[R-G] Perverted Priorities: Corpses, sham elections, and sweatshops in Haiti

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Sun Apr 12 11:22:06 MDT 2009


http://www.haitiaction.net/News/CHAN/4_10_9/4_10_9.html

Perverted Priorities: Corpses, sham elections, and sweatshops in Haiti

by Regan Boychuck

It is revealing what puts a bee in some Haiti watchers' bonnets and  
what they are able to remain silent about. Largely imagined human  
rights abuses by the Haitian government between 2000 and 2004 got some  
all hot under the collar, but when thousands were actually being  
killed after the February 2004 coup, the cat had their tongues.

One would have hoped the disastrous consequences of so many supposedly  
progressive groups' demonization of Haiti's government before the 2004  
coup would have taught the dangers of such perverted priorities.  
Unfortunately, those lessons are apparently lost on some.

As someone who only began to study Haiti after the 2004 coup my own  
government was deeply involved in, the Haiti Support Group's Charles  
Arthur is someone whose name I've only rarely come across.

That's because Arthur did not think the coup was an especially  
significant political event and, accordingly, remained more or less  
quiet as Haitian democracy was brought to an end. In the years since,  
Arthur's main intervention has been a shameful and baseless attack on  
a study published in the Lancet medical journal aiming to quantify to  
carnage that followed 2004 coup.

Today, it isn't the counting of the coup's corpses that has Arthur all  
hot and bothered, it's the UN's promotion of sweatshop labor as a  
"break-out opportunity" for Haiti "to lift itself toward a future of  
real economic prospects and genuine hope." (UN Secretary General Ban  
Ki-moon)

Arthur and others like Port-au-Prince hotelier Richard Morse might not  
have been particularly bothered by the coup and its bloody aftermath,  
but their critiques of the sweatshop model of development are  
nonetheless correct. As the World Bank noted at the peak of Haiti's  
sweatshop industry in the mid-1980s, the sweatshops are "largely  
outside the Haitian economy" and "make no fiscal contribution." During  
that first experiment in sweatshop misery in the 1970s and 1980s,  
poverty in Haiti increased 60 per cent and minimum wages in Haiti have  
been dramatically eroded in the years since. Sweatshops offered Haiti  
no hope in the 1970s and they offer no hope of real development today

As TransAfrica founder Randal Robinson recently noted on Democracy  
Now!, that kind of investment "overwhelmingly favors the interest of  
those businesses who want to invest in Haiti only because its labor is  
desperate and very cheap." Those are the sort of jobs, Robinson adds,  
that don't respect the minimum wage or environmental or health  
standards. "That is not the kind of investment that Haiti needs. It  
needs capital investment. It needs investment so that it can be self- 
sufficient. It needs investment so that it can feed itself."

But as Arthur and Morse rail against these latest sweatshop proposals,  
they miss the forest for the trees.

The UN's sweatshop proposal is little more than a distraction compared  
to the exclusion of Haiti's majority political movement, Fanmi  
Lavalas, from senate elections scheduled for April 19th. While Arthur  
complains the senate is being pressured to reject a proposed increase  
in Haiti's minimum wage, he has nothing to say about the undemocratic  
elections that will soon fill that chamber.

Those concerned with the economic exploitation of Haitians would do  
well to extend their opposition to the suppression of democracy as  
planned in the upcoming Senate elections. Anything less only serves to  
distract the world from the real issue of sham elections that can only  
result in further confusion and misery for the Haitian people.

Regan Boychuk completed his MA 'thesis' on Canada and Haiti at York  
University in 2005. He lives in Calgary and is involved in the Canada  
Haiti Action Network.

©2009 HaitiAction.net


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