More on Haiti

Here is an excellent comment about what brought Haiti to the economic and political condition it is in now, from a blog called Lenin's Tomb:

"The wretched subjugation of Haiti by the 'international community', particularly since the multilateral anti-Lavalas coup in 2004, is angrily and movingly described by Peter Hallward in today's Guardian, and there is more here (the Tomb's coverage of the coup is here). The coup was promoted to advance the process of neoliberal capital accumulation, break the left and the unions, and break Famni Lavalas and the civil society organisations sustaining resistance. For years, UN 'peacekeepers' have slaughtered thousands of Haitians, and the residents have been put through rigged election procedures. Lavalas members, priests, and activists have been subject to political imprisonment and murder, some of them characterised as 'gang' members. This is all for the aid of sweatshop bosses such as Andy Apaid, and the multinationals principally based in the US and Canada that benefit enormously from the exploitation of Haitian labour. This process of capital accumulation is what has driven Haitians out of a devastated rural economy and into impoverished slums with a tinpot infrastructure, and left them vulnerable to this extraordinary catastrophe."

Not much else to say, except to point out the eternal verity that, in the modern world, these natural disasters are made immensely worse by decades of exploitation of the poor by the rich.
Of course, there will never be a second in which these people admit their culpability.

Comments

Paula F. said…
Wow. While I wouldn't mind accumulating a little capital myself, it wouldn't be at the expense of the poor, weak and friendless. I took Jesus at his word.

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