Human Rights and Haiti

by: Kerry Kennedy and Monika Kaira Varma, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Human Rights and Haiti
Haitians climbing rubble in Port-au-Prince. (Photo: Zoriah)

Overwhelmed by sadness, empathy and disbelief, the world’s eyes and hearts are focused on the rescue and relief efforts resulting from the earthquake in Haiti. However, many who have worked in Haiti fear that a preventable and long term disaster lies on the horizon if international interventions do not break with past patterns. As international aid begins to pour into Haiti, we have a brief moment to break with past mistakes and bring real change to Haiti.

During the eight years that the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights (RFK Center) has partnered with the grassroots medical group Zanmi Lasante/Partners In Health in Haiti, we have witnessed U.S and international aid efforts that could be characterized, at best, as unsustainable and, at worst, deliberately harmful.

In 2000, the U.S. and the Inter-American Development Bank approved millions of dollars of what would have been lifesaving loans for improvements to water, health, education, and road infrastructure, only to later withhold these funds because they opposed then President Aristide. While the loans were eventually released, the communities where the very first water projects were to be financed still lack access, ten years later, to reliably clean drinking water, contributing to countless deaths due to waterborne illness.

In 2004, the international community pledged $1 billion to support Haiti. RFK Center, along with Zanmi Lasante and the NYU Center for Human Rights and Global Justice, tried to track the fulfillment of those pledges, but never received clear and consistent answers from donor states on the status of the aid. With no transparency or coordinating body to turn to, the Haitian people had no hope of knowing if that money ever got to Haiti, much less where it was directed and how it could be used to improve their communities. Haitian government sources later confirmed that most of the pledges had never been fulfilled.

In 2008, after hurricanes ravaged the country, the international community convened another donor conference resulting in over $324 million in pledges. Prior to the earthquake, most of those pledges had still not been fulfilled.

Historically, interventions in Haiti have been viewed through the lens of charity. The international community, NGOs, international organizations and donor states have gathered time and again to announce to the world pledges of support, only to quietly back away from these commitments. The goodwill of the international community is certainly critical today to Haiti’s future but charity alone will not be enough to ultimately rebuild a safer and more sustainable Haiti. Only by forging a new path, guided by a commitment to the human rights of the Haitian people, can the international community help to create real, lasting change.

Charity is a personal act of choice with no real repercussions. Human rights are legal obligations, grounded in our shared acknowledgement of human dignity - something that every government must respect and no government can take away.

In the aftermath of this disaster, every country and international organization working toward recovery in Haiti needs to ensure that their actions will promote the respect and dignity of the Haitian people based on constitutionally and internationally recognized rights to water, health, and education. By partnering with the Haitian government and local communities in assessing the nation’s recovery needs and making long term pledges to support the government of Haiti in meeting these needs, donors can pave a sustainable path towards recovery. Additionally, the donor nations should commit to making their aid transparent so every Haitian knows where funds are going. Accountability mechanisms are needed to ensure that the government of Haiti, the international community and NGOs use these funds appropriately.

As the world looks for a way to help Haiti rebuild after the earthquakes, the international community has opportunity to avert a second man-made disaster. The United States and the international donor states and institutions must act now to end a painful history of irresponsible aid policies in Haiti. In acting immediately, as recovery plans are developed, we can honor the survivors of this tragedy by supporting Haitians as they build a better Haiti.

 

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Kerry Kennedy is President and founder of the Robert F. Kennedy Center for Justice and Human Rights (www.rfkcenter.org).

Monika Kaira Varma is Director of the RFK Center for Human Rights.


Comments

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This is typical of Liberals

This is typical of Liberals and dreamers . You say we can with international aid break with the past and bring real change to Haiti . To my great sorrow , that will NEVER happen . The country is too corrupt , the money will be siphoned off and NOTHING will change. The people have no leadership and they themselves are too stupid and semi civilized in order to survive on their own . They live in Paradise compared to Iceland and yet have no idea how to grow and develop the country . They for the next 100 years + will be parasites .
I may be my brothers keeper but I am not their sugar daddy . If they are looking for sympathy , they will find it in the dictionary between syphilis and shit.



Is "Arminius Aurelius" Latin

Is "Arminius Aurelius" Latin for "racist asshole? Why don't you educate yourself about the history of Haiti and how this "paradise" was despoiled by colonial France and then imperial America, before you start ranting about people being stupid and semi-civilized. Ignorance and poverty in Haiti are not just an absence of education and wealth, they are enforced conditions.



Nothing's wrong with

Nothing's wrong with President Aristide except that the lies manufactured about him have "become truth," and he is outspokenly for Haitians and what is good for them.

All the U.S. paranoia about foreign leaders believing in the "wrong stuff" is preventing people like Arminius Aurelius from thinking positively about "liberals and dreamers." As long as many of us listen to and believe people like Beck/Palin/Hannity/Limbaugh/Lou Dobbs/Bill O'Reilly there will be no change.

If a few of us would brave up and think that, for instance, the pictures and ideas we are presented with about Haitians are generalizations to make us fearful that most of them are engaged in riots and being violent--even while good folks are trying to distribute food and medicine--if we could think that these are not true, merely sensationalism, then we could make the break with the past.

I've had years of experience with many Haitians, even intimate experiences. With very few exceptions, these experiences have been very positive.

It's a shame that so many people express very strong opinions without having any authority by which to judge.



Well written, but this time

Well written, but this time will be no different and it has started already. As of yesterday, the military suspended flights for injured out of Haiti for (1) who was going to pay for medical, (2) hospitals were refusing more injured, (3) this is what the US does over and over. The last time I looked the military was not in charge but the WH and our Congress was--Why are they silent? This is day two and more are dying as they have been abandoned--AGAIN. Supplies are not being distributed as the military controls the airport and they are "waiting for orders". Supplies and medical flights are being diverted for military transports and PR photo moments. 100 million in aid, promises of being there by the WH and barely two weeks later, they have been abandoned just like all the times before. No wonder we are hated.