Hispaniola Rising: How
the U.S. Coup in Venezuela Is
Taking
Root in Haiti and the Dominican Republic
- Ariel Fornari -
TML Editor's Note: The Haitian opposition is
calling
for the resignation of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse over
wrecking of the economy and corruption centred around
embezzlement by
Haitian oligarchs and their patrons from Venezuela's PetroCaribe
oil-discount program. This was a program that benefited the poor
and
provided funds for development of a self-sufficient economy.
Since last year, Haitians have been demanding an accounting of
the
PetroCaribe money, which was supposed to be invested in social
programs
for the poor after the country's 2010 earthquake, as shown in the
above
photo from October 17, 2018.
The United States threatened various OAS members like Haiti, El
Salvador, and the Dominican Republic, members of CARICOM, with
diplomatic and financial action if they voted in favour of
non-interference and respect for Venezuela's sovereignty. The
Haitian
government capitulated to the U.S. dictate and voted against
Venezuela
at an OAS meeting in Jannuary, arousing the fury of Haitians
still
further.
***
For more than a decade Venezuela has aided
the
governments of Haiti and the Dominican Republic through a
preferential system known as Petrocaribe, and the people of those
nations are not taking their governments' support for the US coup
in Venezuela lightly.
As Judas betrayed the Son of Man with a kiss for
20
pieces of
silver, the institutionally corrupt governments in Port-au-Prince
and Santo Domingo have written another sad chapter in their
nation's history.
Ironically, it was Venezuela that helped to
develop the
island's energy infrastructure in recent years. A key part of
this is the REFIDOMSA oil refinery in the Dominican Republic
which the Venezuelan government helped to develop and partially
owns, and which has also been used to help alleviate increased
fuel demands and shortages in Haiti.
For more than a decade Venezuela has aided the
governments of
Haiti and the Dominican Republic through a preferential system
known as Petrocaribe, which provided subsidized crude oil prices
to meet the countries critical energy demands. The Petrocaribe
oil agreement, allowed for governments to pay only 60 per cent of
the oil shipments they purchase from Venezuela. The remaining 40
per
cent could be financed over 25 years at 1 per cent interest, as
long as oil prices stayed above $40 per barrel. This allowed for
tremendous savings, and money that (according to the agreement)
was supposed to be used for socially beneficial purposes.
Countries such as Nicaragua, Jamaica, Cuba, and
many
islands
in the eastern Caribbean have successfully utilized Petrocaribe
funds and other Venezuelan support mechanisms, investing in vital
infrastructure, education, health care, and have used the funding
to avoid austerity deals with the IMF and other international
financial institutions. Corrupt politicians in Hispaniola,
though, whose regimes are closely aligned with Washington, have
by contrast become well-known for robbing many of the funds meant
for the social needs of their population.
For this reason, the date of January 10, 2019,
will go
down
in the historical memory of the Dominican and Haitian peoples, as
an ignominious reminder of the historically aberrant role of the
Organization of American States (OAS), when that body was used as
a front by neo-conservative policymakers in Washington. It was on
that date that the governments of Haiti and the Dominican
Republic voted to no longer recognize Venezuela's legitimately
elected president.
The people of Hispaniola, on both sides of the
island,
are
waking up. They are coming to understand how the political orders
in their countries are being managed by Washington and how local
corrupt elites are stealing the solidarity funds sent by
Venezuela while failing to meet the needs of the local
population. Haitians and Dominicans are organizing protests,
meeting at homes and schools to discuss what is happening,
learning on social media and through news spread over Whats App
and Facebook. Hispaniola's betrayal of Venezuela will not be
taken lightly.
The people of Hispaniola know better. They know
that it
was
the U.S., not Venezuela, that twice invaded and occupied the
Dominican Republic; they know of the multiple coups and
occupations that the U.S. has carried out in Haiti. The Dominican
collective memory still bears the deep scars of the over 2,000
Dominicans that perished during the invasion of Santo Domingo by
the U.S. marines in April, 1965. (Dominican historians calculate
that the actual figure of deaths including civilians and
military during the 1965 invasion and occupation, could have
been as high as 5,000). Haitians still march annually protesting
the 1991 and 2004 coups d'état, which cost the lives of so
many thousands, as many human rights studies verified, such as a
paper in the Lancet Medical
Journal
that found that upward of
8,000 people were killed as a result of the 2004 coup and
pro-U.S.
paramilitary violence. A decade prior it was estimated that more
than 10,000 were killed in the wake of the 1991 coup.
We need also to remember how the U.S. supported
the
ruthless
Trujillo and Duvalierist dictatorships. We must not forget the
first U.S. invasion and occupation of Haiti and the Dominican
Republic, that took place in the early 20th century during the
Era of Gunboat Diplomacy in the Central-American and Caribbean
Basin.
It is against this compelling and stark
historical
background, that we are confronted again with tumultuous events
in the region, when the U.S. is once more employing the infamous
and
wholly discredited OAS, in its theatrical charade to lend
an air of "legitimacy" to the recent lopsided vote against
Venezuela. While 14 of the CARICOM states, Mexico, Italy,
Ireland, Greece, Uruguay, Cuba, Russia, Turkey, China, Iran,
India, South Africa, and nearly all of the states in mother
Africa continue to recognize the elected government, the U.S. has
found support from its right-wing and neo-liberal allied
governments across Latin America, Europe, and in Israel.
Shockingly, the Dominican Republic and Haiti joined with the U.S.
in denouncing Bolivarian Venezuela.
This eerily reminds some of us old enough to
remember,
of
those similarly turbulent days in the hemisphere during 1962,
when an OAS meeting took place in a beach resort known as Punta
del Este, Uruguay as Cuba was removed from the body. It was at
that OAS meeting that the legendary Foreign Minister of Cuba Dr.
Raul Roa forever baptized that odious organization as "The
Ministry of Yankee Colonies."
Dominicans Won't Accept Their Government
Stabbing
Caracas
in the Back
Precisely because of these historical realities
that
transpired in Hispaniola and the region, vis-à-vis the
"Colossus of the North," the popular movements and social
organizations of the Dominican Republic have again assumed their
vanguard roles as national leaders, mobilizing throughout the
country, reminding the people of the historic legacy serving as
background to current events, once again building up the people's
collective consciousness, illustrating that these latest events
have not happened in a vacuum. Within this context, a broad
coalition of popular movements and organizations, scheduled a
vigil on February 5, 2019, in Santiago, the heart of the northern
Cibao region of the country, comprising 13 key provinces which
have played a determining role in this country's history, going
back all the way to its independence in the mid 19th
Century.
The deep solidarity bonds of Venezuela towards
the
Dominican
nation can be traced further back in time, when in 1930 the first
outflow of Dominican exiles began arriving in the "Patria de
Bolivar," fleeing the U.S. backed Trujillo's dictatorship.
Professor Juan Bosch, a legendary figure of Dominican history and
who
in 1962 became the first democratically elected
President after the fall of Trujillo, arrived in this first
contingent of Dominican exiles in Venezuela. Bolivar's homeland
in turn became the safe harbour of patriotic activism against
Trujillo, by the Dominican diaspora. This anti-Trujillo militancy
from Venezuela became so intense, that the "Satrap of the
Caribbean" as Trujillo was sometimes known, ordered an
assassination attempt against President Betancourt of Venezuela
in 1960. The Dictator Trujillo was finally assassinated in
1961.
After the fall of Trujillo and the ascent to
power in
Dominican Republic of another lackey of U.S.
imperialism -- President Joaquin Balaguer, whose elections in
1966
were known to have been financed by the U.S. Department of State
according to declassified files -- over 2,000 Dominican
combatants
that participated in the Constitutionalist Revolution of 1965
arrived in Venezuela. Afterwards during the re-election of
Balaguer in 1971-72, hundreds of Dominicans also migrated to
Venezuela. The situation in D.R. then became so untenable for
many Dominicans due to Balaguer's fierce persecution of
opponents, it is estimated upwards of 60,000 of them migrated to
Venezuela. Eventually, the Dominican diaspora in Venezuela became
the largest migration inflow from the insular Caribbean, up to
the ascent to power of Chávez, at which time Cubans began
to
increasingly arrive in Venezuela, composing in part the core of
Chávez's "Mision Barrio Adentro" massive health clinics
projects,
in the poor neighborhoods of the country.
In summary, the brotherly hospitality and
solidarity
afforded to Dominicans in Venezuela, throughout 20thCentury
migratory periods, along with the aforementioned fact of
Venezuela's consistent solidarity with Dominican Republic through
the generous Petrocaribe oil agreement, this honorable background
stands in stark contrast to D.R.'s "Kiss of Judas" vote at the
OAS against Venezuela, on January 10, 2019. This "Kiss of Judas"
comes at a time when Bolivarian Venezuela faces a mounting
economic war undertaken by the U.S. and its allies, compounded by
a huge decline in the international price of oil.
With Dominicans aware of their history and
learning the
truth
about the empire's actions in the region, in the coming months,
it appears very likely that the elite consensus in Dominican
politics will begin to be shaken, as [President] Danilo Medina
faces a
crisis
of legitimacy.
Jovenel Moïse's Treason and the Oncoming
Tidal
Wave
of Resistance
It was Haitians who stood out within our concert
of
colonized Caribbean nations, as the people which decisively
proved in the field of battle, that the very best of Europe could
be defeated in war when it finally gained independence from
France in 1804. Venezuela's and Haiti's history is also
intertwined, when in 1816 Pétion gave arms, money and men
to
Bolivar, for the cause of independence of Venezuela, which in
turn eventually liberated Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Bolivia
from imperial Spain.
Sign seen at weekly Haitian protest against
the
theft of PetroCaribe funds, October 2018.
|
More recently, during the second Presidency of
Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, Venezuela was one of the only countries which kept
providing financial support to the Haitian government as it was
embargoed and undermined by the George Bush administration.
Furthermore, it was Chávez who was the only Latin American
leader
who forcefully denounced the 2004 coup against Aristide.
Afterwards, during the Préval and then the right-wing
Martelly
and Moïse
regimes, Venezuela continued its unconditional
solidarity with the people of Haiti, through its Petrocaribe
agreement, as well as providing financial assistance for
infrastructure projects. Venezuela has never required the
conditionalities, nor the political alignment, for its aid, as
have the supranational agencies and countries of the north. A
true friend.
Regarding Venezuela and Haiti we must remember,
that
during Chávez's tenure and following Haiti's catastrophic
2010
earthquake, the leader of the Bolivarian Revolution soon
thereafter announced Venezuela would "write off" Haiti's
undisclosed oil debts. At an ALBA (Bolivarian Alliance for the
Americas) foreign ministers' meeting after the earthquake,
Chávez
remarked that "it wasn't Haiti that had a debt with Venezuela,
but just the opposite Venezuela had a debt with that nation." He
also mentioned that an initial donation of $10 million would be
disbursed to Haiti for emergency energy needs, along with an
additional $100 million "for starters" towards infrastructure
projects. Additionally, Chávez mentioned, one part of ALBA
assistance to Haiti would consist of fuel distribution via
"mobile service stations" to be up and running within a few
weeks. The ALBA plan of aid for Haiti also included support for
such sectors as agriculture production, food imports and
distribution, and immigration amnesty for Haitians living
illegally in the bloc's member-states. At that time also, Cuba
and Venezuela sent assistance and aid workers to Haiti within
days of the magnitude-7.0 earthquake that left an estimated
150,000-200,000 dead and more than a million people homeless.
To illustrate that unique internationalist
relationship
between Venezuela and Haiti, we must witness the Venezolana de
Television report of Chávez's trip to Haiti in 2007,
exemplifying
the close emotional bond between these two Caribbean nations,
which Chávez in great measure revived as he recuperated
its
historic memory jogging openly with the peoples of Cité
Soleil
and Bel Air through the streets of Port-au-Prince. In this
report, you will witness the incredible feat of Chávez
leaving
his vehicle, as he actually joins the joyful masses in
Port-au-Prince,
which are jogging in unison along his motorcade. On the
other side of the historical spectrum, when Nixon as Vice
President visited Venezuela in 1958 the total opposite occurred
at that time. Instead of joyful crowds awaiting Nixon, enraged
Venezuelans violently assaulted his limousine, manifesting the
people's rebuke of the U.S.'s close collaboration with the
ruthless dictatorship of Perez Jimenez, which had recently
ended.
As Moïse's unpopular government has been
caught up
in
corruption scandals and as complaints grow over the worsening
economic situation and a lack of government support for the poor,
in recent months the USPGN (Moïse's own personal security
forces) took part in a violent massacre targeting an
anti-government slum. With Moïse facing mass protests his
government increasingly takes its cues from Washington.
"No need for threats, I won't vote for
Venezuela!"
|
With regards to Jovenel Moïse's governemnt's
treasonous
vote against Venezuela at the OAS, another of its aberrant
dimensions was its diametrical position vis-à-vis the
Caribbean Community (CARICOM), of which Haiti is a member.
CARICOM's position has been unequivocal in contravention to the
virtually neocolonial position of OAS Secretary General Almagro,
who by
all reasonable standards has become a virtual mouthpiece of Uncle
Sam at the "Ministry of Yankee Colonies." CARICOM on the one hand
recognizes the legitimacy of President Maduro of Venezuela, while
the OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro has recognized the
so-called "self-proclaimed" interim President of Venezuela, Juan
Guaido.
Haiti has long been in the crosshairs of the
Empire and
its
local proxies. In recent years top elites have sought to
restructure the county's economy and political scene. This has
come after the U.S. and its allies have essentially neutralized
the country's sovereignty and independence, heavily
influencing, installing regimes, or supporting political
processes that relied on heavy vote suppression and years of
political disenfranchisement (such as in 2016 with one the lowest
percentages of voter participation in the world). This is the
same unpopular and corrupt regime, which has been the subject
of massive nationwide protests against its misuse of Venezuela's
Petrocaribe funds, starting on August, 2018, and which
continually burst out throughout the following months and into
February, 2019.
These protests were practically made invisible by
Western
mainstream media, even as their brutal repression has been well
documented by citizen journalists and local grassroots
groups.
Hispaniola Rising!
In spite of the backstabbing vote of the corrupt
Dominican and Haitian administration's against Venezuela at the
OAS, the people of Hispaniola's solidarity with Venezuela has
been manifest in many ways.
Huge marches backed by many grassroots groups and
Aristide's
Fanmi Lavalas party have called for an end to the foreign
occupation and new sovereign elections, while a smaller
opposition party Pitit Dessalin has planned demonstrations in
support of the legitimacy of President Maduro. Already Haitian
paramilitary and police forces are being used to brutally attack
these demonstrations.
Meanwhile, on the other side of Hispaniola, on
February
17,
2019, a massive demonstration in support of Venezuela is
scheduled to take place, at the Parque Independencia of Santo
Domingo, Dominican Republic. Student groups and activist circles
across the country are being mobilized and are coming to
understand the threat that Trump and his neo-con allies
present.
Mass demonstration in support of President Maduro and the
Bolivarian
Revolution at Parque Independencia in Santo Domingo,
February 17, 2019.
In view of all the aforementioned, this writer
while
not an
expert on geopolitics or history, by virtue of the fact of having
been born in the Caribbean, and having closely observed its
regional history since childhood and comprising many decades, I
have reasonably concluded that this recent crisis between
Venezuela and the Empire (or the "Colossus of the North"),
could perhaps be opening a new threshold in the correlation of
forces in the hemisphere, to the point where we could almost
start leaning towards the conclusion, that perhaps the United
States of America is no longer the absolute master of this
hemisphere, say as it was the case prior to the Cuban Revolution
of 1959.
What we are witnessing now are key nations such
as
Venezuela
deciding to chart a course in favor of thier own people,
implementing the re-foundation of the nation-state, while further
steering away from the imperial diktat. At the same time, it is
obvious that the Empire while commencing its decline, still
exerts plenty of hemispheric muscle, as the treacherous OAS vote
of Haiti and Dominican Republic has shown, in spite of
Venezuela's committed and honorable solidarity record with these
two sister nations. Informing the younger generations about the
history of the U.S. empire in the region, about the role of soft
power in the media, and what is happening around the region today
is vital. Also vital are creating new bonds and working to unify
popular sectors to oppose the plans of Washington and their
clients, to once again build south-south bonds and regional
development from below.
This article was published in
Volume 49 Number 6 - February
23,
2019
Article Link:
Hispaniola Rising: How
the U.S. Coup in Venezuela Is
Taking
Root in Haiti and the Dominican Republic - Ariel Fornari
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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