France's Rama Yade in Haiti: New Face, Same Old Agenda
By: Kim Ives - Haiti Liberte
There is something troubling about a photogenic 30-year-old black Muslim
woman from Dakar, Senegal fronting for the new right-wing government of
French President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Rama Yade is France's new secretary of state for Foreign Affairs, French
imperialism's version of Condoleeza Rice. She visited Haiti for 48 hours
from Sep. 14-16 to encourage the neoliberal direction of President Rene
Preval's government, a one-year renewal of the United Nations' military
occupation of Haiti, and increased French foreign investment in what was
once France's richest colony.
"He asked me to hasten my visit to Haiti to present the new face of France,"
Yade said of the millionaire Sarkozy, who has flaunted his political
affinity with and admiration for President George Bush.
Yade's first order of business was to shower praise on Preval and compare
him to her boss, which may have done more to undermine Preval's credibility
with Haitians than buttress it. "Preval reminds one of Sarkozy, who is very
determined in many domains," she said. "President Preval has emerged as a
deeply patriotic statesman, conscious of the huge responsibilities that
weigh on his shoulders and on his nation."
France's satisfaction with Preval's "patriotism" stems in large measure from
his pointed abandonment of the demand made in 2003 by his constitutional
predecessor, President Jean Bertrand Aristide, for some $21 billion in
reparations from France for the "independence debt" extorted from Haiti over
122 years. In 1825, France used its gun-boats and economic clout to force
the isolated and cash-strapped first nation of Latin America to pay it 90
million gold francs for property (both plantations and slaves) lost in Haiti's
1791-1804 revolution. Haiti paid that ransom for freeing itself - the first
time in modern warfare that the victorious nation had to pay a war's cost -
until 1947, a debt burden which is largely responsible for Haiti's current
economic underdevelopment and political instability.
Outraged by Aristide's insolence, France joined with the U.S. and Canadian
governments to orchestrate his ouster by kidnapping in February 2004.
Asked during a press conference about the status of Haiti's historic demand
(the first time the sovereign government of a former colony has asked for
reparations for slavery and colonialism), Yade gracefully backhanded the
issue. "Nobody has raised the question," she said, "in the course of my
meetings with different sectors of Haitian society."
This was no doubt because most of Yade's meetings were with the Haitian
bourgeoisie, which hated Aristide and his call for reparations, having
maintained cultural and economic ties to France even after Haiti's
hard-fought independence war. For this reason, Haiti remains "a nation dear
to the heart of the French as it has perpetuated a francophone outpost in a
region which is mainly anglophone and hispanophone," Yade said.
Yade brought in her delegation a number of French businessmen and
parliamentarians who interfaced with their Haitian counterparts at the
Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Haiti (CCIH) in a convivial meeting on
the day she arrived. As deals were brokered, she argued that there are great
investment opportunities now because "Haiti today enjoys a converging of
favorable elements: a freely elected president, a government which functions
in a constitutional framework, and strong support from the international
community." Having helped to overthrow one elected government only three
years ago, France now salutes the "courage" of another more to its liking.
Without clarifying whether she was addressing the coup, reparations, the
1804 revolution, or all Haitian history, Yade called on Haitians to "turn
the page, not to forget but to move on." In other words, France has
sabotaged your governments and plundered your wealth, but let's let bygones
be bygones.
Like a string of U.N. and U.S. officials before her, Yade called for a
one-year extension of the UN Security Council mandate for Haiti's
occupation, which expires on October 15. Mandates for UN military actions
are usually extended for only six months. "France will support the renewal
of the mandate because this mandate is important in helping to assure the
country's stability and since the Haitian authorities want it," she said.
At the same time, she gently mocked Preval's notion of converting UN "tanks
into bulldozers," that is, using occupation resources to rebuild Haiti
rather than repress rebellious neighborhoods.
When UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon visited Haiti on Aug. 2, Preval asked
him to "reinvent MINUSTAH [the UN Mission to Stabilize Haiti] and to turn it
into an instrument to help reform justice and improve our basic
infrastructure."
But Yade responded that "the MINUSTAH is not an enterprise, but a United
Nations mission," reinforcing the position of recently departed MINUSTAH
head Edmond Mulet that "MINUSTAH is not a development agency" and "has
neither the Security Council mandate nor the budget nor the means to be a
development agency."
Yade of course made the obligatory visit to the French troops participating
in the MINUSTAH, primarily as police officers. She also met with President
Preval as well as with Prime Minister Jacques Edouard Alexis and other
ministers including Women's Conditions Minister Marie-Laurence Lassegue.
It was announced that the Haitian government has sent a formal invitation to
Sarkozy. Preval "wants Nicolas Sarkozy to be the first French president to
visit Haiti," Yade announced.
Yade is the junior partner of Bernard Kouchner, Sakozy's Foreign Affairs
minister and the former head of the UN's Kosovo mission. As a long-time
French government free agent, Kouchner was one of the chief architects of
Haiti's current occupation, which he outlined, a year before the fact, in a
Mar. 10, 2003 interview with the website Haiti Info. "The duty to intervene
is accompanied by the duty to remain, to accompany," Kouchner said,
referring to Haiti and Afghanistan. "In Haiti, it would be necessary to put
in place a system that would guarantee democratic functioning and avoid that
Father (sic) Aristide not pervert it."
France, the U.S., and Canada now feel that they have put in place this
"system" and that is why Yade and others are pushing for a one-year mandate
so that UN troops can "accompany" Haitians down the path neo-colonialists
like Kouchner favor.
Yade also visited the northern city of Cap Haitien where she met local
officials and inspected French cooperation projects.
Repeatedly, Yade flashed her 1000-watt smile and summoned "this African
history that we share" with her Haitian audiences as the sugar-coating on
the "solidarity of France" and the "pacifying presence" of MINUSTAH that she
had come to sell. While the Preval government may buy this "solidarity," the
Haitian people remain skeptical.
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