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- <text id=94TT0968>
- <title>
- Jul. 25, 1994: To Our Readers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 25, 1994 The Strange New World of the Internet
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- TO OUR READERS, Page 4
- Elizabeth Valk Long, President
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> For the second time in seven months, TIME's Edward Barnes,
- Cathy Booth and Bernard Diederich are in Haiti waiting for the
- Americans to arrive. Last October the U.S.S. Harlan County,
- trying to land with a U.N.-sponsored team of military and police
- advisers, turned back after anti-U.S. mobs demonstrated at the
- port. This time Barnes, betting things will be different, has
- rented a room in a "strategically located" brothel with a roof
- that should command a good view of the first attack. Miami bureau
- chief Booth spent several days last week at the army's decrepit
- general quarters, trying to glean what plans the country's military
- rulers might be making--either to avoid an invasion by finally
- stepping down or to organize their troops to resist. Diederich
- touched based with longtime sources in and around Port-au-Prince,
- looking for cracks in the army's support.
- </p>
- <p> TIME's team has traveled hundreds of miles within Haiti and
- talked with dozens of Haitians over the past five weeks. Barnes
- slogged by foot and dugout canoe in the south, tracking down
- rumors of whole villages that had perished as desperate people
- tried to flee by sea. Booth set off for the ruggedly beautiful
- north coast, looking for Haitians who had reportedly organized
- a resistance movement in support of exiled President Jean-Bertrand
- Aristide. "The divisions are as profound in the countryside
- as in Port-au-Prince," says Booth. "It's hard to see how the
- pro-military and pro-Aristide groups will ever find a middle
- ground."
- </p>
- <p> Amid their grueling daily rounds, in which comforts are few
- and harassment of foreign journalists is growing--friskings
- are common, and Barnes has twice been detained by police--the reporters feel a dispiriting sense of deja vu. "For older
- Haitians," says Diederich, who once ran the newspaper Haiti
- Sun, "the current crisis is like a rerun of an old horror movie."
- Diederich had just been expelled from Haiti when "Papa Doc"
- Duvalier thwarted President Kennedy's attempt to remove him
- from power in 1963. "The lesson of Papa Doc's defying the U.S.
- has not been lost on those who hold power in Haiti today," adds
- Diederich. Barnes, Booth and Diederich have all reread Graham
- Greene's 1966 novel The Comedians and, says Barnes, "are amazed
- at how little things have changed." Duvalier's feared secret
- police, the Tontons Macoutes, may be called attaches now, but
- Haiti itself remains Greene's "evil slum floating a few miles
- from Florida," where dead bodies discovered along the road are
- more than an occasional occurrence.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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