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- <text id=94TT1447>
- <title>
- Oct. 24, 1994: Haiti:Great Expectations
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Oct. 24, 1994 Boom for Whom?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 33
- Great Expectations
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> While the poor are bewitched by dreams of peace and plenty,
- the rich are preparing for an apocalypse
- </p>
- <p>By Jill Smolowe--Reported by Cathy Booth and Marguerite Michaels/Port-au-Prince
- </p>
- <p> For three years, they have wept and cowered, despairing of
- the empty hopelessness of their days, terrified of the senseless
- brutality of their nights. Now, in the brief moment between
- the rule of thugs and the rule of law, under the reassuring
- protection of U.S. troops, the impoverished of Haiti are finally
- able to sleep--and dream--again. When Jean-Bertrand Aristide
- returns, they say, everything will be possible. "First there
- will be food, and then life will be easier," says Clemence Chaperone,
- 37, an unmarried mother who sells hard candy to feed her three
- children. When the money begins to come in again, Chaperone
- plans to buy her kids notebooks and pens, shoes and school uniforms.
- </p>
- <p> Great expectations bewitch the slum of Cite Soleil. Markets
- and workshops are springing up as residents revel in their release
- from fear. People are chipping in pennies to buy paint and new
- fluorescent lights to spruce up their decrepit neighborhood.
- "Since he is the President of the people, I'm sure he won't
- leave us in the street," says Tiol Losa, a carpenter whose home
- was one of 1,300 leveled last December by soldiers who tore
- through the neighborhood on a rampage of revenge. "When Aristide
- comes, we'll be able to eat," says Mona Numa, a mother of five.
- "We won't be beaten for nothing." She will find work; her children
- will attend school. Pay will go up; prices will come down. All
- will be well.
- </p>
- <p> While the poor feast on hope, the elite who live up in the cool
- hills of Petionville and control 40% of the economy are preparing
- for nothing short of apocalypse. "They look at Aristide and
- what do they see?" says a businessman. "They see their cook,
- their gardener, their maid." The rich have stepped up private
- patrols of their flower-fringed villas and sleep with pistols
- beneath their beds. "Everybody is afraid," says Raymond Roy,
- president of the Chamber of Commerce and Industry. "Aristide's
- people can destroy everything in three hours."
- </p>
- <p> Haiti's other elite, the families of Lebanese and Palestinian
- immigrants who grew rich enough during the years of junta rule
- to corner an additional 40% of the economy, also curse Aristide
- and his American patrons. As they guard their corrugated-steel
- warehouses, crammed full of the contraband goods that made them
- the junta's most powerful allies, they foresee disaster under
- the new regime. "When the U.S. disarmed the paramilitaries,
- they totally eliminated what little security this country had,"
- says Rudy Chemaly, a recent millionaire. "I am sorry they didn't
- kill Aristide."
- </p>
- <p> Yet there were signs of a less drastic outlook among a few of
- the elite at a Mass to commemorate Guy Malary, the young Justice
- Minister gunned down outside Sacre Coeur Church a year ago.
- Malary, who had attempted to restructure the corrupt police
- force during Aristide's absence, had also been a pillar of the
- business community for 20 years. So inside the simple white
- church, rich and poor sat shoulder to shoulder in remembrance
- of a man who had tried to straddle the social divide. Although
- the poor far outnumbered the rich, the accent of the service
- was on lawful justice, with staunch warnings against vigilante-style
- retribution, or dechoukage. "We have to be patient," intoned
- Father Gerard Jean-Juste, a Roman Catholic priest. "We can't
- be struggling and fighting each other."
- </p>
- <p> Members of the private sector who were present saw in those
- words a promising turn. "There was a sense today that some lessons
- have been learned," said Lionel Delatour, who heads a group
- of pro-democracy businessmen, "a recognition that radical extreme
- positions have not paid, a sense of maturity." Although only
- 25 businessmen attended the service, there were indications
- that the monied community was also maturing in its outlook.
- By the reckoning of some business leaders, 20% of their colleagues
- are trying to reach out to Aristide in a spirit of reconciliation,
- including one or two of the seven families who make up the most
- entrenched elite.
- </p>
- <p> Because Haiti is a society where the divide between the haves
- and the have-nots is so stark, it was inevitable that the rich
- and the poor would herald Aristide's return in all-or-nothing
- terms. Yet some recognize that the future belongs neither to
- Aristide the Redeemer nor Aristide the Avenger. Rather, these
- quieter voices suggest, the country's fate rests on the shoulders
- of all Haitians: not only the rich and the poor, but the unsung
- bureaucrats of the middle class. These civil servants, who lack
- the unity and political passion of the rich and the poor, have
- kept their heads down through years of political convulsion,
- siding first with Aristide, then with the military.
- </p>
- <p> Though their safety is not threatened, something just as precious
- is at stake: their jobs. The civil servant ranks have swollen
- from 27,000 during the days of the Duvalier dictatorship to
- 55,000 under the junta. With so many to do so little, government
- work days are often filled with cups of coffee and idle chatter.
- Yet their salaries gobble up 80% of the national treasury. To
- comply with the demands of the International Monetary Fund,
- Aristide must pare those ranks to 34,000. Whether these bureaucrats
- will back Aristide's efforts or try to gridlock his attempts
- to cut jobs is anybody's guess.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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