Haiti: Elections & Continued Dependence

QueEx

Rising Star
Super Moderator
<font size="5"><center>Haiti: Elections and Continued Dependence</font size></center>

STRATFOR
Intelligence Summary
August 9. 2005

The U.S. government and the United Nations are determined to hold new elections in Haiti before the end of 2005, while gunmen loyal to former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide are escalating political violence in an effort to force a postponement of the elections. Even if elections are held on schedule, however, Haiti's new government will remain politically weak and dependent on a large international security presence and on long-term international aid totaling billions of dollars.

Analysis

Haiti is scheduled to hold nationwide municipal elections Oct. 9, 2005, and legislative and presidential elections Nov. 13, 2005. If necessary, a runoff election will take place Dec. 18, 2005.

The U.S. government and United Nations are determined the elections will not be postponed, arguing that a legitimate democratic government represents the first vital step toward lifting Haiti out of its extreme social misery, economic chaos and political instability. However, armed groups loyal to ousted former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide are determined to derail the elections, or else to strip the new government of its legitimacy by boycotting the elections if they are not postponed.

Some groups such as the International Crisis Group (ICG) already are calling for the elections' postponement because Haiti is not prepared to hold transparent elections yet. According to the ICG report, rampant political violence is only one reason for this problem. The report also notes that voter registration is running far behind schedule, and that not a single political party has registered officially to field candidates in the elections. To address the last two issues, the interim government of Prime Minister Gerard Latortue has extended the deadlines for registering voters and political parties.

As to the issue of political violence, U.N. and U.S. government officials claim political violence is being contained in Haiti and say elections will be held on schedule. To make certain this happens, the U.N. peacekeeping force likely will be reinforced before elections. Also, the U.S. government will shortly send 3,000 handguns, hundreds of rifles and anti-riot equipment to Haiti to reinforce the country's police ahead of an anticipated surge in politically motivated violence in coming months. But reinforcing international and local security forces will not stabilize Haiti before -- or after -- the elections.

Eighteen months after the U.S. government compelled Aristide to flee Haiti in February 2004 following a brief rebellion led by former army soldiers and supported by Haitian exiles in Miami and the neighboring Dominican Republic, the country's interim government has failed to contain criminal and political violence. Spokesmen for the U.N. peacekeeping force claim the 7,600-member force has suppressed political violence across the country. Senior U.N. officials also claim the political climate is improving as violence declines, particularly in acutely poor neighborhoods such as Bel Air and Cite Soleil in Port-au-Prince. This official optimism is mostly rhetoric, however.

Since Aristide's flight, more than 1,000 Haitians have died in political violence. And many Haitians view Lartortue's government as incompetent and corrupt.

Many also feel that the post-February 2004 arrests of three major figures associated with Aristide's Family Lavalas (FL) party were politically motivated. Former Prime Minister Yvon Neptune and former Interior Minister Jocelerme Privert have been jailed for months. And radical populist Roman Catholic priest Gerard Jean-Juste recently was arrested in connection with the murder of one of Haiti's best-known journalists, though his supporters say the charges against the priest are false.

It is possible these prominent pro-Aristide figures were detained with cause, as the government claims. However, it is likely not a coincidence that Neptune, Privert and Jean-Juste are FL radicals advocating a boycott of the elections unless Aristide is allowed to return to Haiti from his South African exile. The U.S. government and the United Nations are pressuring moderate FL leaders to participate in the elections, since a boycott by Aristide's party would severely undermine U.S. and U.N. claims that elections have restored a legitimate, democratic government in Haiti.

The elections could still be postponed, however, given the many obstacles that must be overcome. For example, enough voters must register and participate in the ballot to give the new government political legitimacy. If less than half of the eligible population registers and votes, Haiti's next democratic government would be off to a weak start. Also, it is not clear which political parties besides LF could obtain the required 5,000 registered voter signatures to field candidates. And if LF boycotts the elections, many Haitians may not accept the elections as legitimate. On the other hand, should an LF split produce a moderate faction fielding a slate of candidates, many Haitian voters would still probably reject the results if Aristide publicly calls the elections undemocratic because he and his followers were excluded.

Aristide is not running in these elections, but he remains Haiti's dominant political figure. U.S. government and U.N. support for Latortue means little to Haitians. And no alternative to Aristide stands out, or can match his charisma and appeal among the country's most dispossessed people. Moreover, between 2001 and 2004, Aristide and his closest supporters are believed to have amassed a war chest totaling more than $50 million. This is a great deal of money in the Western Hemisphere's most impoverished country; these resources imply Aristide will remain one of the most influential forces in Haitian politics during his life, even from exile.

Even if elections are not postponed, Haiti's new government will need massive, long-term international economic and security assistance to remain in power. Senior U.N. envoys to Haiti recently admitted that a U.N. security presence will be needed for at least a decade, combined with more than $1.5 billion in international financial aid. And that sum probably constitutes an overly optimistic assessment.

Haiti is a failed state, meaning its people and institutions are too poor, uneducated, underdeveloped and corrupt to organize the country either politically or economically. But the U.S. government, the United Nations and other foreign countries refuse to acknowledge this since admitting it would raise an impossible question. For if Haiti -- with more than 8 million impoverished citizens -- is ungovernable, who will accept the financial and political responsibility for subsidizing it indefinitely?

The U.S. government clearly wants to disengage from Haiti quickly. Washington's game plan is first, to elect a new government; second, to cobble together an international aid program for Haiti after elections that will not cut into the U.S. federal budget; and third, to let the new, democratically elected Haitian government fix the country's problems --which have persisted for 200 years. The United Nations also wants out, since its peacekeeping effort is expensive, and since the permanent members of the U.N. Security Council do not see permanent U.N. stewardship of failed states such as Haiti in a favorable light. Even Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is not keen on Haiti, considering he has offered his country's oil wealth to much of the region without signaling any willingness to share the wealth with Haiti.

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QueEx said:
Even Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez is not keen on Haiti, considering he has offered his country's oil wealth to much of the region without signaling any willingness to share the wealth with Haiti.

Haiti is being ran by American installed thugs. Why would Chavez support them?
 
African Herbsman said:
Haiti is being ran by American installed thugs. Why would Chavez support them?
So, if it is as you say it is -- that would be reason for Chavez to punish innocent Haitians ...

QueEx
 
The punishment of innocent Hatians started when the US funded and trained the leaders of the coup d etat. They created the mess they need to clean it up. The truth is out there bruh stop running from it.
 
thats funny, when i heard about the wholesale ghetto slaughter in haiti i didnt hear shit about the US. it was he UN and the countries you love(any country other than the US).

let me guess we ordered it though.
 
African Herbsman said:
The punishment of innocent Hatians started when the US funded and trained the leaders of the coup d etat. They created the mess they need to clean it up. The truth is out there bruh stop running from it.
Wouldn't that be even more reason for The Great Leftist to come to the aid of the Haitians -- a perfect thing to do to make his point on the Evil American Empire ??? Why would the benevolent Chavez make the Haitians pay when it is reported that he spends money everywhere else on anti-American campaigns ??? Maybe ole Shaw-Vez ain't so colorblind, as some Black people seem to think ...; or, maybe Chavez is just another so-called person of color who some of US have anxiously attached a liking -- especially because he shares the view of that some that the U.S. must fail, by whomever hands necessary ???

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
Wouldn't that be even more reason for The Great Leftist to come to the aid of the Haitians -- a perfect thing to do to make his point on the Evil American Empire ??? Why would the benevolent Chavez make the Haitians pay when it is reported that he spends money everywhere else on anti-American campaigns ??? Maybe ole Shaw-Vez ain't so colorblind, as some Black people seem to think ...; or, maybe Chavez is just another so-called person of color who some of US have anxiously attached a liking -- especially because he shares the view of that some that the U.S. must fail, by whomever hands necessary ???

QueEx
Let me rephrase this so you'll understand it. If the US is pulling the strings in Haiti, it makes no sense for Chavez to deal with them. That's common sense man. The Hatian terrorists have money to buy weapons from the US to murder their own in the streets but when its time to support the population there's no money.

Haiti, another example of american intervention gone wrong.
 
African Herbsman said:
Let me rephrase this so you'll understand it. If the US is pulling the strings in Haiti, it makes no sense for Chavez to deal with them. That's common sense man. The Hatian terrorists have money to buy weapons from the US to murder their own in the streets but when its time to support the population there's no money.

Haiti, another example of american intervention gone wrong.
You "Rephrased" right out of the issue -- which was "Chavez is not keen on Haiti, considering he has offered his country's oil wealth to much of the region without signaling any willingness to share the wealth with Haiti.' No one suggested he fund guns -- the Haitian people need subsistence and the article said (true or not) Chavez hasn't done shit.

So, what I understand is that you can't defend Chavez's intransigence, hence, as always, you blame yours.

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
You "Rephrased" right out of the issue -- which was "Chavez is not keen on Haiti, considering he has offered his country's oil wealth to much of the region without signaling any willingness to share the wealth with Haiti.' No one suggested he fund guns -- the Haitian people need subsistence and the article said (true or not) Chavez hasn't done shit.

So, what I understand is that you can't defend Chavez's intransigence, hence, as always, you blame yours.

QueEx


What is it that u don't understand here QueEx, if Chavez shares his oil with Haiti, the U.S installed thugs, the elite and practically every corrupt officials are the ones who will benefit the most from this oil program. More oil will be available for the tanks and armored vehicles to do opression against the masses in the slums such as Cite Soleil and Belair who are currently under siege by the MINUSTAH. The haitians are more concerned about ridiculous price of food and goods that have more than doubled since the coup d'etat. Sharing the oil with Haiti would be a good thing indeed but to have these ignorant blood thirsty greedy and immoral bastards to benefit the most from it is straight stupid. If the Haitians can endure this enhanced u.s sponsored misery they can do without some extra oil.
 
Hardballa said:
What is it that u don't understand here QueEx, if Chavez shares his oil with Haiti, the U.S installed thugs, the elite and practically every corrupt officials are the ones who will benefit the most from this oil program. More oil will be available for the tanks and armored vehicles to do opression against the masses in the slums such as Cite Soleil and Belair who are currently under siege by the MINUSTAH. The haitians are more concerned about ridiculous price of food and goods that have more than doubled since the coup d'etat. Sharing the oil with Haiti would be a good thing indeed but to have these ignorant blood thirsty greedy and immoral bastards to benefit the most from it is straight stupid. If the Haitians can endure this enhanced u.s sponsored misery they can do without some extra oil.
Balla, what part of "<u>wealth</u>" do you not understand? You said "giving oil" -- I didn't. Sharing wealth can be a lot of things limited only by the giver's and taker's imagination -- and it can be tailored to fit Haiti's needs, i.e., FOOD and other quality of life needs.

QueEx
 
QueEx said:
Balla, what part of "<u>wealth</u>" do you not understand? You said "giving oil" -- I didn't. Sharing wealth can be a lot of things limited only by the giver's and taker's imagination -- and it can be tailored to fit Haiti's needs, i.e., FOOD and other quality of life needs.

QueEx


Well I guess you have never lived in a country where the rule of law has been crushed by some thoughtful u.s. intervention. You would then know that even if there's an attempt to supply the country with some goods the masses would only benefit a very small percentage of it. Why would the u.s. supply 80% of the haitian population with anything if they are still mobilizing against that ruthless coup d'etat and denouncing Washington's role in it.

Actually if the u.s. had any sense of humanitary values they wouldn't need anyone's offer to share their wealth with Haiti as it would be in their own interest to alleviate the people's suffering so they could at least find something positive in the country's occupation and would be more prone to vote for any of the proposed candidates instead of having to make a selection rather than an election.
 
Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

Dumarsais Siméus, the most successful Haitian-American businessman in the United States, is going home to run for president of Haiti.

"I wanted my fellow native sons and daughters of the Artibonite Valley to hear it from me first. ... I am a candidate for president of Haiti," Siméus, the son of illiterate peasants, announced Wednesday in his rural hometown of Pont-Sondé. "Today marks the start of a new beginning for our country ... in a time of crisis."

After months of speculation, the CEO of one of the largest black-owned businesses in the USA told supporters he will start campaigning for the November election, the first since Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted following a violent rebellion in February 2004.

"Running a country like Haiti, which is broke and in bankruptcy, takes many of the same skills as a successful businessman: leadership, knowing how to pick the right people to work for you, knowing how to create jobs for people," Siméus said in an interview.

"What a contender!" says James Morrell, director of the Haiti Democracy Project in Washington. "Here is the richest and most successful Haitian around — running to lead a country where nothing works. ... Here is evidence of someone who can get things done."

But the hurdles ahead are many. Siméus has no political experience, no name recognition and no party in Haiti. Then, there are the worsening problems of the hemisphere's poorest nation: gang violence, kidnappings and other crime now are such that it is unclear whether the elections will take place this fall.

Even if the vote goes ahead, under the current interpretation of the Haitian constitution, Siméus would be ineligible to run. Article 135 states a presidential candidate must "be a native-born Haitian and never have renounced Haitian nationality," and have resided in the country for five consecutive years before the election.

Siméus, 65, has taken U.S. citizenship and has been living in the USA for 44 years. But he dismisses potential constitutional barriers. "I don't have anything to overcome in terms of the constitution or getting on the ballot. I never renounced my citizenship," he said. "I have been fortunate to have other homes and other citizenships, but I never gave up my Haitian ones."

Siméus, a father of three, is a Howard University graduate with an MBA from the University of Chicago. He has held management positions in companies such as Atari, Rockwell International, Bendix and PromoCapital, the first investment banking firm in Haiti. He served as CEO of TLC Beatrice Foods, a $2 billion multinational conglomerate.

Today, he is CEO of Siméus Foods International, based in Mansfield, Texas, the largest minority-owned businesses in that state, according to Black Enterprise magazine. It does some $160 million in yearly sales to such customers as Denny's, T.G.I. Friday's and Burger King.

He runs his own foundation, sending money to help poor communities in Haiti, and he sits on Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's Haiti Task Force. His parents, who once sold a plot of land to be able to send their eldest of 12 children to college in the USA, still live in Haiti.

An estimated 2 million Haitians live in the USA, but significantly, they cannot vote in Haiti. Siméus said he does not plan to put any of his own money into his Haitian campaign, but will rely on friends in the USA, Canada, France and Germany to help raise money.

"I am giving myself. My know-how, my desire to help and my patience," Siméus said. "That will be my contribution."

An interim government and a 7,400-member multinational U.N. force has been trying to keep order in Haiti since Aristide fled the country in 2004 and lawlessness engulfed the capital. But Siméus said he believes he can begin to change Haiti.

"We will create ... a country that can function properly and an environment for investment," he said. "I want to be realistic about how long this turnaround will take. It will take at least a generation, but within the first year, change will start taking off. We will start the rebuilding process."
 
Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

this man is seriously considering leaving the u.s to help haiti good on him if his intentions are righteous and he is not tring to be a dictator of sorts
this is really giving back
 
Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

twiggy said:
this is really giving back

dude u must of missed this line right here
based in Mansfield, Texas, the largest minority-owned businesses in that state
and he sits on Florida Gov. Jeb Bush's Haiti Task Force
that means he is BUSH's pawn
 
Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

JUju2005 said:
dude u must of missed this line right here


that means he is BUSH's pawn
He might be a "Bush Pawn" ... but if all we know about him is whats contained in the article, don't you think thats a bit lacking to make judgments ???

QueEx
 
Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

QueEx said:
He might be a "Bush Pawn" ... but if all we know about him is whats contained in the article, don't you think thats a bit lacking to make judgments ???

QueEx
wouldnt the easiest way to tell what masters a politician is going to kotow to be to find out what kind of organizations back him? Does anyone know anything off hand about the Haiti Democracy Project?
 
Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

<font size="4">
From haitiwhois.com:</font size>


pic_524.jpg

Dumarsais M Simeus

<font size="3">
WHO IS Dumarsais M Simeus


Dumarsais M. Simeus is the chairman of RepresentAction.

Mr. Simeus has been Chairman & Founder of Simeus Foods International, Inc. since 1996. Mr. Simeus founded Simeus Foods International, Inc., the largest black-owned food processing company in the U.S. headquartered in Dallas, Texas.

He held key management and executive positions in companies such as: Atari, Inc., Rockwell International, Bendix Corporation and others.

He retired as President and Chief Operating Officer of TLC Beatrice Foods, a $2 billion conglomerate with operations in North America, Latin America, Asia and Australia.

Mr. Simeus has a BS degree in electrical engineering from Howard University and an MBA, with honors, from the University of Chicago.

Mr. Simeus has received many honors, including Entrepreneur of the Year from Ernst & Young, LLP, and he was a finalist for the Horatio Alger Award.</font size>

http://www.haitiwhois.com/whois-dumarsais_m-simeus
 
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<font size="6"><center>The Simeus Foundation</font size></center>

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Rice Visits Haiti Ahead of Elections

Rice Visits Haiti Ahead of Elections
by Michele Kelemen

Morning Edition, September 28, 2005 · Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited Haiti Tuesday, urging voters to turn out for upcoming presidential elections. A U.S.-backed interim government has run the Caribbean nation since former President Jean Aristide was pushed from power in January 2004. U.N. peacekeeping forces have struggled to control violence. 3 min 54 sec

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4866940
 
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Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

damn good post. very informative. i gotta come around these parts more


*salutes and rates 5 stars*
 
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Re: Businessman returns to Haiti to run for president

Haiti: Elections and COntinued Occupation

Businessman returns to Haiti to be dictator under US regime


fuck all this bullshit - get the French and US troops out - get all the crackas out and i bet shit sorts itself out- the US has been tryin to lock down that whole island for a long fuckin time

people should stop pretending any US governmental agencies have haiti's best interests at heart
 
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Re: Rice Visits Haiti Ahead of Elections

how many times have elections been cancelled?

haiti is the victim of us and french imperialism
 
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