. "The situation is
being radicalized," says a young Haitian activist. "If these
negotiations are another farce, God save us. The people will
take to the streets." The Clinton team is probably safe from a
crisis as long as Haitians believe Aristide might really be
restored to power. But if he isn't, Haitian eyes will soon turn
again toward the U.S. Leaning on a car door to listen to the new
President's Inaugural Address on the radio, 10-year-old Reynold
looked happy. What did he want from Clinton? He replied, "I want
him to come and get me in Haiti."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>