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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Volume IV, Number 7 March 14 - 20, 2004 Quezon City, Philippines |
Message from Ramsey Clark
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The
Bush administration has worked towards the removal of Pres. Jean-Bertrand
Aristide from office for three years. It has enforced a unilateral embargo and
cut off humanitarian aid to the poorest country in the
hemisphere. It has sought to undermine support for President Aristide while
supporting his opposition. It has waged a relentless propaganda campaign to
force him out of office. It has supported calls for Most
recently the U.S. has forced regime change by armed aggression supporting former
Haitian military officers, FRAPH leaders and criminal elements who entered Haiti
with heavy firepower. Though only hundreds in number they easily captured Cap
Haitien, Gonaives, Hinche and Les Cayes, killing the police who were untrained
in warfare, or in defending against commando units, armed only with pistols. This
small force could never have entered Haiti if President Aristide, a man of
peace, had not abolished the Haitian army, a praiseworthy act. Unfortunately,
this left the country defenseless against armed aggression. The
international organizations, CARICOM, OAS and the UN should have acted to
protect the democratically elected government of Haiti. After Costa Rica
abolished its army, President Somoza (who U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt
called "our SOB") of Nicaragua, twice threatened invasions of Costa
Rica, only to be stopped, once by the OAS and once by Venezuela. The
U.S. consistently acted to force President Aristide to leave Haiti, abandon his
constitutional duties, repudiate democratic processes and desert his people to
the tender mercies of the Old Regime. The army, the paramilitary FRAPH, criminal
gangs and the old oligarchy that supported Duvalier terrorism against the
Haitian people with U.S. support for 30 years. When in 1986 Baby Doc Duvalier
was forced to leave, his President
Aristide consistently refused to leave his people, to resign, to subvert Haitian
democracy and constitutional government under enormous pressure from the Bush
Administration. He was under that enormous pressure for months as violence was
again threatening his presidency as it did in 1991, nine months into his first
term as the first democratically elected president of Haiti, the first and only
country in which a successful slave rebellion took place. That revolution was
begun by Toussaint Louverteur in In
his autobiography published in exile in 1992 first in France, Aristide wrote,
"In Haiti, we are watching the ascent of a rebellious people who are
revolting against slavery. I am only the reflection, an echo of that President
Aristide listed in the final chapter of his autobiography, "The Ten
Commandments of Democracy in Haiti," first spoken by him before the General
Assembly of the United Nations in September 1991. The This
is the man President Bush has deposed. If
the Bush administration policy of unilateral wars of aggression, violations of
international law and the U.S. Constitution and regime change is to be stopped
before the U.S. loses its last friends and creates a 1.
The role of the U.S. in forcing President Aristide from Haiti; 2.
The support the Bush administration gave in training, financing and arming the
aggression against Haiti; 3.
The acts the Bush administration took to destabilize social order in Haiti, to
support the old army, the FRAPH and the wealthy oligarchies; 4.
The role the U.S. played in President Aristide's sudden departure from Haiti,
contrary to all his public statements, and his transport to a distant country; 5.
Any explanation the Bush administration has for its failure to demand the former
military, FRAPH and other violent groups lay down their arms, arms the U.S.
provided, until the eve of the president's coerced 6.
Why Washington placed every pressure at its disposal to force the democratically
elected President of Haiti to surrender his constitutional powers; 7.
Why President Aristide was kidnapped in fact, even as Toussaint Louverture was
kidnapped to imprisonment in France in 1803 and Philippine President Emilio
Aguinaldo was kidnapped by U.S. soldiers to end the Philippine-American War in
1901? The
Western Hemisphere cannot be a safe or happy place until U.S. military and
economic intervention and regime change end, justice for all is assured,
reparations for past offenses to Haiti are paid and until President
Aristide returns for Haiti to serve his people. Ramsey
Clark We want to know what you think of this article.
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