One can see this at FAdH camp,
No. 7, Lambi 12, Grande Saline, on
the southern outskirts of the capital,
Port-au-Prince.
On a hillside by the sea, past
crumpled houses and a graveyard,
some 150 former military and
young recruits train three times a
week. They say they are part of a
network of camps all over the country
training Haitians in military salutes,
marches, tactics, swimming
and karate. Their uniforms are
hand-painted FAdH logos on old t-shirts.
No weapons are in sight.
They say they intend to bring
security to Haiti as first responders
in times of crisis and hope to soon be
employed.
The black and red flag instituted
as Haiti’s under the father-to-son
dictatorships of François and
Jean-Claude Duvalier (1957-1986)
hangs in their tarpaulin dressing room
flanked by old paintings of founding
fathers Henry Christophe and Jean-
Jacques Dessalines. They all say they voted for Martelly
and claim he visited the camp. This
is quite possible; Martelly has always
been close to Haiti’s soldiers, having
been a (failed) cadet himself.
The prospect of an army career,
with its training, uniforms, and stable
employment, is surely enticing to
young people frustrated by the seven year
presence of the UN occupation
troops, known as MINUSTAH.
Canada has invested over
$555 million in Haiti between 2006
to 2011, much of it in training and
strengthening Haiti’s National Police
(PNH). But “the police force
does not receive a military training”
says Aubain Larose, Sergeant
spokesperson for this FAdH camp.
“Every time a policeman stops a
criminal, there’s another criminal
that comes and frees him. The police
serve criminals, and when they
don’t, they get shot. As military
men we say we can’t accept that
the country function like this.”
It’s not clear why Haiti would
need an army. It is neither threatened
(if you don’t count the three U.S. interventions
into the country in 1915,
1994, and 2004) nor a threat. Haiti
Progrès director Ben Dupuy, raised
in a military family, is critical of the
FAdH’s past role. “We have to remember
that the Haitian army was
the creation of the US Army, in fact
the Marine corps,” he said. “The US
occupied Haiti for 19 years” and the
army served as “a kind of a local
proxy army for the US. In fact, they
played more of a political role creating
coups d’états.”
FAdH officers carried out the
1991 coup against Aristide, and demobilized
soldiers joined with former
death-squad paramilitaries to constitute
the 300 or so “rebels” that overran
Northern Haiti in the weeks leading
up to Aristide’s second overthrow
on Feb. 29, 2004.
Since then, the “rebels” were
put out to pasture, and Haiti has
been militarily occupied by UN
troops despite posing no threat to
international peace.
When asked about the crimes
against humanity of which the FAdH
and Duvalier’s Tonton Macoutes
stand accused, Pierre Jeans Rigaud,
a 26-year-old recruit and diplomacy
student, shrugged. He said he is too
young to have proof of that, but
questioned the legal immunity of UN
troops. Last August, “on the military
base in Cap Haïtien they tortured a
young Haitian boy, the MINUSTAH
soldiers did, and then the threw him
out dead,” he said. “To this day, there
had been no follow up investigation
on the torture that caused his death.
We don’t have this in our army.”
The outgoing government of
President René Préval has turned
a blind eye to the camps of former
and possibly future Haitian soldiers.
The PNH Director General, Mario
Andrésol, said he was not aware of
the group and doubted they were
part of the former military, saying
they were probably private security
companies or charlatans tricking
young people into hoping for a job.
“Did you ask to see their military
badge?” he responded. “Anyone
can print FAdH on an old T-shirt,
it doesn’t mean anything.” But he
promised to investigate further.
Likewise, Aramick Louis, the
secretary of state for public security
declined to comment directly
when told about the camps. He said
only that “the army and police are
republican institutions that have
hierarchy and take orders from the
head of state. I don’t know what’s
going on there, but if it’s not in
accordance with the law and the
state, I have no comment.”
It’s not clear where the funding
for the camps is coming from.
Although they claim to all be volunteers,
the military trainers and
trainees have funds for a dentist, a
doctor, a hill, staff and tents (which
they claim were donated by the Haitian
government).
Will the Haitian army be resurrected
as Martelly promised on
the campaign trail? The would-be
soldiers at FAdh Camp No. 7 are
certainly counting on it.