IDT, Aristide, and the Haiti Democracy Project: A Defamation Suit is Contemplated
By: Kim Ives - Haiti Liberte
In recent years, Haiti seems to insert itself into every U.S. presidential
election. Refugees, military occupations, and sweatshop legislation have all
become campaign issues.
This election year, Haiti has entered the fray even before the Republican
and Democratic conventions. Last week, the Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) fined IDT, a New Jersey-based telecommunications company, $1.3 million
for not disclosing its 2003 - 2004 long-distance phone contracts with Haiti.
During that time, the FCC claims that IDT paid Teleco, the Haitian national
phone company, an illegally low rate for long-distance calls that it handled
between Haiti and the U.S.
James "Jim" Courter, IDT's CEO and Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors,
was a leading fundraiser for presumptive Republican nominee John McCain.
Following the negative publicity generated by the FCC's fine, Courter quit
the McCain campaign. "Mr. Courter did not desire to see a personal business
matter, wholly unrelated to the senator's presidential bid, to detract from
the core issues facing the American people," an IDT spokesman said.
Courter was a New Jersey Republican congressman from 1979 to 1991 and a
former Republican gubanatorial candidate for that state. He had raised over
$100,000 for McCain and was one of the campaign's 20 national finance
co-chairmen. According to Portfolio magazine, the IDT Political Action
Committee has given the McCain campaign $84,850 in 2008.
Portfolio magazine published two articles last week on the fine against IDT
and Courter's resignation from the McCain campaign. Both were written by
Lucy Komisar, a freelance journalist hired by the Washington-based Haiti
Democracy Project (HDP) to "investigate" IDT's dealings with Haiti. The
Haiti Democracy Project, which calls itself an "independent research group,"
is bankrolled by Haiti's notoriously reactionary and corrupt Boulos family
and run by former U.S. government ambassadors, functionaries, and spooks.
The HDP was one of the principal cheerleaders of the February 29, 2004 coup
d'etat against President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, in which he was kidnapped
from his home by U.S. Special Forces soldiers and flown into exile. The HDP
specialized then, as it does now, in disseminating disinformation about
Aristide and his government.
Komisar had already done a number of HDP-sponsored "exposes" purporting to
"prove" Aristide's corruption in his alleged deal with IDT. The company paid
Teleco only 8.75 cents per minute for long-distance calls as opposed to 23
cents a minute, an FCC established rate which other U.S. carriers like AT&T
were paying. IDT paid its fees to a Turks & Caicos company which Komisar
calls "Mount Salem." That company, she alleges, sent 5.75 cents to Teleco
and 3 cents to Aristide.
To buttress this charge, Komisar asserts that "Adrian Corr, a Turks & Caicos
lawyer who was legal counsel for Aristide at Miller Simons O'Sullivan and
who ran Mount Salem, confirmed that Aristide owned the shell." This
statement is the lynchpin of Komisar's story.
There are only three problems. One, Adrian Corr was never Aristide's legal
counsel. Two, Aristide never owned a shell company named Mount Salem. Three,
Corr never "confirmed" to Komisar what she attributes to him.
"I certainly did not tell her that I was Aristide's lawyer," Corr told Haiti
Liberte. "That's completely false. I don't know what drug she was smoking
that day. And I certainly never told her he owned Mont Salem," the correct
name of the company Corr represents. ("She didn't even get that right," Corr
commented).
"I have never acted for Aristide nor have I set up any shell companies to
siphon money for him, as is alleged in [her] story," Corr concluded.
Corr is now exploring whether to bring a defamation suit against Komisar and
Portfolio, which is published by CondeNast. "I've had to refer this to libel
lawyers in New York, New Jersey and the United Kingdom as well," Corr said.
Ira Kurzban, Aristide's lawyer, also denounced Komisar's Portfolio articles.
"Mr. Corr did not and does not represent President Aristide and President
Aristide had no interest in or knowledge of any company - "shell" or
otherwise" - set up in the Turks and Caicos for any purpose," Kurzban wrote
in a letter responding to Komisar's articles. "Mr. Corr never set up Mount
Salem, any "shell" company, or any other company for President Aristide."
Kurzban is also contemplating a defamation suit against Komisar and
Portfolio.
Noting that "Ms. Komisar was paid by the Haiti Democracy Project" to carry
out her IDT investigation and that the HDP "was serving as the political arm
in the United States for the coup against President Aristide," Kurzban wrote
that "these repeatedly false stories of corruption against President
Aristide are part of a continuing disinformation campaign against the
President that began when he first took office in 1991."
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