Will
Haiti be forgotten again so soon?
David
M. Malone and Kirsti Samuels IHT
Nation-building
NEW
YORK On Tuesday the United Nations begins a peacekeeping operation in Haiti,
replacing a multinational force authorized by the UN Security Council three months
ago after President Jean-Bertrand Aristide fled into exile. Unfortunately this
UN effort begins in less than ideal circumstances, with the United Nations distracted
by many other crises..
Until
a rebellion in Haiti in February, French and U.S. policy consisted of complaining
about Aristide. Having taken the initiative internationally to rid the impoverished
nation of this democratically elected leader, these countries might have been
expected to take the lead in a bold strategy to address the country's ills..
The
task of improving governance in Haiti will be a long-term, risky and expensive
one. With Afghanistan, Iraq, the Ivory Coast and several other countries already
requiring extensive life support, countries with a historical interest in Haiti
seem to have resigned from the challenge there, hoping the United Nations can
pick up the pieces without much evident commitment on their own part. There are
shades of Iraq in this story: for missions impossible, it seems, one should dial
the United Nations..
Haiti
is a failed state, now governed by a weak interim administration. More than 70
percent of its population lives on less than $1 a day. The floods last week that
caused hundreds of deaths would have killed no one in more developed countries
with functioning state institutions..
The
multinational force has restored a measure of calm. But ambitious objectives to
disarm rebels came to nothing. Washington's most striking idea recently was a
threat to prosecute Aristide for corruption or other misdeeds. It is not clear
how that would help Haitians..
The
interim prime minister, Gerard Latortue, has announced plans for elections next
year, but elections in Haiti have, in recent years, served mainly to polarize
political life. A willingness to compromise, to break a "winner takes all"
political culture, is more important and more urgent than electoral rituals, as
we have learned in Bosnia and other post-conflict societies, where repeated elections
have done little to promote prosperity or political responsibility..
There
will, of course, be multilateral financial and development assistance on offer,
but this proved remarkably ineffective from 1994 to 1997, when $2 billion was
spent - and wasted because of poor local absorptive capacity and corruption. Some
cash held up in the World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank should
now become available, and, to its credit, the United States has pledged $160 million..
But
how will jobs be created in Haiti? From 1994 to 1996, "quick impact"
projects benefited few. International economic sanctions against Haiti, instituted
to restore Aristide to power after he was overthrown in a coup in 1991, cost thousands
of jobs in the light industrial assembly sector that have never been regained.
Haiti's largely unskilled labor force is highly militant compared to that of,
say, Honduras, which today turns out in large numbers the clothes and other consumer
goods that Haiti used to produce.How
serious are the key capitals about staying the course in Haiti? Washington is
signaling that it wishes to withdraw its troops from Haiti as soon as possible,
hardly a come-on to the countries invited to pick up the slack. France will withdraw
its troops by July 15. Chile and Canada will leave theirs longer. In one hopeful
sign, many Latin American countries have offered troops for the UN peacekeeping
operations, which will be commanded by a Brazilian. The 6,700-strong force has
been authorized - laughably - for only six months. The UN secretary general, Kofi
Annan, had recommended two years.
.
From
1994 to 2000, the United Nations and the Organization of American States, in an
unusually productive partnership, worked hard to train a respectable Haitian police
force, to improve the climate of respect for human rights, and to provide some
basis for economic recovery. That the United Nations and the OAS failed says less
about the effectiveness of these organizations than about the difficulty of the
tasks..
For
international actors, dropping the ball - again - in Haiti would put paid to any
pretensions of seriousness on democratization, human rights and economic renaissance,
which are the themes of America's rhetoric on the Middle East and of French rhetoric
on its global priorities..
David
Malone, a former Canadian ambassador to the United Nations, is president of the
International Peace Academy in New York. Kirsti Samuels is an associate at the
academy.