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- From: Chris Cartter <newslink@igc.apc.org>
- Subject: Haiti Info #6/lead
- Message-ID: <1992Nov9.204300.2777@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
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- Date: Mon, 9 Nov 1992 20:43:00 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 139
-
- (Below is the table of contents and lead story from the most
- recent issue of Haiti Info, the newsletter of the Haitian
- Information Bureau. The lead story from each bi-weekly issue is
- posted in this conference. To receive the entire newsletter, you
- may subscribe by email, fax or mail. See the subscription
- information at the end of this entry).
-
- * * * HAITI INFO * * *
-
- News direct from the people and organizations of
- Haiti's grassroots democratic movement
-
- 9 Nov. 1992, Vol. 1, #6
-
-
- TENDREMOS UNA VERSION EN ESPANOL MUY PRONTO PARA
- LOS COMPANEROS DE AMERICA LATINA Y ESPANA!
-
-
- Contents:
-
- News Stories: FOOD AID SCANDAL
- Government Institutions Still Deadlocked
- Refugees Held Hostage Parishioners Attack
- Papal Nuncio Conference Participants
- Denounce Coup Leaders Strongmen Rule on La
- Gonave O.A.S. Inexplicably Silent
-
- Interview: Claude Bernard Craan Human Rights Report
- Behind the Headlines: IS CLINTON GOOD FOR HAITI?
- Common Ground: THE IMF vs. THE PEOPLE
- About Haiti Info
-
- (No Development column this issue)
-
- News:
-
- FOOD AID SCANDAL
-
- ANSE A GALETS, Nov. 9 - Humanitarian food aid has been sold
- illegally here and local citizens who have tried to stop it are
- being physically threatened.
- The food, part of a U.S.-sponsored project called Operation
- Lifeline, is supposed to feed 25,000 children on the island of La
- Gonave and also other parts of Haiti.
- The program has been criticized for a number of reasons by
- extension workers and its own board of advisors since it began
- about six weeks ago.
- Nevertheless, the program's local director, caught selling
- food, has not been replaced and Lifeline has been closed even
- though there are areas of near-famine here.
- According to many on this rocky and isolated island, even when
- it was operating many communities did not receive food. In some
- cases people walked to Anse a Galets a dozen times, only to leave
- empty- handed.
-
- Board discovers theft
- Lifeline is supposed to be overseen by a local board of
- advisors, but according to one member who requested anonymity
- because of numerous threats, they have not been included in any
- decision- making.
- Several weeks ago they discovered that the local director, Maxo
- Claircira, had sold large amounts of the food to merchants. One
- paid over $4,000 for over 100 cases (6 gallons each) of soybean
- oil.
- The advisors confronted Claircira, who said he had been given
- the authority to sell the food by "his boss" in the national
- office.
- In spite of warnings not to get involved, advisors seized much
- of the oil, locked it in a local jail, and sent one member to
- Port-au- Prince to report the misconduct.
- While there, he was physically threatened by over ten men
- hanging around the office. Luckily, he said, someone recognized
- him and let him wait inside another room until his appointment
- with Director Robert Watkins and his assistant, Joseph Senat.
- "The men told me they would cut off my head ," he said, visibly
- shaken. "I'm not going to Lifeline anymore."
- After the visit, Lifeline sent a team to investigate the
- problem, but according to the advisor, they used the opportunity
- to threaten the board once again.
- Watkins admits there are problems on La Gonave. "We fired
- everyone out there but two guys, and probably should
- have fired them, too. But they are only boys," he said in a
- telephone interview.
- The two not fired were those who everyone here says sold the
- food
- - Claircira and the warehouse manager.
-
- Questionable employees
- Claircira was hand-picked to run the La Gonave program by
- Senat. While Claircira does not have a specifically suspicious
- background,
- Senat is well known on the Haitian political scene, especially for
- his ties to the Duvalier dictatorships.
- Senat was the head of Syndicat des Chauffeur-Guides, the
- tourist taxi driver union, one of the few unions allowed under
- the Duvaliers until 1984, when he was given permission to organize
- another "friendly" union, Federation des Ouvriers Syndiques (FOS),
- so Haiti would qualify for special trade programs with the U.S.
- FOS has always been "pro-business," in contrast to the more
- popular, pro- worker unions here. Every year FOS receives large
- amounts of U.S. funding from budgets earmarked especially for
- conservative labor groups throughout the world.
-
- Quality of aid questioned
- Members of the advisory board and extension workers have also
- questioned the quality of the food aid, which consists of wheat,
- soybeans and soybean oil - all excess products in the U.S. where
- farmers overproduce because of government subsidies. Those
- products are mixed together and cooked into a mush, according to
- one advisor.
- "It's not food," he said. "There are no vegetables or
- vitamins." Last week the advisors were supposed to meet with
- the U.S.
- Agency for International Development which oversees Lifeline, but
- they decided not to go because of renewed rumors and threats.
- In the meantime, Claircira is still in charge of the program,
- and thousands of children are still hungry.
- According to Watkins, the program will operate again in "four
- to six weeks."
- That information was no consolation to the advisor. "It's
- thieves who have the food now, not the people," he said.
-
- ABOUT HAITI INFO:
- * Haiti Info is published every two weeks in Haiti by the Haitian
- Information Bureau, an alternative news agency, and is edited by a
- group of committed individuals from democratic and popular
- sectors.
- * All articles ) HIB. REPRINTS ENCOURAGED. Please cite Haiti Info
- and send copies of usage.
- * Haiti Info is available by mail, by fax, and also electronically
- via computer. Subscription rates range from U.S. $18 to $100. For
- North American/European subscriptions contact newsLINK, 67
- Pleasant Street, Cambridge, MA, 02139, USA. Tel: 617-661-7592.
- E-mail: newslink@igc.org. Other correspondence: Haitian
- Information Bureau, c/o Lynx Air, Box 407139, Ft. Lauderdale, FL,
- 33340, USA or B.P. 15533, Petion- ville, HAITI. Fax: (509) 573560
- (temp.) E-mail: hib@igc.org.
-
-