As Lamothe Resigns:
Police and UN Fire on Swelling Demonstrations Demanding Martelly Step Down
by Kim Ives
Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe resigned at almost midnight
on Sat., Dec. 13, culminating a tumultuous week of
demonstrations, diplomatic theater, and backroom political
maneuvering.
But the move, which some
opposition leaders
had known was coming for
about two weeks, was too little, too late. Another giant
march of thousands surged through Port-au-Prince on Dec. 16,
the 24th anniversary of the 1990 landslide
victory of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, demanding
President Michel Martelly’s resignation and the immediate
withdrawal of the remaining 6,600 United Nations military
occupation troops deployed in Haiti since June 2004 as the
UN Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH).
“Lamothe was just the
smallest part of a trinity holding Haiti down,” said Oxygène
David of the Dessalines Coordination (KOD), a party formed
in February. “The other two elements are Martelly and
MINUSTAH. They also must go for Haiti to have democracy and
sovereignty.”
Jordanian MINUSTAH soldiers
fired leveled weapons at a huge anti-Martelly demonstration
on Dec. 12 in Port-au-Prince, killing one man, Jean Mario,
and wounding several others, including Monvil Gétro,
Vladimir Castry, and Jeanel Pierre. Several
videos, which have
already had tens of thousands of views, show UN soldiers
pointing and shooting directly at protestors, who respond
with jeering, chanting, and rock-throwing.
The demonstrations of
Operation Burkina Faso, as the uprising is called, continued
in the capital on Dec. 13 but were dispersed by police
gunfire and teargas at the Champ de Mars in downtown
Port-au-Prince. A
video by Le Nouvelliste
shows the body of a demonstrator who had been clearly shot
through the chest. According to the Miami Herald,
police spokesman Gary Desrosiers said "no one died” and
“there were no great incidents," claiming that police were
investigating the death. He told the Herald it looked
like people "put the body there."
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry cancelled his planned Dec. 12 visit to Haiti due
to the unrest and the failure of two State Department
officials, Thomas Shannon and Thomas Adams, to broker a deal
during their visit last week
trying to keep the Martelly regime from crumbling.
Praise for Lamothe from
U.S. Ambassador Pamela White
and
former President Bill Clinton
also helped fan the flames of rebellion. “This is the most
consistent and decisive government I’ve ever worked with
across a broad range of issues,” Clinton told the Herald,
enraging many Haitians.
There were also
demonstrations on Dec. 12 and 13 in Cap Haïtien, Gonaïves,
Ouanaminthe, and Petit Goâve, where daily demonstrations
block National Road #2 to the south. Martelly partisans such
as former Sen. Youri Latortue in Gonaïves, deputy Kenston
Jean-Baptiste in Cap Haïtien, and deputy Luckner Noël in
Ouanaminthe tried to disperse demonstrators by firing
weapons from official vehicles, wounding several people. But
the uprising is in full swing, and such repression, like
that of the Tonton Macoutes trying to save the Duvalier
dictatorship in early 1986, is just gasoline on the fire.
In his resignation speech,
which was broadcast just after 1:30 in the morning, Lamothe
made no mention of the demonstrations rocking the country
but just listed the supposed accomplishments of his 31
months in office, during which he burned through $5.5
billion in international aid to Haiti while the population
fell deeper into poverty and hunger. It sounded more like a
campaign speech for the presidential run many expect he will
mount in late 2015.
In a Dec. 15
interview with Bloomberg News,
Lamothe said that “the opposition, of course, is never going
to want the government to succeed” and blamed the political
crisis on six senators who “have been sitting on the
electoral law for the past nine months... so Haiti cannot
have elections.” He also struck a martyr-like pose, saying
he had made the “ultimate sacrifice” to “clear the way
forward for elections” and had no plans “right now” for any
presidential bid.
“As I always said, I would
never be part of the problem, and I would always be part of
the solution to Haiti’s problems,” Lamothe said. “Being
Prime Minister for 31 months, actually the longest serving
Prime Minister, it was never about, you know, myself, it was
always about Haiti and about the country moving forward.”
(One of the gems of the
interview came from the Bloomberg interviewer herself who
asked: “The fact that the opposition party, just as you
said, will never want to see the government succeed, why
don’t we focus on that? Shouldn’t that be a reason to
nullify this opposition party? Because you need a strong
government...”)
“Lamothe was in fact one of the links in the
chain of catastrophes which have battered the country since
May 14, 2011,” when Martelly was inaugurated, wrote Berthony
Dupont in Haïti Liberté’s editorial this week. “But
nothing has really been accomplished as long as Martelly
remains in power.”
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