Sunday, March 05, 2006

Reflections on Monitoring the Haitian Presidential Elections

Reflections on Monitoring the Haitian Presidential Elections

The presidential and legislative elections held in Haiti on February 7, 2006
were momentous and another big step in the process towards democracy in
Haiti after Jean Bertrand Aristide was forced out of office in 2004. These
elections were held after several lengthy delays and many were starting to
lose hope that they would even happen. However, on voting day, the Haitian
people turned out in much greater numbers than expected and overwhelmed the
greatly unprepared electoral officials.

Generally speaking, I was impressed with how the elections went off and was
quite happy that there were no major incidents of violence ­ as many,
including the interim government had predicted. From my perspective, and
those I monitored with (organized by the Réseau National de Défense des
Droits Humains (RNDDH - http://www.rnddh.org) the election was, in general,
free and fair. It gave me a very good insight into the process behind the
scenes and also the strong desire of Haitians to move on into a new period
in their history. It was a very long day for the team of monitors I worked
with, from 5 in the morning until past 10 at night running around to
numerous polling stations to check out the situations there. We were also
able to participate in the monitoring of the counting of votes at one
station. The significant size of the turnout, and even some of the scenes
of people forcing their way into election stations are signs of hope for me.
I had friends and family write to me saying they had seen the ³riots² and
³utter chaos² on the streets and in the voting stations. This was not what
I saw. Yes, it was chaotic, but not chaos out of a desire to create
disorder. It was chaotic in that people wanted to vote and were having
challenges in doing so. They needed to vote ­ and nothing was going to stop
them.

Despite these hopeful signs, there were also many irregularities and signs
of fraud. Ballot boxes full of ballots found in the dump outside of the
city; certain voting centres attacked and burned down, and then closed off
for voting; many people not finding their names on the voter lists and thus
being turned away; intimidation and undue influencing of voting, especially
by party representatives in the voting centres. Perhaps the largest issue
of all was the way in which the election was finally decided. Preval did not
have the requisite 50% + 1 of the vote in order to avoid a run-off vote.
Many of his supporters mobilized and took to the streets to demand that
Preval be declared President, which, in fact, was the end result. It was
clear that Preval would have a won the second round of voting and in order
to avoid chaos and further division, the international community proposed
that the blank ballots be distributed proportionally among the candidates,
which pushed Preval¹s percentage of the vote over 50% - and he was declared
President. I am uncomfortable with the solution because it flaunted the
constitutional process for the election, but the result, in the end, would
have been the same. So, democracy took a hit, but at the same time, the
country can move forward.

Preval has a major challenge before him. He has to respond to ³the masses,²
those living in the poor slums who came out en masse to vote for him. Many
in these slum areas have been blamed for much of the instability and
certainly have been involved in kidnapping and other acts of violence.
Preval also has to respond to the elite classes of Haitian society who did
not support him, and who have also contributed to much of the instability
the country has faced since the ouster of Aristide in early 2004. If he can
respond to the needs of both of these groups of people, while bringing
stability and security, he will be supported. If not, there is a great
chance that either group will try to undermine his presidency and drag him
down.

I, for one, remain positive and hopeful. If I can¹t derive hope from the
process and the future, and how God will use this experience for his good,
then there is no sense in my remaining in Haiti to do the work that brought
me here (reforestation). Now that the process is mostly over, many Haitians
also have a renewed sense of hope. These are all steps in a long journey,
and so let us continue to pray that it be a blessed one.

Matt van Geest
MCC Haiti

------ End of Forwarded Message

Thursday, February 16, 2006

FW: Preval declared President

Very interesting developments.

We are happy about a decision that will hopefully curtail mass protest, but
at the same time, we¹re a bit confused by the process.

Matt and Esther

16 February 2006
Elections 2006 : a decision rendered

Posté le 16 février 2006

At 3:00 am this morning, the CEP announced that following an adjustment of
the ballot counting, Rene Preval of the Lespwa party is the newly elected
president of Haiti, with 51.15% of the vote as calculated. The results
announced were based on a decision (ultimately a proposition made by Brazil)
to divide the blank ballots between all of the presidential candidates
according to the percentage of valid votes counted. Such actions are not
provided for in any of the legal documents concerning the electoral process.

The UN mission was ultimately responsible for providing security for the
ballots and other electoral material. The recently exposed scandal involving
the discarding of electoral material created serious problems for MINUSTAH
and for the international community as accusations of fraud abound, further
tainting a mission that is already plagued by hostile accusations and
general mistrust on the part of the population.

Clearly Preval is the choice of the people, and RNDDH is of the belief that
he would have won the election even if a second round had been called. Many
of the other presidential candidates indicated that their parties would
support Preval's Lespwa in the event of a second round. To resort to the
tactics as used by the CEP is an embarrassment for the country and its
people who came out in massive numbers to democratically elect a president
on 7 February 2006 - a day which will be remembered with pride in the minds
of the Haitian people. While it is true that chosing to divide the blank
ballots has seemingly averted additional crisis and potential violence, the
action taken has no legal basis. As Haiti struggles to find the road leading
to democracy and the Rule of Law, it is imperative that the voice of the
people be heard and be respected. Furthermore, fundamental human rights must
be promoted, protected, and defended, and the law upheld.

RNDDH will continue to monitor and analyse the situation in the coming days
and weeks. A full report on RNDDH's analysis of the electoral process will
be published in the next few days.

*********************************************************
Kristie van de Wetering
Human Rights Program Officer

Réseau National de Défense des Droits Humains (RNDDH)
9, Rue Rivière
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Tel: 509.245.3486 / 245.5821 / 244.1495
Fax: 509.244.4146
Email: kvwetering@rnddh.org
kotchka19@hotmail.com
www.rnddh.org <http://www.rnddh.org>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
>
>
> Subject: Discarded Electoral Material Found in Dump: RNDDH's preliminary
> investigation results
>
>
>
>
>
> Haiti Situation Update #3 ­ Discarded Electoral Material Found in Dump:
> RNDDH¹s preliminary investigation results
>
> Afternoon of 15 February 2006
>
>
>
> As reported earlier, last evening Haitian television channels showed images
> of discarded voting ballots in piles of burning garbage just north of
> Port-au-Prince. An RNDDH and POHDH delegation went to the area this morning
> to gather information.
>
>
>
> The RNDDH/POHDH delegation was able to confirm the existence of several
> hundreds of ballots that had been discarded in the dump. According to
> individuals living in the area, once the trash was dumped, a bulldozer was
> used to cover it and children were told not to play in the piles as the waste
> was toxic. When RNDDH arrived, the electoral materials were visible;
> however, the majority of what was dumped is still allegedly under heaps of
> garbage. The delegation documented the presence of destroyed ballot boxes,
> at least one completed form on the opening of a particular voting office
> (procès verbal), at least one page of a list of registered candidates
> (complete with signatures), as well as several ballots (presidential,
> senatorial, and deputy ballots).
>
>
>
> Of these ballots, there were: void ballots (bulletin nul) meaning that there
> was more than 1 choice indicated when only 1 was permitted and/or the ballot
> was not signed by members of the voting office*; blank ballots (bulletin
> blanc) that were signed but with no choice indicated; valid ballots that
> were both signed and indicated the appropriate number of choices; and finally
> unused ballots that were neither signed or marked with a vote. The majority
> of the ballots seen were valid ballots and unused ballots. The ballots
> documented by the delegation came from voting offices in Thomazeau (northeast
> of Port-au-Prince), Carrefour, Martissant, Léogâne, and Kenscoff (all towns in
> the West department).
>
>
>
> This morning the UN spokesperson, Mr. David Wimhurst, made a press statement
> regarding the dumped ballots. He indicated that during Election Day, 9
> voting centers (centers** not voting offices) had been vandalized. He
> suspected that the ballots found at the dump must be ballots from these
> centers/offices. According to his statement, the centers in question were as
> follows: 4 centers in the Artibonite, 4 centers in the Northwest, and 1
> center in Nippes . However, these areas cited do not correspond with the
> ballots that the RNDDH/POHDH delegation saw at the dump, all which came from
> offices in the West department. When asked how these ballots would have
> ended up in the dump, Mr. Wimhurst only replied by saying that each of these
> areas is ³only one-hour away². No further explanation or clarification was
> provided.
>
>
>
> In response, the President of the CEP, Mr. Max Mathurin, made a statement to
> the press further complicating matters. According to Mr. Mathurin, he was
> not aware that 9 centers in the aforementioned departments had been
> vandalized. In these instances, an incident report must be prepared and
> distributed appropriately. He claimed that while perhaps reports were
> provided to other members of the CEP, as president of the CEP he had not
> received or seen any reports written about these incidents. Additionally, no
> reports concerning such incidents had been submitted by the respective
> Departmental Electoral Offices (BED). Mr. Mathurin indicated that if such
> incidents had been reported, the CEP would have informed the population.
>
>
>
> As of this afternoon, this is what can be reported. Further updates to
> follow.
>
>
>
> Pierre Esperance
>
> Executive Director
>
> RNDDH
>
>
>
> * NB: The president and vice president of each voting office was required
> to sign each ballot and note the number of the voting office. This was to be
> completed prior to opening the office for voting, however, in many cases, the
> ballots were signed throughout the day as people voted. RNDDH observers
> noted in at least one voting office in the Port-au-Prince area that a decision
> was made NOT to sign the ballots as this was taking too much time.
>
>
>
> ** NB: Recall that each voting center contained a series of individual
> voting offices
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *********************************************************
> Kristie van de Wetering
> Human Rights Program Officer
>
>
>
> Réseau National de Défense des Droits Humains (RNDDH)
> 9, Rue Rivière
> Port-au-Prince, Haiti
> Tel: 509.245.3486 / 245.5821 / 244.1495
> Fax: 509.244.4146
> Email: kvwetering@rnddh.org
> kotchka19@hotmail.com
> www.rnddh.org <http://www.rnddh.org>
>
>>

------ End of Forwarded Message

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

FW: Haiti Update#2 - 15 February 2006

Dear all,

I hope we are not bombarding you with too much info on the Haitian
elections. It¹s obviously close to us and we want to keep people informed,
and possibly provide a perspective that you don¹t hear about on CBC or CNN.
So, I will continue to pass along these updates that are written by the
director of one of MCC¹s human rights partners her in Haiti.

For those who got this message via other means, I apologize for cross
posting.

Matt and Esther
MCC Haiti

Haiti Situation: Update # 2
Morning of 15 February 2006

The residents of Port-au-Prince woke up to barricade after barricade along
most roads throughout the city yesterday morning. Barricades of burnt out
cars, tires (some burning, some not), rocks, trees, and other debris made
for interesting obstacle courses for individuals trying to navigate the
roads in attempts to carry out their daily activities. By afternoon, most
of these barricades had been pushed aside, following a clear message from
presidential candidate René Preval for demonstrators to respect the rights
and property of others and to remove the barricades and road blocks. Some
demonstrations continued but traffic circulation was freely flowing. There
was hope for more calm and stability in the days to follow.

However, news reports showing stacks of electoral ballots found in a burning
garbage dump outside the city created a new wave of outcry on the part of
Haitian citizens, and demonstrations popped up around the city last night.
People are demanding an explanation.

Thus the city awoke again this morning to more barricades and road blocks in
some areas, most of which were easily crossed.

Last night, the CEP made an announcement that an investigation was to be
opened into the question of the discarded ballots. The CEP has also said
that MINUSTAH was initially responsible for the security of the electoral
material. It has been reported that following the 7 February election,
the private company ³Boucard Pest Control², contracted to collect trash and
discarded materials for the UN, began collecting trash from a variety of
locations across the city as requested by the UN. Some 20 garbage trucks are
said to have dropped off garbage, including but not exclusively, electoral
materials deemed as trash. According to the owner of Boucard Pest Control,
with whom I spoke earlier today, his employees just picked up the trash and
were unaware of the contents.

At this point it is difficult to make any concrete conclusions about the
electoral materials found at the dump. More than one possible explanation
exists. Firstly, it is possible that these ballots represent valid votes
that were cast on Election Day and then deliberately discarded so as to skew
the final outcome of the vote. Secondly, it is possible that the ballots
discarded at the dump were unused ballots, left over from Election Day. In
many voting offices, not all of the +/- 420 ballots issued were used on
voting day, as fewer people than registered came to vote in those centers.
These ballots found last night are said to have been signed by members of a
voting office. It is possible that many of the unused ballots had already
been signed during voting day but not used by the end of the day. At this
point, this is all speculation. RNDDH, accompanied by a member of the
Platform of Haitian Human Rights Organisations (POHDH), has sent a
delegation out this morning to the dumping area to investigate into this
latest development.

We will update you further as results of our investigation are analyzed.

It appears that for reasons of security, the final results as last
calculated are not being published. Following the meeting with Preval, CEP
officials, and government officials on Monday, the government has decided to
suspend the process and to form a commission to deal with questions of
contestation on the part of the Lespwa party. This would lead one to
believe that the final results as tabulated did not result in a clear-cut
victory for Lespwa and thus the reason for the contestation. However, no
official statement has been made in this regard. Herein lays one of the
problems and sources of frustration. Another potential for problems lays in
the possibility of other parties contesting their place in the final
results. For example, Chavannes Jeune (UNION) has claimed that according to
his calculations, he is in second place, not fourth. If there is no second
round, he will not contest. However, should it go to a second round, he
claims he will contest the initial results.

In terms of predictions concerning the level of violence, for now the
demonstrators are peaceful, despite being restless. However, I am of the
opinion that sooner or later the patience will run out and the frustration
will spill over into violent acts, whether isolated or widespread, that is
hard to predict. Much depends on how the CEP and/or the government respond
to the current allegations and to the overall situation. It was encouraging
yesterday to see PNH patrols accompanying the demonstrators as they headed
up to Pétion-Ville.

Some questions have been raised about the role of the UN (and perhaps also
the international community) in the electoral process. I think it would be
fair to say that 80% of the electoral process has been in the hands of the
UN (via UNDP and MINUSTAH) and the Organisation of American States (OAS).
All funding for the elections has been handled by these institutions,
including money from the Haitian government for the elections which had to
pass through the UN before being distributed to the CEP. All voter
registration lists were prepared by the UN/OAS, and the placement of voting
centers was determined by these institutions. (In the past, the system of
voting centers was not used, but rather a system involving a greater
distribution of voting offices. This newly introduced system clearly had
its drawbacks, but also its advantages, too.) The UN/OAS was responsible
for the distribution of electoral materials to the individual voting
centers, as well as collecting the materials/ballots and delivering them to
the CEP tabulation center at the completion of the voting process. Finally,
the UN/OAS was responsible for securing electoral material in secure storage
containers, designed for this purpose.

Again, we will try and keep you updated as information is obtained.

Pierre Esperance
Executive Director, RNDDH
*********************************************************
Kristie van de Wetering
Human Rights Program Officer

Réseau National de Défense des Droits Humains (RNDDH)
9, Rue Rivière
Port-au-Prince, Haiti
Tel: 509.245.3486 / 245.5821 / 244.1495
Fax: 509.244.4146
Email: kvwetering@rnddh.org
kotchka19@hotmail.com
www.rnddh.org <http://www.rnddh.org>
>
>
> Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2006 1:12 PM
>
> Subject: Update on Situation in Haiti - 14 February 2006
>
>
>
>
>
> Update on Current Events in Haiti
>
> 14 February 2006
>
>
>
> I am pretty confident that some of the events taking place in Haiti right now
> are making the international news, and so I am sure that many of you are
> aware that the situation is quite tense and precarious at the moment.
>
>
>
> As of this morning, the CEP has yet to announce any final results.
> Initially, the CEP had announced that the final results would be announced 3
> days following the elections. However, the last CEP announcement of partial
> elections results was Saturday, 11 February, during which time a press
> release was also published announcing that the final results would be
> announced Sunday, 12 February in the evening. Since that last press
> conference on Saturday afternoon, there have been no statements from the CEP
> at all (perhaps except for the occasional posting of an update on the CEP
> website www.cep-ht.org <http://www.cep-ht.org> ).
>
>
>
> The initial decision was made to publish partial results as they were
> calculated. As such, initial results reported that former president René
> Preval, party Espwa (translated as Hope), was in considerable lead with more
> than 60% of the vote as counted at the time. That lead began to decrease as
> the results from other voting centers across the country were submitted and
> calculated. As of Saturday, that lead remained just over 50%; however, it
> slipped just under that mark to just over 49% according to the partial
> results published on Sunday (on the internet), and now to just over 48% as
> of Monday morning.
>
>
>
> There remains a significant gap between Preval and the candidate next in
> line, namely former president Leslie Manigat, who for most of the partial
> results published has hovered around 11%.
>
>
>
> According to the electoral law, a presidential candidate must receive 50%
> plus 1 of the votes in order to win the election in one round. Should
> he/she not achieve this, a second round must be held with the two candidates
> receiving the most votes. The CEP has a responsibility to apply the
> electoral law.
>
>
>
> Preval supporters have poured out into the streets in huge numbers to demand
> the final results and to celebrate Preval¹s electoral victory as the new
> president of Haiti. Protestors in support of Preval are saying that they
> will refuse to accept a second round, a run-off, for the presidential
> elections; that they have already voted and Preval has won. Large
> demonstrations, accompanied by numerous large road blocks consisting of
> burning tires, rocks, burnt out cars and other debris, were observed across
> the city on major as well as smaller roads, and making movement throughout the
> city difficult at best. A large group of demonstrators managed to push their
> way into the court yard and exterior grounds of the Hotel Montana in
> Petion-Ville, making their way into the reception area, pool and
> restaurant/dining area. There was a distinct and noticeable lack of Haitian
> police and/or UN presence in the streets yesterday, and again this morning as
> barricades were set up again in several neighbourhoods with crowds
> assembling. Demonstrations and road blocks have been reported in other areas
> of the country such as Jacmel and various towns in the Artibonite Valley.
>
>
>
> For the most part the demonstrators have been peaceful and little violence
> and/or vandalism has been reported, with the exception of an incident
> reported in the northeastern part of the city (Tabarre) where at least one
> Preval supporter was shot and killed yesterday morning, several others
> injured. What exactly happened is unclear at this time. Witnesses claim that
> a UN patrol shot at the demonstrators; however the spokesperson for the UN
> claimed that the UN patrol shot a couple of rounds in the air in order to
> take control of the situation after which several shots were fired in the
> area by unidentified individuals.
>
>
>
> Without the publication of the final results, it is difficult to know how
> things will evolve from here on. Should Preval not win the majority and a
> second round is announced, the tension and potential for widespread chaos and
> violence will necessarily escalate ­ to what degree and level it is hard to
> predict. One potential solution in the event that Preval does not win a
> majority is for the candidate in the second place position, in this case
> Manigat, along with the cooperation of the other presidential candidates in
> the top 9 places, to make a decision to concede the vote and to give the
> election to Preval. This is an acceptable solution and one that was recently
> used in the Dominican Republic where the margin between the first and
> second place candidates was must less than the margin between Preval and
> Manigat. At this point, we do not know if this option is even being
> considered by the parties in question.
>
>
>
> We do know that yesterday Preval met with members of the current transitional
> government, members of the CEP and the international community at the
> National Palace. Details of that meeting have not been released. Earlier
> this afternoon, Preval held a press conference at his residence in
> Port-au-Prince where he addressed the current situation. In summary, Preval
> denounced the manner in which people have been demonstrating ­ a manner which
> he believes serves to isolate the Espwa party on a national and international
> level. He supported one¹s right to demonstrate but asked that people
> demonstrate intelligently, in the spirit of peace and reconciliation. He
> called on his supporters to respect the rights of others, to respect their
> property and possessions and to remove the barricades so as to enable people
> to go to work and provide for their families. Preval also talked of
> isolating those who do not support him and/or his party, saying that there
> will always be people that will never convert over to the Espwa party.
>
>
>
> For RNDDH, the statement was a welcomed and much needed one. The only point
> of concern was the concept of isolating your enemies, with is open to much
> interpretation.
>
>
>
> RNDDH is extremely concerned with the potential for widespread violence in
> the coming days, especially given the PNH and UN¹s apparent decision to stay
> off the streets. The population¹s safety ­ both that of the demonstrators
> and innocent bystanders ­ is compromised when security forces are not
> sufficiently present in situations such as we are seeing now.
>
>
>
> At this point, RNDDH is of the belief that Preval will win the presidential
> election, even if it goes to a second round. At least 7 of the other
> presidential candidates, including Evans Paul, Chavannes Jeune, and Dany
> Toussaint, have publicly stated that they concede that the mass population has
> voted for Preval and that they are in agreement on bypassing a second round.
> With the country already divided, RNDDH is of the opinion that a second round
> would only serve to further divide the country and create additional
> problems.
>
>
>
> In terms of the RNDDH office, we are continuing to operate as usual, with
> more flexible hours for the staff as many have had difficulty arriving at the
> office and/or returning home, yesterday in particular. The office will
> remain open as RNDDH must be available to monitor the situation and receive
> accounts and reports of any human rights violations taking place.
>
>
>
> We will do our best to keep you updated on the situation here, but please do
> not hesitate to write if you have specific questions or concerns.
>
>
>
> Most kind regards,
>
> Pierre Esperance
>
>
>
>
>
> *********************************************************
> Kristie van de Wetering
> Human Rights Program Officer
>
>
>
> Réseau National de Défense des Droits Humains (RNDDH)
> 9, Rue Rivière
> Port-au-Prince, Haiti
> Tel: 509.245.3486 / 245.5821 / 244.1495
> Fax: 509.244.4146
> Email: kvwetering@rnddh.org
> kotchka19@hotmail.com
> www.rnddh.org <http://www.rnddh.org>

------ End of Forwarded Message

Monday, February 13, 2006

The Adventure Grows

Dear family and friends,

Just as the country that has adopted us takes another step towards
democracy, we have decided to participate in the future of Haiti by adopting
a Haitian child.

We're a few steps into assembling the paperwork to complete our adoption
dossier and MCC welcomes our adoption plan as long as we're halfway into our
term. That's March (2006)!! We don't have a child identified yet (that we
know of) but Bondye konnen (God knows) there's one out there that will bring
us love, joy, challenge and add a new kind of adventure to the one that we
started together when we got hitched.

We ask for you to help us pray for the child that will join our family and
the mother and the family as adoption is gift that comes out of a loss.

We also ask for you to pray for Haiti, a beautiful country not without
riches that we pray will soon to become part of the heritage of our family.

Excuse us for being products of the 2000's but we'll be starting a(nother)
BLOG to keep you posted and so that you can travel on the adventure of
adoption with us. We will send the address asap.

Peace and love to all of you!

Esther and Matt

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Cyvadier Jacmel lookout


Cyvadier Jacmel lookout
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Giant Papaya!


Giant Papaya!
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

mattandesthercuties


mattandesthercuties
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Truck in the mud!


Truck in the mud!
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Tuesday, September 06, 2005

A Day in the Life . . . 2

The second in a series of "A Day in the Life . . . "

Today, the 5th of September, was a pretty typical day. Got up at the crack
of dawn (ok, Esther got up at the crack of dawn, and I crawled out a half
hour later), washed up a bit and headed down to the office, a 15 minute walk
(except that I had my motorbike, so I rode down.)

We had a meeting scheduled with ODD, a local development organization that
MCC (the organization we work for) supports. The meeting was for 8 - but we
all knew it wouldn't start then. We do make a point of showing up on time
for our meetings, if not just to encourage the Haitians we interact with to
consider perhaps showing up a bit earlier! At 9, there weren't enough
people for us to start the meeting - in fact, there were more MCCers (6)
than ODD members. So, we decided to cancel the meeting. I was rushing
trying to get out because I had a whole bunch of computer work to do. As we
were walking out the door, a bunch of ODD folks showed up, so we decided to
do the meeting anyway.

Meeting went well. Main purpose was to talk about their request for funds
from MCC to help them buy seeds to plant limes. Limes are a pretty popular
tree here, and there is good money to be made in them, so we've been
encouraging people to plant more of them. We wanted to discuss some
technical things with ODD, but mostly to help them see that they really need
to have some clearer plans in place before we can just give them money.
They want to plant 5000 trees, but have no real idea how many they planted
last year, how many were sold to the local population, etc. Andy they still
have a few thousand sitting there in their tree nursery. Blah blah blah,
lots of talking around each other, repeating each other's points, etc.
Meeting ended and I rushed back to the office to work on financial reports.

Had a backlog of financial reports to work on - for some reason I just never
got around to doing June and July reports. So, that came back to haunt me
today as I scrambled to find receipts, remember expenses from months ago,
etc. But it all worked out and, amazingly enough, balanced squarely too!

Made a quick run to the local Caisse Populaire (Credit Union) to deposit an
MCC cheque and get out some cash. Then went back to the office and sat in
on part of the seminar that Esther is leading on teaching teachers how to
facilitate MCCs environmental education curriculum. It's going great so far
- the teachers are really in to it! Got a free lunch out of the deal too!
It's pretty funny because the MCCers who are not involved in the seminar, me
included, tend to gravitate to the seminar area around lunch time, just on
the off chance there is food!!!!

Ran to the cybercafe after lunch to send off the financial reports, check up
on other email, and read the news. All this stuff happening in New Orleans
and environs is crazy. I just think it's so sad that in situations like
this, it brings out the worst in some people. I was reading about snipers,
and armed gangs, and looters, etc. I know they are the vast majority . . .
but it's still sad.

At 4 we had a meeting with another local organization, ODEPE, who is
interested in starting up a tree nursery. MCC would like to open a new one
this year too and so we've been meeting with them to see if it could work.
This was to be the 3rd in a series of meetings to help us make a decision,
and they were to have a minimum of 80 people present so that we could see
that the community was behind it. Unfortunately, when we started the meeting
at 4:45, there were only 27 people. So we couldn't proceed and had to set
another meeting. The ensuing discussion took the better part of an hour, so
it was a meeting, even though it wasn't really a meeting. Anyway, I hope it
works out - I'd really like to open a new tree nursery this year.

Came back to the office, picked up some firewood for the cooks for tomorrow,
grabbed some food from the fridge at the office (we don't have one at our
house) and walked up with Esther. I made dinner while she showered, and then
we ate. Soup. It was good. Along with cassav bread and wonderful avacados.
I bought 5 avacados yesterday for 20 gourdes, which is about 50 cents US.
Can you believe it!

Ok, off to bed. Tomorrow should be another exciting day!

Matt

Tuesday, August 30, 2005

A Day in the Life . . . 1

A day in the Life . . . Day 1

Probably the most common question that Esther and I get, especially when we
are back in Canada is : ³So, what it is that you do anyway.²

Well, we thought we¹d blog a few of our days in the next little while.

I¹ll start.

Tuesday, August 23

Today was a fairly relaxed day, at least to get started. The plan was to
meet with 3 of my colleagues. We were preparing to head off to the northern
part of the country to lead a workshop on how to run a tree nursery. That¹s
a big part of work here ­ helping communities produce trees through
community based tree nurseries. We would like to expand this work, and one
of the ways we hope to do that is by training other local organizations to
help them get started on the same path.

Our meeting was set for 9, so I headed down to the MCC office here in Dezam
at around 7:30. It¹s about a 15 minute walk from our house to the office,
through the local market which was just getting going for the day. Before
the meeting got started I prepared a few last minute documents that we were
going to use for the training. I also started to gather some of the
materials we would need to help us in the workshop. Our meeting started at
about 9:20. We went through some last minute things and we¹re set to go. I
placed a call to the people from another organization who were to meet us
enroute. They were leaving from Port-au-Prince, to meet us in Pont Sonde,
approximately a 2-3 hour drive. We are only about 30 minutes away, so I
wanted to make sure they were on the way before we left. Well, apparently
they were having problems with a tire and hadn¹t even left yet. So we had
to sit tight for a while. Another call about 45 minutes later, and they
still hadn¹t left. We started to get a bit worried about the time, because
with the rain at this time of year, the roads can be pretty bad. We had a
7-8 hour drive ahead of us, so we didn¹t want to leave late, hit rain and
arrive in the dark. We decided to go ahead without the second vehicle from
Port, even though it would have been preferable to drive together.

The roads were rough, very rough, but thankfully we didn¹t encounter any
major problems. We arrived in Bassin-Bleu, where we were supposed to find a
small hotel to stay the night. The person from the other organization ­ the
one in the vehicle a few hours behind us - said we could get a room there.
Alas, no rooms available. We walked down to the local CARE office because
someone had mentioned that they had a guesthouse. Indeed they did, but they
needed prior authorization from their head office in Port, and besides, they
didn¹t have enough room for all of us. So, we made a quick decision to
keep driving to Port de Paix. (For those of you who have Haiti maps close
by, Port de Paix is on the north coast, more on the western side). That was
another 2 hours from where we were, so we had to get moving to arrive before
dark.

We arrived in Port de Paix. I was the only one in the group who had been
there before, but the last time we had a local person arranging everything
for us, and we stayed in a pretty nice hotel on the outskirts of town. We
didn¹t have the budget to pay $60 US a night, so we had to drive around and
find a place in town. We did manage to find something after a while, but it
wasn¹t exactly the nicest place. I had single room and had to use the
public bathroom in the hall. The bathroom was a bit gross, with only half a
seat on the toilet! It was pretty hot too, but the fan did take the bit off
that. Had a pretty crappy dinner of chicken and banan peze.

So, that was the day. A little office work and short meeting in the morning.
And then 8 hours of driving and having to wing it to find a hotel in Port de
Paix. By the way, Dezam to Port de Paix was exactly 160 km. 8 hours to
drive 160 km. Welcome to Haiti, and a day in the life . . . of Matt.

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Sunday, July 17, 2005

Aristide in Exile

This is a recent article that appeared on rabble.ca. It's interesting,
which is why we post it here. This doesn't mean I agree, nor does it mean
that MCC endorses it.

Matt

Aristide in exile

>by Naomi Klein
July 15, 2005
When United Nations troops kill residents of the Haitian slum Cité Soleil,
friends and family often place photographs of exiled President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide on their bodies. The photographs silently insist that there is a
method to the madness raging in Port-au-Prince. Poor Haitians are being
slaughtered not for being ³violent,² as we so often hear, but for being
militant; for daring to demand the return of their elected president.

It was only ten years ago that President Clinton celebrated Aristide's
return to power as ³the triumph of freedom over fear.² So what changed?
Corruption? Violence? Fraud? Aristide is certainly no saint. But even if the
worst of the allegations are true, they pale next to the rap sheets of the
convicted killers, drug smugglers and arms traders who ousted Aristide and
continue to enjoy free rein, with full support from the Bush Administration
and the UN. Turning Haiti over to this underworld gang out of concern for
Aristide's lack of ³good governance² is like escaping an annoying date by
accepting a lift home from Charles Manson.

A few weeks ago I visited Aristide in Pretoria, South Africa, where he lives
in forced exile. I asked him what was really behind his dramatic falling-out
with Washington. He offered an explanation rarely heard in discussions of
Haitian politics ‹ actually, he offered three: ³privatization, privatization
and privatization.²

The dispute dates back to a series of meetings in early 1994, a pivotal
moment in Haiti's history that Aristide has rarely discussed. Haitians were
living under the barbaric rule of Raoul Cédras, who overthrew Aristide in a
1991 U.S.-backed coup. Aristide was in Washington and despite popular calls
for his return, there was no way he could face down the junta without
military back-up. Increasingly embarrassed by Cédras's abuses, the Clinton
Administration offered Aristide a deal: U.S. troops would take him back to
Haiti ‹ but only after he agreed to a sweeping economic program with the
stated goal to ³substantially transform the nature of the Haitian state.²

Aristide agreed to pay the debts accumulated under the kleptocratic Duvalier
dictatorships, slash the civil service, open up Haiti to ³free trade² and
cut import tariffs on rice and corn in half. It was a lousy deal but,
Aristide says, he had little choice. ³I was out of my country and my country
was the poorest in the Western hemisphere, so what kind of power did I have
at that time?²

But Washington's negotiators made one demand that Aristide could not accept:
the immediate sell-off of Haiti's state-owned enterprises, including phones
and electricity. Aristide argued that unregulated privatization would
transform state monopolies into private oligarchies, increasing the riches
of Haiti's elite and stripping the poor of their national wealth. He says
the proposal simply didn't add up: ³Being honest means saying two plus two
equals four. They wanted us to sing two plus two equals five.²

Aristide proposed a compromise: Rather than sell off the firms outright, he
would ³democratize² them. He defined this as writing antitrust legislation,
insuring that proceeds from the sales were redistributed to the poor and
allowing workers to become shareholders. Washington backed down, and the
final text of the agreement ‹ accepted by the United States and by a meeting
of donor nations in Paris ‹ called for the ³democratization² of state
companies.

But when Aristide began to implement the plan, it turned out that the
financiers in Washington thought his democratization talk was just public
relations. When Aristide announced that no sales could take place until
Parliament had approved the new laws, Washington cried foul. Aristide says
he realized then that what was being attempted was an ³economic coup.² ³The
hidden agenda was to tie my hands once I was back and make me give for
nothing all the state public enterprises.² He threatened to arrest anyone
who went ahead with privatizations. ³Washington was very angry at me. They
said I didn't respect my word, when they were the ones who didn't respect
our common economic policy.²

Aristide's relationship with Washington has been deteriorating ever since:
While more than $500 million in promised loans and aid were cut off,
starving his government, USAID poured millions into the coffers of
opposition groups, culminating ultimately in the February 2004 armed coup.

And the war continues. On June 23, Roger Noriega, assistant secretary of
state for Western Hemisphere affairs, called on UN troops to take a more
³proactive role² in going after armed pro-Aristide gangs. In practice, this
has meant a wave of Falluja-like collective punishment inflicted on
neighborhoods known for supporting Aristide. On July 6, for instance, 300 UN
troops stormed Cité Soleil, blocking off exits and firing from armored
vehicles. The UN admits that five were killed, but residents put the number
of dead at no fewer than 20. Reuters correspondent Joseph Guyler Delva says
he ³saw seven bodies in one house alone, including two babies and one older
woman in her 60s.² Ali Besnaci, head of Médecins Sans Frontières in Haiti,
confirmed that on the day of the siege 27 people came to the MSF clinic with
gunshot wounds, three-quarters of them women and children.

Yet despite these attacks, Haitians are still on the streets ‹ rejecting the
planned sham elections, opposing privatization and holding up photographs of
their president. And just as Washington's experts could not fathom the
possibility that Aristide would reject their advice a decade ago, today they
cannot accept that his poor supporters could be acting of their own accord ‹
surely Aristide must be controlling them through some mysterious voodoo
arts. ³We believe that his people are receiving instructions directly from
his voice and indirectly through his acolytes that communicate with him
personally in South Africa,² Noriega said.

Aristide claims no such powers. ³The people are bright, the people are
intelligent, the people are courageous,² he says. They know that two plus
two does not equal five.

Naomi Klein is the author of No Logo and Fences and Windows. This column has
appeared in The Nation.

Friday, July 15, 2005

Distribution Smiling.JPG


Distribution Smiling.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Adventures in Haiti - 4

Adventures in Haiti - 4
July 15, 2005

Dear friends, family, colleagues, distant contacts and anyone else whose
email address got onto our email list:

You haven't heard from us in a while . . . but life is still sweet and green
(The rain is here, even if it's not in Southern Ontario). Since you heard
from us last (which we can't remember when it was) we've been pretty busy.
In the last few months we have:

- done a few seminars and a whole bunch of visits to the tree nurseries.
It's always fun to visit, thin, transplant, compact, and degarni mangoes
with the committees, see all the trees coming up and getting hyped about
giving the trees to people in the communities

- visited churches in each of the communities to mobilize and educate them
about the distribution of trees.

- finished the first round of tree distributions in the 21 communities where
MCC works. Thus far, 291,000 tree seedlings have been distributed. We hope
to hit 400,000 by mid August.

- Handed out certificates to our 138 students (from 4 local schools) in
environmental education for the 2004-05 school year. Highlights were
visiting forests, writing letters to the Haitian minister of the environment
reminding him to protect Haiti's forests, eating and planting mangoes,
planting trees in the schoolyard on the last day of school.

Big plans to expand the program to make it more hands-on and participatory
by marrying it with the tree nurseries are taking shape. In the past
months, each of 21 tree nurseries choose a school that they'd like to work
with. We'll choose 10 to start with this year. This means we're training
the teachers to do the teaching (this year and previously, Esther and
Francklin were teaching). Esther is tying herself to a chair to write the
curriculum and training planned for the first week of September.
By September, we will also have a new person to replace Francklin to work
hand in hand with Esther to support the teachers, the students, and their
visits to the tree nurseries.

- went on a retreat with our MCC colleagues. The first year that we went as
a whole team (Nationals and Expats). It was a lovely few days on a remote
island off the coast. Great food! Air conditioning! Amazing showers! Lovely
beaches! Ahhhhh . . . . life in the Caribbean. But we were happy to come
home to the valley (Artibonite) again.

- we've also been getting more and more settled into our MCC team, our house
that we moved into in January, and our community. It's both rewarding and
challenging to be more and more "known" in our community. Becoming more
proficient in Creole, being comfortable walking around everywhere and
talking to the neighbour through the cactus fence is fun . . . but having to
talk to everyone and face the barrage of demands and kids yelling at you
isn't always fun. Life really isn't fair.

The big news is that a new soccer field has gone up across the road from us
and there are organized games there every few days with Kompa Kreyol (music)
and snacks for sale. It's 10 gourdes to get in (about 25 cents) but we can
watch from our front yard for free. Next time y'all visit, we'll try to
arrange a match for you to watch. We are thrilled to be part of the crowd
and not what the crowd is watching.

In other news . . .

- registration for elections has started. This is a positive development,
but many people feel like the elections won't happen on schedule. Port au
Prince is still having some problems. The presence of UN troops helps
sometimes, but also hinders sometimes. There is talk of the US Marines
coming in again.

- two hurricanes just passed through - Denis and Emily. We got a few heavy
rainstorms, but nothing too bad. The south of Haiti, typically, was hit much
harder and people died when a bridge collapsed and there are always issues
of drainage due to lots of plastic (imported mostly- blah). These two
storms mark the beginning of the storm season, and are also a reminder of
last fall's devastating floods in Gonaives.

Ok, that's the news from Desarmes. We hope and pray that your lives are also
enriching you and those around you. Please let us know how you are all doing
and what exciting things are happening in your lives.

If you want to, you can visit our blog site. We just uploaded a bunch of new
pictures there. You can also go back and read some articles that we put up
a few months ago. We'd especially encourage you to read the ones that detail
the current human rights and political situation in the country.

http://www.mattandestherinhaiti.blogspot.com

Be well. Love and peace to everyone.

Matt van Geest and Esther deGroot
MCC Haiti

Distribution Smiling.JPG


Distribution Smiling.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Brewing Storm.JPG


Brewing Storm.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Distribution Valere.JPG


Distribution Valere.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Distribution Dris.JPG


Distribution Dris.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Graduation Maren1.JPG


Graduation Maren1.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Leje Comittee1.JPG


Leje Comittee1.JPG
Originally uploaded by mattnest.

Saturday, May 28, 2005

Thursday, May 19, 2005

HAITI: The National Network for the Defense of Human Rights (RNDDH)

MCC works very closely with a Haitian human rights organization called
RNDDH. We just posted an article on our blog site
(http://www.mattandestherinhaiti.blogspot.com) that outlines their work in a
very challenging situation. Visit their website too, to find out more.

http://www.rnddh.org

You can also sign up for their english language email newsletter if you are
interested in learning more about the human rights situation in Haiti.

Hope all is well with you.

Matt and Esther, with MCC, in Haiti

Human Rights in Haiti

Unwavering dedication in the face of constant adversity: RNDDH, formerly NCHR-Haiti, reaffirms its objectivity and renewed commitment to the establishment of the Rule of Law in Haiti
The National Network for the Defense of Human Rights (RNDDH) reconfirms its mission to promote, protect and defend fundamental human rights of all Haitians regardless of socio-economic status, political and/or religious affiliation, gender or sex. Through its persistent and rigorous condemnation of reported and documented human rights violations, and through its efforts to contribute to reform key State institutions, RNDDH is striving towards the creation of a human rights culture in Haiti.
In a country such as Haiti, where the foothold of society is impunity, corruption, and violence, the need for objective and credible human rights organisations is essential : an organisation whose work remains consistent during periods of political unrest and regime changes ; an organisation that respects the guiding principles of confidentiality, accuracy, and impartiality.
In seeking justice and the establishment of the Rule of Law, RNDDH's human rights monitoring activities seek to find and uncover the truth so that justice may prevail. Furthermore, RNDDH seeks reform and improvement in the functioning and professionalism of State institutions. and this frightens many of the actors involved who profit from the state of impunity and corruption that Haitians continue to live under today.
One of RNDDH's primary roles is and always has been to accompany the Haitian people in their quest for justice. Not aligned with any government, local or foreign, this role remains consistent regardless of the government in place,and especially in circumstances where human rights are being systematically and blatantly violated.
Today, RNDDH is doing the same challenging work it did under the military government of the coup from 1991 - 1994, ; the same work that it did once constitutional order was returned in 1994 until 2000 ; and the same work it did during the three (3) years of Jean Bertrand Aristide's latest presidency, from 2001 - 2004. RNDDH did not turn a blind eye to the violent crimes perpetrated during the coup years nor did it turn away fromresponding to the systematic human rights violations committed under the previous Lavalas government.
Criticisms of the Current Interim Government
In the early days following its installation, the Boniface-Latortue government promised the Haitian people that one (1) of its priorities would be to tackle the problem of impunity. For several months now, this has proved to be an empty promise, and RNDDH has been openly critical of the government's lack of action. More than three thousand (3,000) prisoners were released from Haitian prisons across the country in the weeks prior to 29 February 2004, many of whom were serving time for crimes committed during the coup d'état. The majority of these prisoners still remain at large today as the government has not adopted any significant measures to ensure that they are re-apprehended and placed under state control.
The non-guilty verdict in the Louis-Jodel Chamblain mockery of a trial in August 2004 only further solidified the growing belief that not only would this government not keep its promise to fight against impunity, but that it would continue to promote it with its actions. (See http://www.rnddh.org/article.php3?id_article=192)
RNDDH has also expressed its concern over the posting of high-ranking members of the former military officials to high-level positions within the current government and has been highly critical of the interim government's laxed attitude towards the ever-present threat posed by the united members of the former Haitian Armed Forces. Lavalas lobbying campaign in North America against Haitian Human Rights Organisations
In recent weeks and months, a pro-Lavalas campaign has been taking root in Canada and the United States. Many of those aligned with the campaign do not clearly understand the complex reality in Haiti while many others fully understand yet continue to fuel the movement. Unfounded messages purporting subjective beliefs, presenting half truths as solid facts, and sadly misrepresenting the situation in Haiti are being widely circulated as truth.
It is difficult to deny the increase in insecurity and indiscriminate violence within capital since the September 2004 launch of the self-proclaimed Lavalas movement in several of the densely populated neighborhoods pledging allegiance to former President Aristide and demanding his return. The groups behind the movement were the Lavalas government's "henchmen" - paid and supplied with weapons to repress opposition to the government. The violence has left hundreds dead and wounded, homes and property damaged, and entire neighborhoods held hostage.
Despite difficult access to many of these neighborhoods, RNDDH has been able to establish contact with individuals living in these areas, as well as with victims and/or their families seeking assistance from the organization.
Assistance to Victims of Human Rights Violations
Contrary to charges that the organsation only helps certain sectors of society, RNDDH's office is open to any and all victims of violence and huma rights violations and/or their families. This is demonstrated in the more than one thousand (1,000) individuals that sought help in 2004 alone, of which more than fifty percent (50%) were assisted in one form or another.
More than three hundred (300) individuals and/or families identified as being affiliated with the Lavalas party who were victims of violence have been assisted by RNDDH within the past four (4) years. Assistance includes legal counsel, financial assistance, coverage of medical expenses alternative housing arrangements, and/or accompanyingment at the level of the high-ranking police and/or judicial officials.
Some of the Lavalas cases RNDDH have treated have been very public cases such as the murder of Lavalas official, Cléonor Souverain (and four (4) family members, inluding two (2) of his children ; one of his children was left permanently handicapped) in the Central Plateau, and the 20 March 2004 summary execution by Haitian National Police officers of five (5) young men from La Saline (Port-au-Prince), known to be Lavalas supporters. RNDDH also publicly denounced and intervened in the arbitrary and illegal arrest of Maxon Guerrier, former mayor of Delmas which led to his eventual release, investigated and denounced the police brutality used by the police during the arrest of Lavalas activitst Reverend Gérard Jean Juste, and intervened in the case of musician Jean Renald Bruno (alias Tipaille), which resulted in his release from police custody.
Other Lavalas victim cases - like most of RNDDH's cases - have remained confidential, closed to the public at the request of the victims for variou reasons, including security.
Furthermore, RNDDH has been concerned for some time now regarding the waves of arrests being carried out primarily in Lavalas strongholds such as Bel Air, Fort National, La Saline, and Cite Soleil. Since September 2004, RNDDH increased its number of delegations to several police stations within the metropolitan area in response to these arrests. General monitoring and specific investigations into the cases of those arrested has led to RNDDH's public denounciations of the systematic violations of many of these individuals' basic rights. In many of these cases, family members of those arrested have made their way to the RNDDH office to solicit help. Examples of cases such as these are explained in RNDDH's 3 Frebruary 2005 report entitled Continuing Climate of Violence and Insecurity, and Human Rights Violations of Individuals in Custody at http://www.rnddh.org/article.php3?id_article=218.
The La Scierie Massacre and the Incarceration of Former Prime Minister, Yvon Neptune
What took place in La Scierie (St. Marc) from 11 - 29 February 2004 has been identified as the biggest killing spree that took place under the Lavalas government. (based on the information that RNDDH has gathered regarding number of individuals killed and/or disappeared, women raped, damage and destruction). RNDDH also has sufficient reason to believe that it wa planned at the highest levels of government.
NCHR-Haiti/RNDDH began documenting the massacre immediately identifying victims and documenting the losses, and assisted victims and/or their family members to form a victims' associate - AVIGES. RNDDH also provided legal councell for the victims and provided material and financial aid. RNDDH is not one of the plaintiffs in the complaint filed with judicial authorties, and thus it is wrongly assumed that RNDDH is responsible for Mr. Neptune's incarceration. Furthermore, no one on RNDDH's staff is a practicing judge within the judicial system, so again, RNDDH is not responsible for his incarceration.
RNDDH is sincerely concerned about Mr. Neptune's current state of health. It is troubling to know that his health has deteriorated significantly and that potential serious problems could arise. It is imperative that the Haitian government take the necessary measures as swiftly as possible to ensure that his condition does not deteriorate any further and that, on the contrary, his health can improve. A turn for the worse in the case of Mr. Neptune would be a senseless tragedy.
In the case of Mr. Neptune, RNDDH has never accused him of being directly implicated in the La Scierie Massacre, nor has it ever accused him of murder. As then Prime Minister and President of the Superior Council of the PNH, we believe that Mr. Neptune has information on and explanations to giveregarding the massacre.
For these reasons, RNDDH believes that Mr. Neptune - like all others – must respond to questions put before him by the Haitian Judiciary, more specifically by the judge assigned to the case. However, Mr. Neptune continually refuses to respond to the summons of the judge and appear before her to answer questions related to the incidents in La Scierie. He has bee called four (4) times thus far and each time he is summoned he has restarted the hungerstrike. Finally, prison authorities had to use force to take him to St. Marc to respond to the judge's questions. Mr. Neptune resisted, biting a female prison guard on the arm (see attached photo) and pushed another prison guard to the ground and assaulted two (2) prison guards.
This is a case for the Haitian judiciary and this is where RNDDH's other concerns come into play. In its efforts to contribute to the establishment of the rule of law in Haiti, RNDDH has always demanded a clear separation of the three (3) branches of power, highlighting the widely accepted principle for the need for an independent judiciary. The Lavalas government under Aristide had little respect for this principle and blatantly used the Haitian Judiciary as a tool of manipulation and oppression. This is generally accepted fact - internationally as well as domestically.
Just as RNDDH condemned the Lavalas government's manipulation and influence over the Judiciary, so, too, RNDDH must condemn similar actions committed by the interim government. To do otherwise would be hypocritical and partisan. Decisions regarding Mr. Neptune's case must be decided by the Haitian
Judiciary.
Unfortunately, the current state of the Haitian Judiciary is unacceptable. It is the role of the government to reform the judiciary, to reinforce its work, and create conditions conducive to performing the tasks at hand. The interim government has done little, if anything, in terms of judicial reform. Haitian prisons are overflowing with individuals whose rights are being violated on a daily basis. Cases are not being investigated by theappropriate judicial authorities and individuals are forced to remain in inhumane conditions in detention centres across the country. (Please refer to RNDDH's various reports, most specifically its most recent report published on 3 February 2005.)
Neptune's case, like more than ninety percent (90%) of those in prison, is taking far too long to be dealt with and decided on. This, as in the case of all prisoners in the same situation, is completely unacceptable, and it remains the same situation as the one faced during the time that the Lavalas regime was in power.
An RNDDH delegation, granted special access accompanied by the Director of the Penitentiary Administration Authority (DAP), visited the new Penitentiary Annex on the morning of 27 April 2005. The purpose was to monitor the conditions, physical state of the building, and the situation of individuals being detained there. We observed the detention of five (5 individuals : Yvon Neptune, Amanus Amayette, Jackson Joanis, Louis Jodel Chamblain, and Jacques Mathélier. Unfortunately the delegation was unable to see Mr. Neptune as he was being consulted by a delegation of doctors from the International Red Cross. However, the Director of DAP confided that Mr. Neptune's health was extremely precarious.
On 30 April, the government was prepared to make arrangements to evacuate Mr. Neptune to the Dominican Republic to receive medical treatment. Mr. Neptune refused to go unless the government dismissed all charges against him. As this was not one of the options being presented by the government, Mr. Neptune was never evacated.
It is RNDDH's sincere hope that the government reacts swiftly and appropriately in ensuring that the Mr. Neptune's situation does not worsen, taking the necessary measures to save his life.
Committment to the Stuggle
As an organisation engaged in the struggle for the protection and respect of the rights of all people, one of RNDDH's concerns is the respect of the rights of those being detained in prison. We believe that pressure must be placed on the government to ensure that fundamental rights are respected throughout the country.
RNDDH is disturbed that the greatest demand of the Haitian people – forj ustice - is being ignored by a government ruling in a country where murder, crime, and human rights violations are commonplace. RNDDH renews its committment to the human rights struggle in Haiti and its dedication to witnessing the day when Haitian mothers no longer weep over their sons' mutilated bodies trying to make sense of the senseless work of politically motivated police officers ; when justice is not for sale, and murderers, drug dealers, and rapists pay their debt to society ; when those incarcerated in Haitian prisons are treated with the full respect and dignity that is owed them ; and the day when all Haitians live in a culture of tolerance and human rights where those rights are known and are fully enjoyed by each and every Haitian.
Pierre Esperance

Sunday, May 08, 2005

More arms no solution for Haiti

More arms no solution for Haiti
By ROBERT MUGGAH
Thursday, April 7, 2005
Globe and Mail

Flying in the face of a promising recovery strategy, the United States
has quietly begun shipping arms to Haiti's interim government, despite a
13-year arms embargo on the Caribbean nation. The new arms are meant to
brace up a shaky security force, but the reality is that they could
actually undermine security by jeopardizing an innovative disarmament
effort just getting under way.

The island is increasingly in chaos. Armed militia and former army
soldiers terrorize the countryside and urban slums with impunity. More
than 1,000 people have been killed since fighting began in late 2003,
and several hundred since Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted as president
in February of 2004. Fiefdoms controlled by various armed factions have
emerged throughout the country, reminiscent of Iraq and Afghanistan.

Large sections of the capital, already unstable, are now no-go areas,
with protests regularly turning violent. The UN multinational
stabilization mission has not dramatically improved the situation since
its arrival last June. Hampered by a shortfall of personnel, the full
contingent only arrived in December. Haiti's interim government and many
bilateral donors are growing impatient. About $1.1-billion in
international aid offered in July by 13 donor countries cannot be
disbursed.

Guns are already omnipresent in Haiti, with illegal weapons flowing into
the country regularly. A study by our Small Arms Survey identified the
presence of illegal weapons from more than a dozen countries. A large
number of arms is known to have been shipped in from gun dealers in
Florida. Jamaica and the Dominican Republic are also notorious sources
of guns, and narco-traffickers who distribute weapons to intermediaries
and armed gangs are known to use Haiti as a transit point for at least
10 per cent of the cocaine now entering the United States.

As troubling as illicit trafficking, however, is the leakage of weapons
from national police and former army officers into the hands of
criminals and insurgents. This is a result of contradictory ties of
allegiance within the security sector itself. The new police force
includes former army officers who are openly sympathetic to the
insurgency, which is led by the onetime police commissioner of Gonaïves,
Guy Philippe.

Now, the United States has provided almost $7-million (U.S.) in new
weapons for the Haitian security sector. Given the instability of the
interim government and its security forces, and the popularity of the
rebellion in some areas, some of those weapons will undoubtedly be
circulated among the population.

That would be most unfortunate.

The UN is now adopting a new and radical approach to disarming and
reintegrating the many armed groups in Haiti. The program does more than
just pay for weapons, giving equal attention to reconfiguring behaviour
and attitudes toward weapons.

By educating people about the dangers of militarization, the UN effort
aims to reshape their preferences for guns. Small-scale credit,
vocational training and communal development projects, such as health
clinics and schools, are possible incentives for voluntary disarmament.
It is only by working with communities that the seeds of sustainable
security can be sown.

The new disarmament program is built on the understanding that
demilitarizing the minds of civilians is as important as collecting the
weapons themselves. It is the right approach and it can succeed if given
the opportunity.

That means increasing the efforts to reduce the flow of weapons into the
country. The United States, Canada and its multilateral partners should
step up interdiction to end illicit trafficking from U.S. shores and
elsewhere. It should no longer be possible for weapons purchased in
downtown Miami gun shops to reappear in the streets of Port-au-Prince.

Similarly, it is damaging to disarmament efforts to supply an unstable
security sector with new weaponry when we know that some of those
weapons will almost certainly end up in insurgent and criminal hands.
The U.S. embargo should remain in force without exception.

It is time to recognize that true peace in Haiti will not come from the
barrel of guns, but from disarmament, dialogue and development.

Robert Muggah is project manager of the Small Arms Survey at the
Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva

Saturday, April 09, 2005

Washington post article on Haiti

Haiti, One Year Later

Tuesday, April 5, 2005; Page A22

JUST MORE THAN a year after U.S. forces escorted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide into exile, Haiti remains in crisis. Heavily armed gangs loyal to Mr. Aristide or to drug traffickers roam urban neighborhoods; former army and security forces of the military dictatorships that preceded him control much of the countryside. More than 400 people have died in political violence just since September, ranking Haiti with Iraq as a zone of debilitating insecurity. A timid U.N. peacekeeping force has been as ineffectual as the politically isolated interim government. Economic reconstruction from last year's warfare and subsequent natural disasters has barely begun: International donors failed to deliver 80 percent of the aid they pledged last year.

In short, Haiti remains what it was a year ago: a quasi-failed state 600 miles from the United States. Sadly, U.S. policy hasn't changed much either. The Bush administration still aspires to delegate Haiti's troubles to other countries or international organizations such as the United Nations and the Organization of American States. One direct result of this policy is the continued insecurity, since the Brazilian-led U.N. force of 7,400 has lacked the capability or willpower to disarm the thugs. It has never reached its mandated strength, and until recently its commander equated the use of force with "repression" and refused to employ it. Last month it finally launched a couple of raids on armed gangs, taking and inflicting several casualties. But few Haitians believe that the U.N. force or the national police, who number just 4,000 and are themselves infiltrated by criminals, will be able to restore security.

U.S. disengagement has contributed to a similar lack of progress on the political front. The interim government of Prime Minister Gerard Latortue has been aggressive in rounding up and jailing, usually without charge, former officials of the Aristide government, but it has done little to forge the political climate that will be needed to hold successful legislative and presidential elections later this year. The U.N. special representative in the country is a Chilean diplomat with little influence over the country's feuding political forces. Administration officials boast of the $230 million in aid they say has been provided to Haiti in the last year; but when Congress recently considered a trade measure that could have created tens of thousands of desperately needed textile jobs, the administration stood by while a couple of Republican senators blocked it.

Some policymakers appear to be slowly awakening to the possibility that Haiti is once again headed toward catastrophe. France recently sponsored a new pledging conference and assigned donor governments specific projects, in the hope that this would prompt them to deliver on their commitments. Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld discussed the peacekeeping mission during visits to Argentina and Brazil, perhaps inspiring its belated show of muscle. Yet the Bush administration still resists accepting the obvious: that deeper U.S. involvement in Haiti is inevitable. Better that it happen sooner -- when there is an international force that can be bolstered, and political solutions that can be brokered -- than later, when the only recourse, as so often before in Haiti's history, may be the Marines.

Thursday, March 03, 2005

WalMart and the Meaning of Life in Haiti

This article was first published in the St.Catharines Standard in late
February 2005. Finally, we can share it with all of you too!

Matt and Esther

WalMart and the Meaning of Life in Haiti

Haiti has been our home for nearly five months now. We are beginning to
have a sense of this place we now call home. We are developing
relationships, even friendships. We have just moved into a more humble home
that resembles the homes of most of our neighbours. We get compliments on
our abilities in Creole and don¹t shy away when people even say we speak
better Creole than some Haitians! We¹ve also caught on to Haitian kindness
and hospitality to foreigners. We know which restaurants to visit on which
days to get our favourite Haitian dishes. We know the two directions: up
and down in this mountainous country and we know many of the roads, paths
and little villages that surround our valley home. More importantly, we know
how to ask for directions. We¹ve had a chance to do some traveling to see
different parts of this beautiful country. Our work is starting to take
shape ­ and when we have nothing planned, we know someone will come by with
a plan to invite us into. All this to say that we are starting to feel
settled.

Feeling settled gives us a chance to think of what we left behindŠwhat we
might be missing. Recently, a friend working in Nigeria wrote to us,
reflecting on what she was missing from home in Virginia. We were quite
surprised to read that the things she missed most were some of the things we
were quite happy to be living without right now. She mentioned, among other
things, WalMart, microwaves and snack foods. After we read her letter, we
realized that one of the reasons we don¹t miss those things is because we
actually have most of them here in Dezam.

Our ³WalMart² appears twice a week in our town ­ Tuesdays and Fridays. It
appears in the form of a huge market. Truckloads full of people and their
wares, overloaded horse and donkey carts, and peasant women walking with
huge bags on their heads fill the roads at sun-up and sun-down. Buyers and
sellers come from all over the region to exchange their precious goods. From
what we¹ve heard, you can get almost anything you want at WalMart. The same
is true for the Dezam market ­ and more! You can find any kind of animal you
could possibly want, most of them even living. We have goats, chickens,
turkeys, cows, horses, and rabbits. There are also cows tongues, goats
heads, and pig intestines. You can find all sorts of other food products ­
rice, flour, spices, fresh baked goods, even Corn Flakes and cookies
imported from the Dominican Republic. Fresh fruit and vegetables abound.
Carrots, cabbages, eggplants, and onions sit alongside pineapples, bananas,
mangoes, papaya and the more exotic fruits like knips, bread fruit and jack
fruit. Cleaning products, school supplies, farm tools, ice, lottery tickets,
shoes, and used and imported clothing (I even saw a Toronto Maple Leafs
t-shirt!) fill the dusty aisles of the jam-packed market. The sights,
sounds and smells in the Dezam market are exhilarating. Sometimes we go
just to walk around, see our neighbours at work, and check up on the latest
town gossip.

So we don¹t miss WalMart or many of the other conveniences that we enjoyed
while living in Canada. That¹s not to say that using and enjoying modern
conveniences is necessarily a bad thing. Surely, however, we could be more
responsible with our consumptive habits and the values that under-gird them.
And this is also not to say that we miss nothing. Reading our friend¹s
letter about what she missed did make us realize that what we do miss are
the intangibles. We miss family of course. They¹ve been very supportive of
us making the move to Haiti so we definitely still feel close to them. I
miss talking to my best friend on the phone everyday. We were sad to miss
the change from summer to fall and the first snowfall. We really miss the
things that only come along once in a lifetime, like our baby nephew¹s first
steps or my Oma¹s 89th birthday. And of course, we missed celebrating
Christmas and the New Year with those we love.

We are anticipating that living and working in Haiti for these three years
is going to be an incredible opportunity to expand our minds, develop new
skills, learn a new language and build new relationships. This experience
will also help us to realize that it¹s not the ³stuff² that¹s important,
it¹s the people, the relationships, the experiences, the memories, the
values we adhere to ­ all the things that are the glue that keeps our lives
together, and in the end, that make us better off.

Matt Van Geest is a long-time Niagara resident. He and his wife, Esther
deGroot are working with the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) in Dezam,
Haiti, three hours north of the capital city, Port-au-Prince. Their work is
focused on environmental education and reforestation in rural Haiti. This is
the second in a series of periodic columns that will appear over the next
three years. They will share about their lives and experiences in Haiti
from a Niagara perspective. Matt and Esther can be contacted at
greatspirit@fastmail.fm

Monday, February 28, 2005

Check us out . . . Online!

Hey all,

Well, spare time comes and goes with our busy schedule of visiting tree
nurseries, school classrooms, other parts of the country and more . . . and
it just so happens we had a little spare time recently to put together a
blog (website) with some stories and pictures.

It's not a big thing really, most of the written stuff is stuff you've
probably received by email already. We'll post those there when we send
them, but we also hope to post additional things too. There are also
pictures, which we won't be sending by email (unless you're signed up for
the Super Duper Matt and Esther Fan Club) - so DO check out the pictures
there for sure. As you all know, a picture tells a whole different story.

So, without any further ado, we hereby officially announce our blog site.

You can find it at:

http://www.mattandestherinhaiti.blogspot.com

Please let us know what you think!

Sending you all our Caribbean love and warmth,

Matt and Esther

Saturday, February 19, 2005

MCC in Haiti

Dear friends,

Months after Tropical Storm Jeanne caused catastrophic flooding in
parts of northwest Haiti, hundreds of survivors have replanted fields or
rebuilt homes with support from MCC. Read about MCC's ongoing response on
the updated Haiti appeal page, http://www.mcc.org/haiti.

Let us know what you think.

Matt and Esther