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diamond geezer
Mar 25, 2004, 06:02 PM
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=04/03/25/1537236

National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice has refused to appear before the 9-11 Commission to give sworn testimony. But she has been very busy on a different front: The situation in Haiti. Rice and other officials have very publicly expressed their anger at President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's return to the Western Hemisphere on March 15, after spending 2 weeks in the Central African Republic. The Haitian President is currently in Jamaica with his wife, Mildred, and their two young daughters. The Bush administration has characterized Aristide's return to the Caribbean as inflaming the situation in Haiti and has gone as far as to label his presence an incitement to violence. Aristide maintains that he was kidnapped as part of a US-orchestrated coup.

Just as the Aristides were settling into their temporary life in Jamaica, news broke that the 15-nation Caribbean Community-CARICOM, had sent a formal request to the government of Nigeria, asking them to host Aristide. Jamaica, CARICOM and the Nigerian government have all indicated that pressure was being put on them by Washington.

Randall Robinson, an author and founder of TransAfrica. He is a close friend of the Aristides. He was on the delegation that returned President Aristide to the Caribbean.

Transcription of Radio interview:

AMY GOODMAN: Randall Robinson joins us now from St. Kit's. Can you tell us exactly what is happening?

RANDALL ROBINSON: I hope that you can hear me better than I’m hearing you. I think I’ve heard enough to make out your question. I have learned from a White House source that Condoleezza Rice has pointedly threatened the Jamaican Government, telling it to expel President Aristide or face the consequences. The administration wants President Aristide out of the region. As this is a clear measure of how much broad support the president still enjoys as the democratically elected leader of Haiti inside the country, because the U.S. apparently views his mere presence in Jamaica as a threat to their control along with the thugs and the installed government in Haiti. Jamaica has not buckled. They did have discussions with the Nigerians who were pressured to grant this temporary asylum to President Aristide. President Aristide does not want to go Nigeria, and as made that plain enough and that is off. He remains, and will for the indefinite future in Jamaica, in spite of these clear threats from Condoleezza Rice made to the government of Jamaica.

JUAN GONZALEZ: Randall Robinson, what kind of specific pressure are you aware of that the U.S. Government is bringing on Jamaica?

RANDALL ROBINSON: I don't know that the specific actions that the U.S. would take, or were made, were spelled out. It was clear that Ms. Rice told the Jamaican Government that if Aristide was not expelled immediately, and anything happened to any American forces in Haiti, that the consequences of that would be exacted against a president or against Jamaica by the United States with full force. Now, one doesn't know what that means, but we know what America is capable of doing. It's abducted the President. It executed the coup. It took him to a country with which it has no relations, nor does any African country to speak of, that the state department warns all people not to go to. We brought him back to Jamaica, to his home region and the U.S., of course, has brought full weight of its authority upon Jamaica to have him expelled immediately. Hearing that his simple presence there would cause people in Haiti to rally to salvage their democracy.

JUAN GONZALEZ: The Associated Press reported yesterday that a summary execution of Aristide followers have continued to occur. There were four supposedly by Haitian police in Port-Au-Prince and an A.P. reporter, reported that in Cap-Haitien, he witnessed Louis Jodel Chamblain former FRAPH leader, actually putting people on trial and rendering verdicts even though there were French troops in Cap-Haitien.

RANDALL ROBINSON: The French and American troops are standing by while the summary executions are carried out. The Mayor, Jean Charles Moise of the town of Miro, which is very near Cap-Haitien, is in hiding now, and he has said that at least 50 people are killed by the thugs in Cap-Haitien a day now. All of this done with the sufferance with the French and American troops.

AMY GOODMAN: How do you know Randall Robinson that Condolezza Rice is the one who’s applying pressure to Jamaica to expel the Aristides.

RANDALL ROBINSON: My source in the White House named Condoleezza Rice.

AMY GOODMAN: And what has been the response of Jamaica. How is it that Aristide is not gone?

RANDALL ROBINSON: As I said, Jamaica has not buckled. Jamaica has made it clear that they have no plans to expel President Aristide. Jamaica deserves an enormous amount of credit. Prime Minister Patterson has been principled and brave. He recognizes, of course, that President Aristide was twice elected democratically, there were no questions about the elections, the last one he won with 94% of the vote. We all know that the country has been taken over by thugs, armed by the United States. This is a coup executed by America, a coup against democracy in Haiti. The CARICOM nations of course will stand shoulder to shoulder with Jamaica.

Once again, the US ****** on democracy.



Sayhey
Mar 25, 2004, 09:23 PM
Haiti is quickly disappearing of the media's radar. I would hope that some folks are forced to answer questions, not only about Aristide's departure, but also the decisions to cut off funding to the Haitian government in the years before and the funding behind the "rebels" - including where their arms came from. I too believe there is good reason to think this might have been a US sponsored coup against a democratically elected government. Even if the US did not plan it, it is clear that the support for democracy doesn't extend to the Haitian people in the eyes of the Bush administration.

I have tremendous respect for Randall Robinson's work and I'm glad to see the post, diamond geezer.

diamond geezer
Mar 25, 2004, 10:08 PM
Haiti is quickly disappearing of the media's radar

I think there is a tremendous overload of dodgy newsworthy stories at the moment. To fit then all in, networks would have to shorten the human interest and sports sections of the news, and we cant have that now, can we?

Maybe the networks are dancing to someone else's tune who don't want the questions asked?

Or maybe reporting the truth about the US's lip service to democracy is just unpalatable?

Thank God (or Gore) for the internet :-)

Cheers Sayhey

mactastic
Mar 25, 2004, 10:29 PM
Ah that liberal media. Good thing they are so liberal that they hold this administration to the fire consistently.

Sayhey
Mar 26, 2004, 01:08 AM
Ah that liberal media. Good thing they are so liberal that they hold this administration to the fire consistently.

On a few issues they have had their moments, but you're right in your sarcasm, they have been an extreme disappointment. Am I wrong or are they suffering still from their period as "embeds." If there ever was a more appropriate term for how the press has kissed this administration's rear for the last few years, I haven't heard it.

Thanatoast
Mar 26, 2004, 02:31 AM
Not that I trust this administration further than I could throw it, but...why would the US want the overthrow the government of Haiti? :confused:

skunk
Mar 26, 2004, 05:32 AM
Not that I trust this administration further than I could throw it, but...why would the US want the overthrow the government of Haiti? :confused:
Dirt-cheap labour pool, compliant government?

mactastic
Mar 26, 2004, 09:16 AM
Not that I trust this administration further than I could throw it, but...why would the US want the overthrow the government of Haiti? :confused:

We need a bastion of democracy in the Carribean?

skunk
Mar 26, 2004, 09:24 AM
We need a bastion of democracy in the Carribean?
Anywhere south of Canada would be good...

Sayhey
Mar 26, 2004, 09:52 AM
Not that I trust this administration further than I could throw it, but...why would the US want the overthrow the government of Haiti? :confused:

For a number of reasons. With this administration it could be just because the Clinton administration helped bring Aristide back. However, I think the major reason was that Aristide's politics were too far to the left and he was at odds with the "traditional" allies of cutthroats and murderers that we have trained and supported. Some of the folks in this administration looked on Aristide as a potential Castro or Chavez ally that had to be gotten out of office. The wishes of the Haitian people be damned. The stupid thing is they have succeeded in making many other countries in the region question the rhetoric of US support for democracy and look to see if this isn't just a repeat of the type of gunboat diplomacy and US interference the ruled the day for decades.

FatTony
Mar 26, 2004, 10:49 AM
Not that I trust this administration further than I could throw it, but...why would the US want the overthrow the government of Haiti? :confused:

As I understand it, Aristide wanted to raise the minimum wage to something like a couple of dollars per day.

zimv20
Mar 26, 2004, 12:42 PM
As I understand it, Aristide wanted to raise the minimum wage to something like a couple of dollars per day.
fwiw, it's going to be impossible for me to read your posts in a voice other than Joe Mantegna's character.