usa should take over haitian government.

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The US should have maintained its backbone and taken over the Haitian government.

Read this Associated Press quote from Monday, July 21, 2008::

"But three months later, The Associated Press has learned that only a fraction of a key U.S. food pledgeless than 2 percent as of early July has been distributed."

Okay.

Let's first get past the liberal "Hate America First" spin put on this statement and get to the core reason for this lack of distribution.

A little later on you'll read this: Some 16,000 tons has reached Haiti.

But more than 11,000 tons of that is still in port; nearly all the rest lies undistributed in World Vision International and Catholic Relief Services warehouses.

Only 724 tons of food has reached distribution centers.

There is still another 24,000 tons (1200 truckloads) scheduled to be shipped to Haiti but waiting for the existing stuff to be delivered.

That's 550 truckloads of food sitting in Haiti with no way to deliver it. The problem?

There are no roads on which the trucks can travel to get the food delivered to the rural regions in need of it. This is a country without a functioning government and there's no time to establish one:

People are starving.

So what's to be done?

1. The Haitian Government as it exists, needs to be ignored.

2. The US needs to airlift food supplies to needy regions without consent of the Haitian government or its involvement.

3. The US needs to establish in Haiti the Haitian Infrastructure Initiative without consent of the Haitian government or its involvement.

4. The US needs to begin bringing in the Military Corp of Engineers without consent of the Haitian government or its involvement to begin road construction using the well laid plans of those infrastructure "studies" that have been done over the last 40 years.

5. The US needs to acquire land (paid at reasonable market rates) and by force if necessary, to complete these road projects without consent of the Haitian government or its involvement.

6. The US needs to secure the workforce through a military presence without the consent of the Haitian government or its involvement.

7. The US needs to stop any and all direct foreign aid paid to the Haitian government or other entrenched groups operating in Haiti.

8. The US needs to establish an independent operation that ignores the Haitian government until critical infrastructure needs are met. That will mean over 10 years.

9..

The US needs to invite other industrialized nations to participate and use it as a model for handling corrupt governmental regimes throughout the world.

10. The US needs to handle all distribution of funds to the Haitian government once detailed proof on how it will be spent is provided.

The US needs to have a backbone against all of the initial criticism it will receive.

"Another Iraq!" "Nation building!" "Evil Imperialists!" etc will have to be tolerated and as the roads begin to appear, those cries will be quieted and "Get out!" "Leave us alone" will be heard.

But by then, substantial progress will have occurred despite the best efforts of the elitist worldwide to prevent it and disrupt their "Hate America First" promotional programs that ring their cash registers..

The Europeans have allowed African nations to remain under one corrupt dictatorship after another for centuries, but the US must put a stop to this in our own hemisphere.

It sounds naive but action not studies, action not diplomacy, action not negotiations, is what is needed.

Let the naysayers talk all they want because they're always the first to jump to the side that's winning.

For Haiti, that needs to be the USA

George Grunner Atlanta, GA

Targeting Haiti's kidnap trade
Luis stood on the spot where six months earlier his and Vanessa's life changed.

On the winding road up the hill, are wealthy homes with some of the best views of Haiti's capital, Port-au-Prince.

A week before Christmas, early in the evening, it had just gone dark and Vanessa was driving back to the house they shared.

She did not make it.

Ahead a car blocked her path. Another one stopped behind her.

"The perpetrators just backed the car into Vanessa's Subaru," Luis said.

It was a swift and brutal abduction.

Vanessa left Haiti after the attack and was not with us at the scene.

Speaking from the US, where she now lives, she said two men approached her car. One had a shotgun.

"I just started to scream from the bottom of my lungs and I was trying to get away. Everything happened really fast.

"They were saying 'open the door, open the door!' And, before I knew it, I heard a big bang and I felt extreme pain in my stomach.

"I looked down and my white pants and my white t-shirt were turning red very quickly."

Moments later they got in, bundled her into the back and drove away. Police rescued her three days later, following intense, unrelenting efforts by Luis.

Upsurge Reported kidnappings occur in Haiti at a rate of one or two every day.

Haiti is well known as a major trans-shipment point for drugs heading to North America, with the trade controlled by violent gangs.

It is also a country where the police and courts function poorly; destitution is widespread (most people live on less that $2 (£1) a day; there is 70% unemployment.

Add to that the sheer number of guns on the streets and you have the perfect conditions for what can be described as a kidnap industry in Haiti.

Former President Jean Bertrand Aristide disbanded the army (which had overthrown him less than a year into his first term as president in 1991) when he was restored to power in the mid-1990s for a second term.

By the time he was forced from office again in February 2004 because of the armed violence enveloping the country, many of the army's weapons were the hands of gang members.

Haiti came close to meltdown that year and kidnappings were running at an estimated rate of five a day. By November 2004 a multinational stabilisation mission (Minustah) had been sent in by the UN.

In 2005 there were 760 reported kidnappings.

The UN, which has 9,000 soldiers and police in the Caribbean country, set up a special anti-kidnapping unit in 2006. Together with the Haitian police it gradually brought the numbers down to about 300 last year.

But in the first six months of this year, there was a significant upsurge in the number of abductions.

The United Nations Special Representative in Haiti, Tunisian diplomat Hedi Annabi, has taken a personal interest in the kidnapping issue and made a point of meeting victims, including Vanessa, after their ordeal.

He told the BBC there could be an increase of about 100 abductions on last year's numbers.

"It could become a political problem for the government, and a liability for the UN force", Mr Annabi said.

In recent weeks, however, the police have arrested some kidnappers and they say they have dealt a serious blow to the kidnap gangs.

Ransom Following the usual pattern, Vanessa's kidnappers demanded $300,000 ransom.

In many cases, the kidnappers settle for less than a tenth of that, often between $5,000 and $20,000.

Kidnap victims are usually freed after six to 10 days, though the gangs do sometimes sell their hostages on to another gang, to demand another ransom.

"It's just a way to make money," says Ermenela Nanaj, an Albanian clinical psychologist who works for the UN, "and it works."

One of Ermenela's most important tasks has been to provide support and counselling to kidnap victims and their families.

Foreigners and relatively well-off Haitians are prime targets.

"I started making a list of people I know that were victims", Vanessa said.

"I found 25 people that were kidnapped.

There will be a day in Haiti where not one family of a certain class, of the people who have a job and who earn money, who own a car and a house - middle class families - will not have been a victim of kidnapping."

However, an increasing number of poor Haitians from the slums are getting abducted, often for ransoms of just a few dollars.

Many of these cases are not reported to the police.

Penalty The sentence for convicted kidnappers is life in prison with hard labour.

But corruption in the judicial and prison systems means that they are sometimes back on the street - and back in business - in a few weeks.

Vanessa could have died of her injuries if she had been held for a few more days. Hundreds of shotgun pellets were lodged in her body. She was put on a course of anti-retroviral drugs to prevent possible HIV infection from one of the kidnappers who raped her.

She disputes that poverty motivated her kidnappers.

"It's not for economic reasons.

It's because of greed and evil. The people who kidnapped me had money.

There is no reason in the world, except evil, that can explain people treating others that way."

Vanessa could not bring herself return to house she shared with Luis, and they are now living in the US. She thinks the ultimate sanction should be considered for kidnappers.

"No prison in Haiti is working.

We don't have the prisons to maintain them.

"So I really see it as a burden for the state.

For me kidnapping calls for the death penalty.

The death penalty would be the solution in the short term.

"Kidnappings are draining the country, destroying the country.

Desperate times call for desperate measures."

Raymond, July 25 2008, 2:28 PM

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You are an idiot of the worse kind to suggest that the United States should take over Haiti's government. For your... read more >
Robertson, 25-Jul-08 6:51 pm
You are really frustrated! But don't let yours frustration take over your ability to reason! We are all frustrated! I... read more >
Zarien Krab Spider, 27-Jul-08 1:56 am
who ever wrote this need to think again read more >
Taciena, 26-Aug-08 10:24 pm
Raymond, You said, "USA SHOULD TAKE OVER HAITIAN GOVERNMENT." Are you kidding me? If my memory doesn't fail me, last... read more >
Tiba, 27-Aug-08 6:21 am
Tiba, I agree with you not because I like you, but I agree with you because you are telling the truth about the... read more >
Ti Rouge, 27-Aug-08 12:05 pm
OK, now that we all agree that the incompetent, sorry excuse for a president, and even sorrier excuse for a human... read more >
Linda, 27-Aug-08 3:51 pm
Ti Rouge C'mon! word on the streets claim that you like me a lot and you are now denying it! lol I like you too, man. read more >
Tiba, 27-Aug-08 7:20 pm

 

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