UN Military Base Expanding: What is Washington up to in Cité Soleil?
By: Kim Ives - Haiti Liberté
The U.S. government plans to expropriate and demolish the homes of hundreds
of Haiti's most impoverished by expanding the U.N. military occupation force's
outpost in the giant shantytown of Cite Soleil.
The infamous U.S. government contractor DynCorp, a quasi-official arm of the
Pentagon and the CIA, is responsible for expanding the base named "Konbit
pou lape" (Get Together for Peace), which houses the soldiers of the U.N.
Miss ion to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH) in the most bullet-ridden
battleground of the foreign military occupation that began after U.S.
Special Forces kidnapped President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and his wife from
their home and flew them into exile on Feb. 29, 2004.
According to Cite Soleil mayor Charles Joseph and a DynCorp foreman at the
site, funding for the base expansion is provided by the State Department's
U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), a very unorthodox use of
development aid.
Lawyer Evel Fanfan, the president of the Association of University Graduates
Motivatd For A Haiti With Rights (AUMOHD), says that about 155 buildings
would be razed if the base expansion goes forward.
"They started working without saying a word to the people living there,"
Fanfan said. "The authorities have not told them what is being done, if they
will be relocated, how much they will be compensated or even if they will be
compensated."
Most of the buildings targetted are homes, but one is a church.
"They have begun to build a wall around the area to be razed," explained
Eddy Michel, 37, an assistant to Pastor Isaac Lebon who heads the Christian
Church of the Apostle's Foundation, which serves some 300 parishioners.
"They have already built a 10-foot high L-shaped wall, which cuts us off
from the road. Once they complete the rest of the wall, the remaining 'L',
we will be completely enclosed and we fear the destruction will begin."
Alarmed residents of the area formed the Committee for Houses Being
Demolished (KODEL), which contacted AUMOHD. Fanfan put out a press release
and KODEL held a press conference.
"MINUSTAH soldiers came to our press conference and told us to get a lawyer
to talk to the American Embassy because the American Embassy is responsible
for the work," said Eddy Michel.
"Legally, the Haitian government has not authorized anybody to do anything,"
said Fanfan. " The Cite Soleil mayor [Charles Joseph] supposedly, between
quotation marks, authorized the construction, but there is no paper, no
decree, no order which authorizes it."
The use of DynCorp to build the base is particularly telling. DynCorp
International, offering, as its website says, "Global Integrated Solutions,"
belongs to a select group of behemoth corporations like Blackwater, Brown &
Root, and Halliburton that exist mainly to carry out U.S. government
strategic projects and programs.
Founded in 1946 and based in Reston, VA near CIA headquarters in Langley,
DynCorp was the principal contractor deployed in Colombia to carry out
Washington's supposed war on drugs called "Plan Colombia" in 2000. It
conducted aerial dusting of supposed coca fields, a practice which resulted
in 10,000 Ecuadorian farmers and the International Labor Rights Fund (ILRF),
an AFL-CIO affiliate, lodging a class-action lawsuit against then DynCorp
CEO Paul V. Lombardi in 2001. The dusting caused illness and death, the suit
charged. Lombardi tried to intimidate the plaintiffs, writing to individual
members of ILRF's board to warn that the "politically charged litigation"
was inappropriate after the events of Sep. 11, 2001.
One of the ILRF's board members, Bishop Jesse DeWitt, responded to DynCorp's
Lombardi. "Imagine that scene for a moment," Dewitt wrote. "You are an
Ecuadoran farmer, and suddenly, without notice or warning, a large
helicopter approaches, and the frightening noise of the chopper blades
invades the quiet. The helicopter comes closer and sprays a toxic poison on
you, your children, your livestock and your food crops. You see your
children get sick, your crops die. Mr. Lombardi, we at the International
Labor Rights Fund, and most civilized people, consider such an attack on
innocent people terrorism. Your effort to hide behind September 11 is
shameful and breathtakingly cynical."
On May 12, 2000, Colombian police also captured a small bottle of liquid
being sent from DynCorp's Colombia headquarters to one of its airbases in
Florida. The bottle contained $100,000 worth of heroin. No prosecution was
ever conducted.
Two years earlier, ten DynCorp employees were shipped out of Colombia when
it was discovered that they were illegally trafficking amphetamines. No
prosecution was ever conducted.
Also in 2001, a 29-year-old DynCorp paramedic had a heart attack and was
taken to a hospital in Florencia, in southeastern Colombia, where he died.
"Forensic tests conducted at the time revealed that the cause of death was a
cocaine overdose," writes Robert Lawson in the article "DynCorp: Beyond the
Rule of Law," published by the Information Network of the Americas' online
journal Colombia Report. "Mysteriously, when the Colombian Central Office of
Prosecutions took an interest in the death and requested more information,
all related documents, such as the legal medical reports, vanished."
Lawson notes that a high ranking Colombian police official, who had followed
DynCorp since it arrived in Colombia in 1993, told Semana magazine: "No
authority, whether the Civil Aviation Authority, police or army, is
authorized to search DynCorp's planes. Nobody knows what they carry on their
return to the United States because they are untouchable."
DynCorp has been an important "private" player in other U.S. wars around the
globe, including Iraq, Afghanistan, and Yugoslavia.
"Dyncorp (...) has garnered a reputation as a shadowy company with a spooky
pedigree, rumored to be a CIA 'cutout,' or front company, for the Agency's
dirty tricks," writes Uri Dowbenko in "Dirty Tricks, Inc.:The
DynCorp-Government Connection" in 2002. "Using high-level government insider
connections, DynCorp provides a range of 'services' one would expect to
facilitate fraud and money laundry activities, acting like a virtual conduit
between the corporate (private) and government (public) worlds. According to
DynCorp, the US Government is its biggest client, accounting for more than
95% of its revenues."
What so interests the U.S. government and DynCorp in Cite Soleil?
First, as Port-au-Prince's largest, poorest, and most pro-Aristide slum, it
has been a hotbed of anti-occupation resistance for the past four years.
Although most of the popular organizations carrying out armed struggle were
dismantled in early 2007, unrest still continues there, particularly with
Haiti's (and the capitalist world's) worsening economic crisis. Hence,
military domination of this important northern flank of Haiti's capital is
critical.
Furthermore, Haiti's bourgeoisie and Washington's strategists have for some
years coveted the prime real-estate on which Cite Soleil sits. The quadrant
has a port, is close to the airport, sits on the main road to the north, and
is ringed by factories and the old Haitian American Sugar Company complex
(HASCO). Rumors are continually afoot that Haiti's economic and political
powers want to level this shantytown of 300,000 to replace it with more
factories, office buildings, and other business development.
As Haiti reels under the devastation brought by Hurricanes Gustav and Hanna
as well as ever deepening hunger, it is ironic that Washington is spending
money to expand a foreign military base and uproot Haiti's poorest of the
poor. But Cite Soleil's residents are not easily steam-rolled.
For example, on Aug. 31, President Rene Preval and new prime minister
Michele Pierre-Louis toured Cite Soleil to view new drainage canals. During
the visit, residents got their hands on Cite Soleil's second mayor Benoit
Gustave, accusing him of selling off Cite Soleil for bribes, specifically in
the case of the base expansion, and of doing nothing for the people. He was
pelted with slaps, kicks and spit.
DynCorp's expansion of MINUSTAH's base seems more likely to rile Cite Soleil's
citizenry than pacify it. Once again, as in its other misadventures around
the globe, Washington seems to have, as the Krey l proverb says, "byen
konte, mal kalkile": counted well, but badly miscalculated.
All articles copyrighted Haiti Liberte. REPRINTS ENCOURAGED.
Please credit Haiti Liberte.
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