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- <text id=94TT1733>
- <title>
- Dec. 12, 1994: Haiti:Getting the Hang of It
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Dec. 12, 1994 To the Dogs
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- HAITI, Page 37
- Getting the Hang of It
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Despite huge problems, a newly molded Aristide has given his
- country what it never had before: hope
- </p>
- <p>By Kevin Fedarko--Reported by Cathy Booth and Bernard Diederich/Port-au-Prince
- </p>
- <p> As workmen scrambled last week to apply a glistening coat of
- white paint to the outside of police headquarters in downtown
- Port-au-Prince, a tax official standing on a nearby street corner
- summed up the skepticism that hangs over Haiti like a noxious
- bouquet. "It will take more than white paint to change this
- country," he said. "It's all just dressing on the cake."
- </p>
- <p> The remark might have been uncharitably cynical were the official
- not standing directly across from the National Palace. While
- that building's facade has also been given an impressive face-lift
- to honor the Oct. 15 return of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide,
- the state of affairs inside Haiti's house of state is considerably
- shabbier. The departing military-backed government ransacked
- the palace so thoroughly that executives at the nerve center
- of Haiti's government now have no vehicles, computers or typewriters,
- almost no pencils, only one toilet--and just $11.5 million
- in the treasury on Aristide's return.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Haiti today is a far better place facing a far brighter
- future than any it has seen in decades. Ships from U.S. ports
- arrive daily, and airplanes disgorge businessmen, missionaries
- and a small army of development experts who, it is hoped, will
- eventually disburse more than some $645 million in financial
- aid from international lenders. The capital's sidewalks are
- bristling with vendors. Mango growers have sold $600,000 worth
- of fruit abroad, and orange peels destined to flavor Grand Marnier
- are again drying in the midday sun.
- </p>
- <p> That is pretty much the way things are throughout Haiti two
- months after 21,000 American troops arrived to shove the regime
- of Lieut. General Raoul Cedras into exile. It is a measure of
- Haiti's desperation that the country's remarkable progress has
- been surpassed only by the magnitude of what remains to be done.
- Despite achievements that exceed all but the most optimistic
- expectations, Haiti is still bankrupt and riven by social disarray
- and class distrust. Even the President, who continues to sleep
- on a fold-up cot in his office, seems stunned by the problems.
- "This country is like a battered old truck that's stuck," Aristide
- confided to a friend. "Pushing it will not start it. It needs
- technical work on the engine."
- </p>
- <p> More like a complete overhaul. Even before the military grabbed
- power in September 1991, Haiti had the fewest telephones, least
- electric power and lowest gross domestic product in the western
- hemisphere. After three years of terrorist misrule, real GDP
- fell one-third, income dropped to $205 per capita, and the gourde
- lost half its value. The government deficit soared to 10 times
- its former level, while revenues dropped by half: by some estimates,
- only 2,500 people in a population of nearly 7 million paid income
- taxes.
- </p>
- <p> While goods are now flowing in and the price of gasoline has
- dropped from $10 per gal. to $2, the economy has yet to revive.
- Nine thousand U.S. soldiers remain stationed in 29 cities, drawn
- more deeply into solving local problems with each passing week.
- The national airport is surrounded by concertina wire, and the
- industrial park nearby that once housed scores of assembly plants
- is occupied by American troops. Crime is up, and the population
- is struggling with the aftereffects of last month's tropical
- storm Gordon, which killed more than 1,000 people.
- </p>
- <p> The bustle returning to the streets owes much of its energy
- to the lingering euphoria of Aristide's return. When U.S. soldiers
- chaperoned the President home seven weeks ago, the big question
- was whether he was up to the job. By most accounts, Haitian
- and American, Aristide appears a transformed man. Gone is the
- leftist firebrand who coyly refused to discipline the mob that
- brought him to power. Gone too is the self-righteous, mercurial
- contrarian of Washington exile. In their place is a man whom
- experience has imbued with wisdom, a newfound respect for dialogue
- and a deft skill for the politics of pragmatism.
- </p>
- <p> The fire of the evangelist is still there, but it has been tempered
- with a cool willingness to compromise. The President has made
- conciliatory gestures to aristocrats who opposed his election.
- He has massaged the egos of political opponents who supported
- his ouster. He has acceded to the demands of church superiors
- who successfully pressured him to resign his priesthood in November.
- He has renewed his promise to step down at the end of his term
- in February 1996, even though he lost three years of his five-year
- tenure in exile. As he goes about the business of remaking the
- government, Aristide has never stopped preaching the gospel
- of reconciliation, often to the dismay of followers who want
- revenge for the estimated 3,000 people murdered during the military's
- reign of terror. American officials still express frustration
- that he does not always bow to U.S. wishes, but they are encouraged
- by his willingness to listen and talk. "He's a real politician
- now," says an American who met privately with Aristide. "Before,
- he was antagonistic. Now he's genuinely seeking out advice.
- People feel he's making a real effort."
- </p>
- <p> That attitude has helped change the way the country is run.
- Aristide has fired the notorious chefs de section, the rural
- military strongmen who ruled vast areas of rural Haiti like
- medieval fiefdoms, terrorizing villagers with their raw power.
- Some hang on, but this is a first step toward whittling them
- down. Another important step was taken last week when the Senate
- fine-tuned a new law designed to establish a 4,000-man police
- force removed from army control. But Aristide has yet to reform
- the judiciary fully or settle on a mechanism for dealing with
- those responsible for the terror of the past three years.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps the biggest surprise is the supportive reviews coming
- in from leading business magnates, who rarely missed a chance
- to bad-mouth Aristide. Many are now flocking to the President's
- side. Much of their approval comes from the promising economic
- team he has built around men such as Leslie Delatour, the respected
- World Bank economist who has helped devise a reconstruction
- plan that includes selling off a handful of state-owned industries
- and cutting the 45,000-strong bureaucracy in half. "Aristide's
- strategy of stitching together society is working," says Gregory
- Mevs, whose family is one of Haiti's richest.
- </p>
- <p> The President's thorniest problem remains the military. He hopes
- to reduce it from 6,000 men to 1,500, but has yet to finish
- purging the institution of all its corrupt officers, some of
- whom are pro-Aristide. Another concern is Haiti's police; they
- are being weaned by American trainers from decades of abusive
- habits, but ordinary citizens continue to despise and distrust
- them. Despite the confusion and uncertainty, most people seem
- cautiously satisfied. The poor, who once huddled indoors after
- dark fearing attacks by government thugs, now roam the streets
- at all hours. "The people are amazingly patient," says a professor
- at the national university. "They know it's night and day from
- three months ago. They can breathe freely now." In Haiti, at
- last, the stench of evil is fading away.
-
- </p></body>
- </article>
- </text>
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