With
his official inauguration planned for May 14,
Haitian President-elect René Préval faces a
Brobdingnagian challenge in rebuilding his shattered
country. Succeeding a U.S.-installed de facto
government headed by Interim Prime Minister Gérard
Latortue, which couldn’t have performed more
poorly, Préval must search for a precise balance
between the interests of foreign donor governments
and bitterly divided domestic forces. In recent
weeks, Préval has shown a genuine interest in
consulting with the competing pressure points that
will soon enough affect his new government.
On
the domestic front, there is a near consensus that
Préval has inherited a broken country from Latortue.
Because of this, once inaugurated, the new president
will need to act quickly to prove his credibility
after a questionable election process, which almost
illicitly consigned him to an unwarranted run-off.
He must also prevent a flare up of domestic
political malcontents; create an effective coalition
among the several parties in his government; and
constructively assess former President Aristide’s
possible request to return to Haiti.
Not
only has the president-elect initiated his efforts
on the domestic front, but he has already made
various strategic foreign visits, and has attempted
to build a consensus with the international forces
that have had a historic presence in Haiti, such as
the U.S. and Canada. However, he is also attempting
to form new alliances elsewhere, with Cuba and
Venezuela for example, breaking away from a
traditionally Washington-controlled Haiti.
Préval’s
efforts on the domestic front
Préval’s victory is a positive sign for many of
Haiti’s poor. His inauguration is expected to be
the start of a hopefully more stable period for the
island, after a lame period of interim rule under
the leadership of former lending agency official Gérard
Latortue. The controversial election period has left
Préval in a somewhat tenuous position, and he will
now need to juggle between the competing domestic
political groups, while at the same time making
improvements to Haiti’s shattered security,
infrastructure and judicial systems. Perhaps Préval’s
most daunting challenge will be managing the
contentious situation surrounding Aristide’s
exile.
Préval’s
victory
Préval won the Haitian presidency after a
controversial election, which saw him obtain 51% of
the vote only after a consensus arrangement was
reached on how to tally spoiled ballots. The second
round of parliamentary elections on April 21
attracted only 30 percent of the 3.5 million
registered voters, to cast ballots for the 127
available parliamentary seats. While Préval’s
Lespwa party won the most Senate seats (eleven), it
fell five short of the number needed to appoint the
country’s prime minister, which will force Préval
to form a coalition government in order to pass
legislation. The new Prime Minister will need to
carefully be chosen by the Préval government, in
order to ensure Haiti’s future political
stability.
Many
of the island’s political weaknesses were
exacerbated by the notorious interim government that
preceded Préval. The departure of the hapless
Latortue regime marks the end of a government that
fundamentally disregarded human rights and the rule
of law. Ironically, this government was set up and
appointed by a band of self-serving international
powers - primarily the U.S., Canada, France, and the
UN’s Kofi Annan - in early 2004, just as the
anti-Aristide forces were reaching Port-au-Prince.
Human rights organizations such as the Haiti Support
Group, several Latin American governments, as well
as CARICOM (the Caribbean Community), accused the
Latortue government of further darkening the
country’s already shaky human rights record by
arresting, torturing and imprisoning pro-Aristide
government officials and supporters, including
former Interior Minister Jocelerme Privert and
former Prime Minister Yvonne Neptune, who still
remain behind bars but most likely will be released
the moment that Préval assumes office.
Aristide’s
Return
Another domestic issue Préval will have to manage
amidst divisive political groups in the country is
former president Aristide’s possible early return
to Haiti. The February 2004 coup, orchestrated by
the U.S. State Department and backed by its
confederates, ousted Aristide and sent him into
exile in South Africa. They then installed former
Boca Raton talk show host Gérard Latortue as
interim Prime Minister. At the onset of Préval’s
presidency, Aristide’s shadow lurks large amidst
Haiti’s many uncertainties. Many Aristide
supporters, as well as pro-democracy advocates,
supported Aristide and are now inquiring whether Préval
will allow his mentor to return to Haiti once he
assumes the presidency. His many critics do not want
to see Aristide come back to Haiti, at least for
now, and the country’s elite adamantly argue on
scant evidence that Aristide was becoming
“dictatorial” and corrupt. The Latortue
government accused the ex-president of stealing
millions of dollars of state funds, which may be as
much an auto-biographical statement as it is a
serious charge against the former president. But
Aristide has a tremendous influence among the
country’s poor, where his popularity is
immeasurable. Many of Préval’s supporters
consider his Leswpa (“Hope” in Creole) and
Aristide’s Lavalas parties to have almost
identical agendas, and support the former
president’s return. While a March Knight
Ridder News report noted that “Préval has
made it increasingly clear to foreign diplomats that
he does not want the fiery former priest to return
home any time soon,” in an interview with Dominion,
Préval “reiterated his intention to uphold the
Haitian Constitution’s ban of political exile,”
which leaves the door open for Aristide’s possible
return. Préval has simultaneously warned of
possible corruption charges against the former
president. While Préval and Aristide were close
allies in the past, their relationship became
increasingly distant during Préval’s first
presidency from 1996 to 2001, and many fear that
Aristide’s return would cause a resurgence of
domestic violence between pro and anti-Aristide
groups.
During
the Chilean presidential inauguration in March, Préval,
South African President Thabo Mbeki, Brazil and
several other international players - such as
Argentina, France, and Chile - discussed
Aristide’s possible return and its likely
implications. Préval will thus have to find a
middle ground between Aristide’s domestic
supporters and opponents, while taking into
consideration the potential reactions of key
international actors, among them the U.S., Canada,
France, Brazil, Chile and Argentina, who fear that
Aristide’s return to Haiti would cause unnecessary
political turmoil and unrest, and could use the
return to justify sanctions.
Préval
in the global arena: A call for continued
international aid and responsible behavior
While not only initiating efforts domestically, Préval
has started to actively engage with the
international community, particularly regarding the
flow of international aid which is crucial to
building up Haiti’s economy. His efforts in this
area must be stellar, since the island nation has
historically been impoverished and dependent on -
and thus controlled by - foreign donors.
During
his predictable visit to the United States in late
March, Préval met with President Bush in Washington
to discuss financial assistance, and visit
institutions such as the United Nations - where he
requested the continuing presence of MINUSTAH (the
United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti); the
World Bank; the Organization of American States; the
Inter-American Development Bank; and the IMF, all
venues where he requested long-term development aid.
Préval
also paid a visit to Ottawa for a series of meetings
with Canadian officials, including Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, to remind the officials of the
importance of their country’s goods and assistance
to Haiti. In his conversations, Préval emphasized
the recognition of dual citizenship for the Haitian
Diaspora in Canada, and the need for foreign
investment and tourism in Haiti’s future, which
would undoubtedly lead to increased economic
development and more stable conditions in the
country. Prime Minister Harper promised continued
support of the Caribbean nation, indicating that the
relatively new Conservative Canadian administration
views Canadian financial assistance to Haiti as a
priority in the two countries’ relationship.
Ironically, during Préval’s visit to Ontario and
Quebec, Interim Prime Minister Gérard Latortue who
is to leave office on May 14, asked the Canadian
government to lift the travel ban on several former
Haitian officials (accused but not charged of human
rights abuses), stating “Help us, forget about
that... give a chance to all Haitians now to be able
to reconcile once again and be able to work
together,” according to the Canada-based
newsletter Embassy.
Beating
the Brush for Aid
Préval has also moved his diplomacy into new
international arenas, somewhat to the dismay of
Washington, which already warily associates him with
Aristide—who the State Department abominated. In
April, Préval visited Cuba and Venezuela, where he
discussed aid in health care, education, and
electricity. The Préval-Castro meetings were
particularly significant since the country is in
dire need of the doctors Cuba could provide, as well
as medical training for Haitian students in Cuba’s
universities. Following the Havana visit, Préval
had a 24-hour stay in Venezuela on April 24, where
he discussed with Chávez possible Venezuelan aid in
health and education, as well as Haiti’s entry
into Venezuela’s Petrocaribe program, which
provides poor Central American and Caribbean nations
with discounted or bartered oil. Assistance from
Cuba and Venezuela could play a key role in Préval’s
attempt to rebuild Haiti.
Importantly, Préval made his first visit to the
Dominican Republic in March, where he dialogued with
President Fernandez on the vitally important
immigration issues that dominate the relationship
between the neighboring countries. Préval then
continued to Brazil, where he met with Brazilian
president Luis Inacio “Lula” da Silva, to
discuss infrastructure projects, as well as thank
Brazil for its troop support in Haiti under the
Brazilian led UN mission MINUSTAH, later traveling
to Argentina and Chile.
Washington’s
Worries
Washington will, as always, be scrutinizing what is
happening on the island. Policymakers are
undoubtedly troubled by Préval’s ties to Aristide
and his decision to build relationships with such
“pink tide” countries as Venezuela. What the
U.S. mainly wants from Preval is to get Haiti off
its agenda as soon as possible and at the lowest
cost. It also will insist that Preval clamp down on
any revival of the “boat people” trying to
illegally enter this country.
This
is, of course, Washington’s primary concern, as a
renewed instability would lead to a higher number of
illegal Haitian immigrant boats floating towards
Florida’s shores, a problem Washington is eager to
avoid. This may give Préval some much needed
autonomy to formulate policies and build alliances
that, while untraditional, may ultimately benefit
Haiti. Thus, Préval’s attempts towards domestic,
as well as international cooperation, including
Cuban and Venezuelan aid to Haiti may not produce an
immediate backlash. For decades, until the present,
the State Department has been content to allow lower
policy standards, based on the working philosophy
that since it is only Haiti, the best need not be
required.
As
Florida Governor Jeb Bush prepares to lead a U.S.
delegation to Haiti for Préval’s official
inauguration on Sunday, unfortunately very few will
be watching the situation closely and carefully.