by Kim Ives
Haitians
in New York joined their brothers and sisters marching in
anti-government demonstrations across Haiti when President
Michel Martelly headlined a rally at Brooklyn College
on Sep. 26 after speaking earlier in the day at the
United Nations General Assembly.
Hundreds of Haitians marched a
half mile down Nostrand Avenue through the rain from Radio Panou
to the school. There they jammed onto the sidewalk across
from an entrance to Brooklyn College, where Martelly’s
supporters waited on line for hours to get into the event.
“Down with Martelly,” the
protestors chanted. “Down with corruption! Down with
illegality!”
The demonstrators denounced a
tax that Martelly has levied on money transfers and phone calls
to Haiti. The tax is illegal because it has not been ratified
by, or even presented to, Haiti’s Parliament.
“It’s been a while since
Haitians have turned out in the streets like this. I’m very
satisfied with the response of the community which has poured
out to denounce Martelly as a thief,” said Marlène Jean-Noel, a
longtime leader of the Fanmi Lavalas in New York. “One month
after he came to power, Martelly put a $1.50 tax on every money
transfer Haitians send back to their families in Haiti. He also
put a 5 cents per minute tax on phone calls. You can’t call
Haiti anymore. When you do, your calling card finishes almost
immediately. And what does he do with the money? He gives it to
his wife and his son to do baloney projects. Meanwhile, the
Haitian masses are dying of hunger.”
On the opposite side of the
street, well-dressed people pressed to get through a
heavily-guarded single gate into the event. The Haitian
Consulate of New York rented the Brooklyn College auditorium for
a sum that neither the college nor the Consulate would disclose
(see accompanying
article). But an anonymous source in the
Consulate told Haïti Liberté that the Consulate owes
Brooklyn College about $12,000 for the affair, covering hall
rental, sound, and security. The Walt Whitman Theatre, which can
hold 2,350, was partially filled with about 1,500 thanks to the
free tickets the Consulate distributed to Martelly’s
sympathizers mostly at money transfer companies and churches.
Many of those who attended
thought they were going to also get a concert from some
well-known musical artists including Shoubou from Tabou Combo,
Cubano from Skah Shah, a singer from Carimi, and Alan Cavé of
Zin. But Martelly cancelled the concert at the last minute,
perhaps nervous about how it would be denounced by the
demonstrators across the street.
“It’s not the $1.50 that we
object to, but it’s the way he took it: illegally and with no
transparency,” said Minouche Lambert, another longtime Lavalas
leader. “We don’t know where that money is going. It’s not going
to education obviously. Schools are not being built. Teachers
are marching and striking; they say they are not being paid.
Some kids don’t get their report card because they haven’t paid
school fees. And now, when the country has all these problems,
we are outraged that Sweet Micky is spending money to come make
another Carnival at Brooklyn College with Shoubou, Skah Shah,
and the rest of them. We call on the community to boycott those
bands when they play.”
Some of those going into the
auditorium taunted the demonstrators and waved expensively
printed signs which read, in misspelled Kreyòl, “Aba Gran Gou”
(sic) (Down with Hunger) and “Viv Ti Manman Cherie” (sic) (Long
Live Dear Little Mother), a reference to two Martelly programs
which demonstrator Jackson Sylvain of Westbury, NY and Arcahaie,
Haiti denounced as “pure bluff.”
“Martelly has taken a lot of
money,” Sylvain said. “He says he’ll build houses. He says he’ll
give young people laptop computers. That’s how he got many of
them to vote for him. Now they see that it was a lie. The youth
of Gonaïves have risen up and gone into the streets because they
see he was bluffing. Now he went to the University in
Port-au-Prince and says he’ll give them 18,000 gourdes [US$450].
The students said they’re not falling for that again.”
Sylvain also complained about
other government price hikes and taxes. “Passports used to cost
$73,” he said. “Now Martelly raised the price to $93. As for
airline tickets to Haiti, they were already high. But now, when
you buy a ticket, the Haitian government levies an additional
$50 fee.”
People going into the
auditorium had to pass through three checkpoints where security
made sure they had tickets. Even the press was not permitted
unless a journalist held a ticket.
The event inside began around
9:15 p.m with, appropriately, a rara band – Rara-m – circling
the room, blowing horns and playing drums. Then U.S. Ambassador
Pamela White and 11 Haitian government officials, including
President Martelly and Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe, were
seated at a long table, covered in a red tablecloth, that
stretched the length of the stage.
In fact, Martelly came to New
York for the General Assembly with a giant retinue as
demonstrator Sylvain noted. “He came here with a delegation of
78 people,” he said. “According to Senator Moïse Jean-Charles,
Martelly gets $20,000 a day, his wife gets $10,000 a day, his
kids get $7,500, and his other acolytes get $4,000. That money
goes to his family and friends. They’re wasting Haiti’s money.
Everywhere he goes, he has to pay money. When he needs people to
demonstrate, he gives them money. But the people demonstrating
out here today don’t have that problem.”
Several people spoke before
Martelly, including master of ceremonies Guy Evens Ford, Prime
Minister Lamothe, Ambassador White, Brooklyn Assemblywoman
Rodneyse Bichotte, local Catholic Bishop Guy Sansaricq, and
local Protestant Pastor Philius Nicolas.
“Our government is determined
to change the country,” Lamothe declared to scattered applause.
MC Guy Ford heaped effusive
praise on the President, only surpassed by Pastor Nicolas who
declared Martelly to be “sent by God.”
Finally Martelly took the
stage, but not behind the podium. He took the microphone from
its stand and strode back and forth across the stage like a
performer, giving a completely unprepared rambling talk
punctuated with singing, jokes, and regular turns to Lamothe for
facts or figures.
This was a very different forum
from those with President Jean-Bertrand Aristide a decade and
two ago. At those events, Haitians formed long lines at
microphones to ask questions for hours on end. President
Martelly’s event turned out to be more of a monologue, a
performance, which ended with him singing the title to one of
his songs when he was the bawdy musician Sweet Micky: “Sak pa
kontan,” roughly translated, whoever is not happy, too bad!
Even New York City Councilman
Mathieu Eugène, whose office intervened with the college on
behalf of the Consulate to help make the event possible, was
critical. “I thought the event was going to be an opportunity
for the community to raise their issues and their questions for
the government,” he told Haiti Liberté. “So I think this
was a missed opportunity for the community to ask questions
because people have a lot of legitimate questions and legitimate
issues. I think a forum like that should be used for people to
get answers from whoever is president. There should have been a
dialogue.”
Asked if he were disappointed
with the evening, Eugène laughed and said: “I don’t want to get
involved in the politics of Haiti. But I have my opinion.”
Next week, we’ll offer a
complete dissection of Martelly’s speech. But one particular
remark gives a taste of the speech and speaks volumes. At the
very end of the evening, a man cried out from the audience:
“What is the role of MINUSTAH [the UN occupation force] in
Haiti, President?”
Martelly’s response was very
telling. “Let me tell you a little something,” he said. “I think
that it was Haitians who created MINUSTAH... There was
kidnapping. The country was unlivable. [Haitians] created the
conditions for people watching us to come establish peace, to
calm us down. It’s Haitians who created MINUSTAH.”
So according to President
Martelly, it wasn’t paramilitary “rebel” leaders Guy Philippe
and Jodel Chamblain, National Endowment for Democracy-agent
Stanley Lucas, Group of 184 leaders Andy Apaid and Charles
Baker, the U.S., France, Canada, and Martelly himself, as a
musical cheerleader, who fomented the coup to overthrow the
legitimate elected government of President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide and provide the excuse and opportunity for foreign
troops to militarily occupy Haiti for the past eight years. (The
Security Council will likely renew MINUSTAH’s mandate for
another year in two weeks.) No, it was the Haitian people
themselves, the victims of the coup, who brought the occupation
on themselves.
He then concluded that the UN
troops will stay “until the police force is in shape, or until
President Martelly has set up his own defense force.”
After his speech, the
organizers gave about three dozen prizes to various local
officials and local businessmen, who helped finance the affair,
according to the Haitian Consul General to New York Charles
Forbin.
Outside the hall, despite police efforts to disperse
them, several dozen demonstrators remained until after 11 p.m.,
when those inside were leaving. “We want to embarrass those U.S.
politicians who are supporting what is being done in Haiti,”
said Fritzner Pierre, a leader of the Brooklyn-based Citizen’s
Committee. “We are staying here until the event inside finishes,
because we want them to know our anger. They thought that
Martelly would come here to just strut and get away scot free?
No way!” |