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- <text id=91TT2307>
- <title>
- Oct. 14, 1991: Haiti:One Coup Too Many
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Oct. 14, 1991 Jodie Foster:A Director Is Born
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 34
- HAITI
- One Coup Too Many
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Haiti's soldiers fail to reckon with George Bush's determination
- to preserve--maybe even restore--democratically elected
- leaders
- </p>
- <p>By Bruce W. Nelan--Reported by Bernard Diederich/Port-au-Prince
- and Christopher Ogden/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Even if the world has not fully achieved a peaceful new
- order, its tolerance for political mugging is declining
- dramatically. A 28-nation coalition sent that message last
- February when it drove the Iraqi invaders out of Kuwait. Then
- thousands of Soviet citizens, supported by democratic countries
- around the globe, physically blocked the August takeover in
- Moscow.
- </p>
- <p> Last week, after an old-fashioned coup ousted Haitian
- President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the entire western hemisphere
- focused its outrage on the brazen military bosses in
- Port-au-Prince. The Americas were not prepared to let Haiti's
- military men get away with it. Their takeover, White House
- spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said bluntly, "will not succeed."
- </p>
- <p> This coup, which sent Haiti's first freely elected
- President into exile after eight months in office, was
- particularly galling to the U.S. and the Organization of
- American States. The OAS had concluded at a meeting in Chile
- only four months ago that all 34 of its members were now
- democracies. To protect their legitimate governments--some of
- them shaky--from possible overthrow by military plotters, the
- organization's foreign ministers were authorized to "adopt any
- measures deemed appropriate" to reverse future coups.
- </p>
- <p> After rampaging Haitian soldiers opened fire on street
- crowds and threatened to kill Aristide, a 38-year-old priest,
- Venezuela's President Carlos Andres Perez sent a plane to fly
- him to safety. Perez offered Aristide refuge in Caracas and said
- his country would be ready to take part in "the severest of
- actions" to re-establish a legitimate government in Haiti.
- </p>
- <p> In Washington, George Bush judged the Haitian coup a
- throwback to the violent old days and a violation of the rules
- he envisions for a new world order. "I'm very worried about it,"
- he said. "Here's a whole hemisphere that's moving the democratic
- way, and along comes Haiti now, overthrowing an elected
- government." When the old Stalinists made their power play in
- Moscow two months ago, Bush observed that "coups can fail." He
- intends to ensure the same outcome this time.
- </p>
- <p> Bush ordered an immediate cutoff of the U.S. aid program
- for Haiti, which was to provide $85 million in 1991 and $90
- million in 1992. The European Community followed suit,
- suspending a $148 million aid package, and France, Japan and
- Canada halted bilateral programs totaling about $77 million.
- </p>
- <p> But Haitians living in the U.S. demanded stronger action,
- including armed intervention to restore Aristide to the
- presidential palace. Rioters in Miami's "Little Haiti" built
- bonfires and threw bottles at police. In New York City, several
- thousand Haitians demonstrated outside U.N. headquarters.
- </p>
- <p> Calls for armed intervention carried little appeal for
- U.S. decision makers. Gunboat diplomacy was long Washington's
- way of dealing with Latin America, but it is part of the past
- Bush now wants to overcome. "I am disinclined to use American
- force," he said. "We've got a big history of American force in
- this hemisphere, and so we've got to be very careful about
- that."
- </p>
- <p> After the Pentagon announced that it had sent a few
- hundred Marines to Guantanamo Bay naval base in case the 15,000
- American citizens in Haiti had to be evacuated, spokesman Pete
- Williams quickly explained that it was only a precaution. The
- U.S. had "absolutely no interest" in using force, he said, and
- added, "I don't think we are going to have to carry out an
- evacuation."
- </p>
- <p> Clashes between mutinous troops and Aristide's supporters
- had left as many as 100 dead in the first few hours of the
- coup, and Western diplomats believe the final death toll could
- be in the hundreds. The streets turned quiet after bands of
- soldiers began patrolling in unmarked cars, their rifles
- protruding from the windows. Haitians mounted a de facto general
- strike even before Prime Minister Rene Preval, who is in hiding,
- sent out the call for one. "No one is going to work until Titid
- returns," a taxi driver said, using Aristide's affectionate
- nickname.
- </p>
- <p> Just what action would be required to reverse the coup was
- the question addressed by an emergency session of the OAS in
- Washington. Aristide flew to the U.S. capital and urged the
- hemisphere's assembled foreign ministers to clamp enough
- nonmilitary pressure on Haiti to restore him to office. He
- suggested sending a delegation to Port-au-Prince to tell the
- army chiefs, led by Brigadier General Raoul Cedras, an Aristide
- appointee, "that they must immediately leave the presidential
- palace" or face total isolation. For his part, Cedras claimed
- he had stepped in only to quiet rebellious troops in what had
- begun as a rank-and-file revolt.
- </p>
- <p> Precisely how the coup got rolling is still unclear, but
- the army left no doubt it had been unhappy with what it saw as
- Aristide's high-handedness. It had demanded that Cedras and
- other senior officers be confirmed by parliament and that
- Aristide disband a new 50-man presidential guard intended to
- serve under his direct command. The army also accused Aristide
- of arranging the execution last week of Roger Lafontant, a
- former leader of the hated Tontons Macoutes, who was jailed for
- a coup attempt last January.
- </p>
- <p> In Port-au-Prince last week, there was scant evidence of
- who was in charge. The power vacuum was visible at military
- headquarters, where a handful of soldiers gazed at Cable News
- Network and a burly naval officer was watching Poltergeist II.
- He had no idea where Cedras or his aides might be.
- </p>
- <p> At the OAS meeting in Washington, meanwhile, Secretary of
- State James Baker offered strong support for Aristide's
- proposals. "This junta is illegal," he said. "It has no standing
- in our democratic community. It will be treated as a pariah,
- without friends, without support."
- </p>
- <p> After a discussion that lasted well past midnight, the
- organization unanimously approved an 11-point resolution. It
- called on the member states not to recognize the military regime
- in Haiti and to cut off all economic, military, commercial and
- trade ties with it. These sanctions add up to the total
- isolation of Haiti within the hemisphere, except for
- humanitarian aid shipments, mainly of food and medicine.
- </p>
- <p> Economic sanctions, though often applied, only rarely
- force a determined rogue government to mend its ways. Haiti,
- however, is almost without domestic resources. It is the poorest
- country in the hemisphere, and 60% of its 6 million people are
- unemployed. Without aid from abroad, its economic survival is
- in question. An economist in Port-au-Prince says the military
- leaders have "grabbed hot steel and they are going to get
- burned.''
- </p>
- <p> To explain the seriousness of the OAS decisions to the
- army leaders, a nine-member delegation headed by
- Secretary-General Joao Baena Soares of Brazil was dispatched to
- Port-au-Prince at week's end. If the junta does not back down,
- the organization has resolved to call another emergency meeting
- to plan further turns of the screw.
- </p>
- <p> Aristide went on to the United Nations in New York, where
- the Security Council listened to his appeal and gave him a
- standing ovation as he declared that the coup had "murdered
- democracy" in his country. The council did not, however, provide
- him with a resolution of support. Reason: members such as China
- and India have domestic problems of their own--Tibet and
- Kashmir, for example--and do not want to set a precedent for
- international action in what they consider internal affairs.
- </p>
- <p> As part of the pressure on the Haitian junta, there is
- talk of a possible multilateral OAS military operation to put
- Aristide back in charge. The ousted Haitian President says he
- does not favor it, but some countries are not feeling
- constrained. Venezuela apparently meant what it said about
- taking the "most severe measures." General Fernando Ochoa
- Antich, the Venezuelan Defense Minister, announced after the OAS
- meeting that he had been ordered to prepare for possible
- multilateral action in Haiti. "The armed forces," he said, "are
- right now carrying out the planning of a possible regional
- military operation." President Perez promised to offer his
- troops if the OAS decides to intervene.
- </p>
- <p> While such warnings should increase the pressure on the
- Haitian army to back down, the western hemisphere's leaders hope
- they will not have to contemplate military action. The OAS has
- traditionally looked with horror on even the hint of
- intervention in its members' affairs. The fact that it is
- already acting more boldly than usual may well foreshadow the
- emergence of a new hemispheric order.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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