Neo-Colonialism 2

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Three to five years ago, both the International bodies, the Neo's along with many of us around the world have described the situation in Haiti as catastrophic.

We urged the international community to intervene on a massive scale to stop the humanitarian crisis.

We even suggested that the country is to be placed under international protection, a situation that from the exterior may look like neo-colonialism, but in fact being the only way to restore law and order and to guarantee basic rights and freedoms until democratically elected authorities are established.

Three years later we can conclude that the international community has since tried to do exactly this, but unfortunately its willingness to help has recently decreased substantially.

What we may predict is that Haiti will return to its common circle of violence and political anarchy, until a new major humanitarian crisis forces the international community to intervene again.

The last time we looked at Haiti in 2003, the former regime of President Jean-Betrand Aristide was agonizing.

Only months later, in a midst of armed and civilian rebellion, he ran away from the country.

A wave of refugees from Haiti started to bother all neighboring countries, thus making their intervention more than necessary.

The international community, a nebulous term, usually including the richer countries plus some regional powers, pledged to provide more than $1 billion for economic reconstruction and development.

In the years that followed no more than half of this pledge was honored.

An international police force was sent to the country, having as a main task guaranteeing law and order and making sure that the new democratically elected public authorities can start working efficiently.

In fact the world has listened to the voice of reason, forced to apply some neo-colonial schemes in order to save thousands of lives, and perhaps more importantly, to save itself from millions of new unwelcome refugees.

These two basic tasks were accomplished, especially the second.

Thousands of Haitian refugees continued storming the shores of the neighboring islands, but nothing of the proportions most analysts feared two-three years ago. Which actually led some major countries concluding that Haiti could be transferred from the group of 'urgent' to 'enduring' problems.

Once the threat of massive refugee crisis was eliminated, Haiti became much less interesting to many who switched their attention to other regions and subjects, e.g. Middle East, oil prices, North Korea, illegal aliens, rising China, etc.

In the meantime Haiti desperately needs substantial economic aid. Without it, the newly elected politicians will soon lose most of their public credibility, and the world will have again to send 'firefighters' instead of bankers.

The real miscommunication between Haiti and the world comes from the unclear meaning of the word 'aid'.

Webster dictionary gives several closely related definitions to this word. For the purpose of our analysis we will limit ourselves to two, assistance and a gift. Haiti understands the aid as a gift, meaning the country should develop economically by mainly receiving gifts from the rest of the world.

The long-term list of wishes is already measured at $7 billion, that is $693 Billion less than what the US will be issuing to bail out those major US profit finacial institution.

Point is, the rest of the world, on the other hand, looks at the 'aids' as miracles and not knowing how those aids are actually given out to those poor Countries why those aids never actually do help those Countries in any major institutionalized, infrastructural and fundamental ways for real.

Anyway, more often than not, those aids do not even come or serve as helpful; not even temporarily and as secondary assistance often those aid money go to NGO institutions woh gets to decide how to allocate and appropriate those funds if they even really truly do so an dnot supplying thier own pockets, riding nice cars and living in nice quaters in Haiti as though it is just another vacation to them. Meaning the main task should be accomplished by Haiti itself and the Haitian government has got to do a wayyyyyyyyy better job stepping up and start to doing for Haiti and not for NGO and foreign influences, but then again...

that would have been the right way to do businesses and as we all know the words RIght Way does not apply in Haitian politics.

Thus, with such miscommunication my prediction is that Haiti will soon return to the circle of violence and the West will have again to deal with it as an 'urgent' problem since in reality, the stability of that Country among other nations are discreetly bieng manipulated by those foreign influences who are calling all the shots and actually not the actual Sovereign Governments of those small poor nations.

Wilgeens Rosenberg, September 27 2008, 3:21 PM

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Messages in this topic

I am glad to see that you are back,Wilgeens. President Preval said recently at the United Nations in New York that... read more >
Rintintin, 29-Sep-08 8:14 am
Well, even though he said that and indeed he is right... the situation of Haiti being so dependent and in dire need... read more >
Will Rosenberg, 29-Sep-08 9:33 am
I totally disagree with your statement that the country cannot afford not to accept these aids. Take Cuba for... read more >
Rintintin, 29-Sep-08 12:35 pm
YES I AGREE WITH YOU Well, even though he said that and indeed he is right... the situation of Haiti being so... read more >
El Caribeno, 29-Sep-08 3:29 pm

 

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