[R-G] Rights Groups Assail U.S. for Withholding Aid to Haiti, Citing Political Motives
Anthony Fenton
fentona at shaw.ca
Tue Jun 24 14:11:11 MDT 2008
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/24/world/americas/24haiti.html?ref=americas
June 24, 2008
Rights Groups Assail U.S. for Withholding Aid to Haiti, Citing
Political Motives
By MARC LACEY
An array of human rights groups has strongly criticized the United
States government, saying it withheld money meant to provide clean
drinking water to Haiti as leverage for political change in the country.
The activists, in a report released Monday, called the delay of $54
million in international loans to the Haitian government “one of the
most egregious examples of malfeasance by the United States in recent
years.”
The loans from the Inter-American Development Bank were intended to
revamp the water and sanitation systems in Les Cayes and Port-de-Paix,
two Haitian towns in dire need of the money to improve their
infrastructure. Nearly 70 percent of Haitians lack regular and direct
access to potable water, experts say. The lack of clean water
contributes to intestinal parasites and amoebic dysentery.
The development bank, over which the United States Treasury Department
holds significant influence, approved the loans in 1998. Although
payments began to be made several years later, the water projects have
yet to be started, the report said, “largely the result of aggressive
attempts by the U.S. government to block the disbursement of these
loans.”
Haiti’s own political turmoil and financial difficulties also
contributed to the delays, the report acknowledged.
The report was prepared by the Center for Human Rights and Global
Justice at the New York University School of Law; Partners in Health,
a Boston-based health care provider that does work in Haiti and other
impoverished countries; and the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for
Human Rights.
The groups went to court to gain access to internal government
correspondence saying why the United States sought to prevent the
approved loans from reaching Haiti in the years after their approval.
The Inter-American Development Bank’s charter states that the bank
should not interfere in the political affairs of member countries.
But the delays in disbursing the loans were linked by American
officials to their concerns about the administration of Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, whose first presidency was overthrown by a military coup in
1991 and whose return to power in 2001 was cut short three years later
with the encouragement of the Bush administration.
Dean Curran, who was the American ambassador to Haiti at the time,
said publicly in 2001, “There now are a certain number of loans of the
Inter-American Development Bank that are not yet disbursed with the
objective of trying to request of the protagonists of the current
situation, in the current political crisis, to reach a compromise.”
A top Treasury Department official then sent an e-mail message to
staff members that called it a “major screw-up” for the ambassador to
explicitly acknowledge a connection between the holdup in development
loans and American political concerns in Haiti.
A Treasury Department spokeswoman, Brookly McLaughlin, said on Friday
that she had not yet seen a copy of the report but that the United
States government and other international agencies had played a major
financial role in the development of Haiti.
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