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- <text id=94TT1372>
- <title>
- Oct. 10, 1994: Haiti:Walking a Thin Line
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 10, 1994 Black Renaissance
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 42
- Walking a Thin Line
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Edward Barnes, Cathy Booth and Bernard Diederich/Port-au-Prince
- and Nina Burleigh and Mark Thompson/ Washington
- </p>
- <p> When Evans Paul, the youthful mayor of Port-au-Prince who has
- been in hiding from the Haitian junta for the past three years,
- emerged to reclaim his office last Thursday, he brought along
- a kind of personal insurance policy: 40 American MPs and soldiers
- from the U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division. Under their watchful
- gaze, the man who is second in popularity to President Jean-Bertrand
- Aristide was able to deliver an emotional speech celebrating
- the end of military rule and admonishing his fellow Haitians
- to exercise patience, mercy and restraint. His only rhetorical
- barb was reserved for junta leader Lieut. General Raoul Cedras.
- "Bye lakou blanche!" he declared. Rough translation: "Hit the
- road!"
- </p>
- <p> Bold words. Too bold, perhaps. Barely two hours after the mayor's
- address, an explosive device was tossed from a seaside warehouse,
- tearing into a crowd of several thousand celebrating Paul's
- return. The blast killed six, injured another 43 and sparked
- a rampage by furious Aristide supporters. After U.S. soldiers
- prevented the mob from venting its wrath on several men suspected
- of throwing the bomb, the crowd turned on the warehouse itself.
- And in a sample of what rich Haitians have predicted could engulf
- the entire country, the throng stripped the building bare. They
- took everything: steel drums, bags of cement, iron bars, even
- coils of wire--but this time no Americans intervened.
- </p>
- <p> The melees underscored the volatile state of affairs in the
- capital and the precariousness of American control, despite
- an overwhelming military superiority. On Friday hours of looting
- and a bloody street battle marred a democracy march marking
- the three-year anniversary of Aristide's ouster. As gunmen loyal
- to the military junta fired into the lines of marchers near
- the headquarters of the paramilitary Front for the Advancement
- and Progress of Haiti, or FRAPH, dozens of militiamen armed
- with machetes and sticks fought viciously with Aristide supporters.
- By the end of the day, at least six had died and 20 more were
- wounded. This time too U.S. troops made no effort to break up
- the violent clashes and stood by as Haitians looted two warehouses
- they believed belonged to the police.
- </p>
- <p> By Saturday, the attaches' first brutal attacks had succeeded
- in violently dismantling three separate pro-democracy marches.
- Gunmen swaggered through the streets of the capital, boasting
- that they would kill anyone who tried to shut them down. Such
- eruptions of violence dispelled the spin, confidently put forward
- by one Clinton Administration official, that everything was
- going well and unfolding according to a White House plan "adopted
- months before we went ashore." Americans were confused by successive
- scenes of trouble in Haiti: sometimes U.S. soldiers stepped
- in, sometimes they did not. The true nature of American involvement
- remained hazy as the troops struggled to keep their balance
- between bitterly opposing camps in a dangerously uneasy climate,
- and the Administration tried to gauge what Congress would tolerate.
- As U.S. lawmakers began debating setting a date for withdrawal,
- the disorder offered a graphic reminder of how vulnerable Bill
- Clinton's policy is when mayhem erupts in Haiti.
- </p>
- <p> At the heart of the American occupation is a murky ambivalence
- about what it means, how it will be accomplished and when it
- will be over. No matter how crisply the White House tried to
- frame the answers to these questions, events last week proved
- that the rules of the game were being fashioned on the ground
- on a day-by-day, case-by-case basis. The improvisational approach
- only seemed to force Washington into an ever deepening commitment.
- On Thursday Pentagon spokesman Dennis Boxx announced that rather
- than withdrawing American forces, the U.S. was actually increasing
- its troop presence. Together with the troops at sea, the total
- number serving in the Haitian campaign--some 28,800--eclipses
- the 26,000 Americans who invaded Panama in 1989 and the 25,800
- sent to Somalia. "I'm very concerned," a senior military officer
- said at week's end, "that the mission's creeping, and we don't
- even know it yet."
- </p>
- <p> Yet the ugly snapshots from Port-au-Prince did not convey the
- full picture of the occupation. Despite chaos in the streets,
- U.S. troops secured one objective after another with clocklike
- precision. On Monday, as Clinton announced he was lifting the
- bulk of the U.S. economic sanctions, American MPs moved into
- five of the capital's most notorious police precincts. That
- same day, the Coast Guard returned the first installment of
- what is hoped will be a reverse wave of returning refugees.
- Then on Tuesday, U.S. forces secured Haiti's simple white parliament
- building, reopening it to its democratically elected legislators.
- The next morning, amid much backslapping between old friends
- and hostile looks dividing old adversaries, 11 Senators and
- 54 Deputies gathered to deliberate on the terms of an amnesty
- for the men who had forced many of them to spend the past three
- years in hiding or in exile. Progress was slow: by week's end,
- no one was sure an agreement could be passed by the Oct. 15
- deadline.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, out in the countryside the disintegration of the
- Haitian military left a yawning power vacuum. In the north,
- around the country's second largest city of Cap Haitien, civil
- authority virtually collapsed following the fire fight on Sept.
- 24 in which a company of Marines cut down 10 Haitian police
- officers. Since then, the army and police have evaporated throughout
- whole sections of the region.
- </p>
- <p> For the vast majority of Haitians who support Aristide, freedom
- from the hated military was something to be welcomed joyfully.
- In Cap Haitien, while residents celebrated the return of electricity
- for the first time in three years--courtesy of the Marines--only one uniformed Haitian soldier remained at his post.
- The rest of the garrison--from Lieut. Colonel Claudel Josaphat,
- the feared and brutal regional military commander, to telephone
- repairmen who owed their jobs to the de facto government--had fled. Shortly after U.S. forces arrived, a delegation of
- local dignitaries approached Marine commander Colonel Thomas
- Jones. "I guess you are the new mayor of Cap Haitien," their
- spokesman announced. Asked what were the capabilities of the
- remaining local government in the nearby town of Gonaives, one
- American captain explained: "They could consume oxygen and occupy
- space," but not much more.
- </p>
- <p> The breach left by the departing authorities forced U.S. units
- to devise jury-rigged solutions to local problems never anticipated
- by the planners in Washington: stamping papers for the sale
- of a pig; issuing market permits; settling marital spats. In
- Gonaives, Captain Edmond Barton, head of a Special Forces unit,
- was asked to mediate a dispute over who owned a bicycle. "Every
- time I deal with someone in the village, I get criticized for
- taking sides," said Barton. "We try to show them we are being
- fair, but everyone complains."
- </p>
- <p> The most surprising aspect of the collapse of civil authority
- outside the capital was the restraint exhibited by Aristide's
- supporters. In Cap Haitien, several attache thugs were escorted
- safely through an angry crowd by Aristide men, who warned that
- reprisals might be used as an excuse to block the return of
- their exiled President. The captives were passed over the razor-wire
- barricades and safely delivered into the hands of American sentries.
- </p>
- <p> The little violence that did arise was targeted not at the minions
- of the military junta, but its symbols. At the main army barracks
- in Cap Haitien, crowds stripped police and army buildings as
- if they were exorcising an evil spirit. For most of the week,
- bonfires fed by old arrest records and prison sentencing memos
- left a dull blue haze over the town's courtyards. Outside the
- home of the region's despised military commander, his band's
- tubas, trombones and horns were piled up to form a barrier in
- the middle of the street, then littered with thousands of pages
- of musical scores. "It was their music," said one looter. "We
- don't need to hear it anymore."
- </p>
- <p> Crowds also made a point of assisting in disarming the population.
- In the capital, where the U.S. was offering $50 for handguns
- and $300 for mortars, only 280 guns were collected. But up north,
- hundreds of weapons were spontaneously dumped at the feet of
- U.S. troops. In the manner of a religious offering, crowds brought
- in everything from vintage World War II rifles to ceremonial
- swords. At one American checkpoint, people even turned over
- two green hoods used to cover prisoners' heads during beatings.
- "They just hand them over and leave," said an amazed Special
- Forces officer. "They don't want guns turned on them again,
- I guess. The people are trying to do our job for us."
- </p>
- <p> While U.S. troops appeared delighted at the level of good behavior,
- supporters of the Haitian military remained terrified by the
- latent potential for popular uprising. They are haunted by a
- vision of wild rampages in which mobs seek retribution by destroying
- the homes of their oppressors. Those fears were only exacerbated
- by the Americans' success at squelching the Haitian military,
- which has tended to embolden pro-Aristide forces. In several
- cases, the sheer presence of American troops has inspired crowds
- to attack stragglers from the Haitian military. To discourage
- this, the U.S. has actually cut the size of its patrols in some
- neighborhoods.
- </p>
- <p> The disorder in Port-au-Prince underscored the need for some
- serious policing of the streets where local forces have been
- told to hang back. On Thursday former New York City police commissioner
- Raymond Kelly took charge of the 1,000-strong international
- monitoring force in Puerto Rico, which the U.S. is sending to
- Haiti to restrain and retrain local authorities: 300 monitors
- were to arrive by the weekend. But it will be months before
- the new Haitian police can be counted on to enforce civic order
- fairly. In the meantime, the U.S. wants to make clear that it
- will not tolerate mob violence, but is uncertain how to convey
- the message.
- </p>
- <p> The Pentagon continues to worry that G.I.s will be forced into
- the gap as Haitians fight one another. An unreleased army report
- paints a bleak picture of the future, calling the occupation
- a "prescription for disaster." Author Donald Schulz, a Caribbean
- expert at the Army War College, writes, "We can train and otherwise
- try to professionalize the Haitian military and police, but
- as long as the dominant culture places a premium on authoritarianism,
- dishonesty and the use of force, the new military and police
- will eventually slip back into the patterns of the old."
- </p>
- <p> The White House adamantly maintains that despite the bloody
- incidents, the operation is proceeding well. One official even
- said the Administration prefers the current situation, with
- all its tenuousness and unease, to the alternative--troops
- that blasted their way into Haiti saddled with running the entire
- country. "I would much rather be where we are," he declared,
- "than where we could have been."
- </p>
- <p> Reassuring? Not really. The Administration seemed publicly determined
- to hold steady as last week's mayhem was beamed back to the
- states on CNN cameras, but some senior officials privately expressed
- doubts. "There is no question," admitted one, "that we are going
- to be tested every day in our ability to try to provide order
- and move the nation to a place where it can deal with these
- issues on its own." One need only glimpse the recurrent mob
- scenes in Port-au-Prince to realize that the future of democracy
- in Haiti--and with it, perhaps, the success of the Clinton
- presidency--now hangs in a delicate balance.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-