WikiLeaked Diplomatic Cables Reveal:
Rudy Hériveaux is a “Close Contact” of the U.S. Embassy in Haiti
(First of three parts)
by Kim Ives
Haiti’s current Communications Minister Rudy Hériveaux
became a focus of popular rage in November when, in an
editorial, he labeled as “cockroaches” the thousands of
demonstrators now marching almost daily to demand President
Michel Martelly’s resignation.
But for at least a decade,
Hériveaux has been a regular and trusted source for the U.S.
Embassy in Haiti, according to the secret diplomatic cables
of several U.S. ambassadors and chargés d’affaires obtained
by the media organization Wikileaks and provided to Haïti
Liberté.
The cables paint a picture
of a thoroughly unscrupulous self-promoter – “opportunistic”
according to one cable – who attempted to hijack
leadership of the Lavalas Family party of former President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide while the latter was exiled in South
Africa from 2004 to 2011. Although Hériveaux was “a close
embassy contact,” in the words of one cable, U.S. officials
gave credence to the assessment of Sen. Simon Dieuseul
Desras that “Senator Hériveaux's history shows he is not a
true Lavalassian and has never been recognized as such.”
Although Hériveaux may soon
be out of a job following the Dec. 13 resignation of Prime
Minister Laurent Lamothe, he nonetheless promises to
continue as an actor on Haiti’s political scene since, as
the cables show, his modus operandi appears to be to
insert himself into whatever political current he sees as
ascendant.
Hériveaux’s Rise
Rudy Hériveaux was first elected in
2000 as a deputy from Trou du Nord in Haiti’s 47th
legislature under the Lavalas Family (FL) banner. He went on
to be elected as a Lavalas senator for the West Department
in 2006, although the faction of the then-splintered Lavalas
Family party that he represented was in deep conflict with
more militant currents, particularly those led by the late
Father Gérard Jean-Juste and popular organization leader
René Civil.
During the 2004-2006 coup
d’état, Hériveaux was also technically a member of the FL’s
“Communications Commission,” a sort of directorate which
included former FL interim chairman Jonas Petit, former
Interior Minister Bell Angelot, former Aristide government
spokesman Mario Dupuy, former Aristide advisor Dr. Maryse
Narcisse, and former deputy Gilvert Angervil, although as
U.S. Ambassador James Foley noted in
a Mar. 22, 2005 cable,
Hériveaux and former Sen. Yvon Feuillé “have effectively
been ostracized by the others.”
The reason for this
ostracism was because Feuillé and Hériveaux were part of a
breakaway “moderate faction” of Lavalas, Foley explained.
“Those in the moderate
faction, more diverse and less vocal, insist they want to
participate in the elections, that they represent the
original spirit of the Lavalas movement, and that FL itself
has been discredited by Aristide and his misgovernance,”
Foley wrote after meeting with them.
Seven months later, on Oct.
13, 2005, the U.S. Embassy political counselor (Polcouns)
held a meeting with “moderates” Hériveaux, Feuillé, former
Lavalas Sen. Louis Gérald Gilles, former Lavalas deputy
Sorel François, and former Lavalas deputy Jonas Coffy,
according to
an Oct. 21, 2005 cable
by U.S. Ambassador Timothy Carney.
The group said “that they
are confident of a Marc Bazin victory in the upcoming
[presidential] elections,” Carney
wrote. Marc Bazin was a former World Bank official who was
briefly dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier’s Finance Minister,
then Washington’s neoliberal candidate and the principal
challenger to Aristide in the Dec. 16, 1990 election, then
briefly Prime Minister of the military government that sent
President Aristide into exile from 1991 to 1994, finally to
become the presidential candidate of the “moderate Lavalas”
faction in 2006.
“The key to a Bazin
victory, according to Hériveaux, is success in the North and
in Port-au-Prince,” Carney reported. “Nevertheless, Gilles
said that a Bazin-Siméus runoff is agreeable to them, and
that a Bazin presidency with Siméus as Prime Minister would
be good for
Haiti.” (Dumas Siméus was a
conservative Haitian-American millionaire businessman living
in Texas who in 2005 was Washington’s favorite presidential
contender, mostly because he was a U.S. citizen. That status
resulted in his disqualification from the 2006 race because
the 1987 Haitian Constitution did not allow dual nationality
for high government officials.)
Nonetheless, Hériveaux
worried that the Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) might
rig the vote in favor of the social-democratic party Fusion,
and “Hériveaux implored Polcouns to be vigilant with respect
to the CEP,” Carney wrote.
Astonishingly, Hériveaux and the Lavalas
“moderates” were begging the U.S. Embassy to oversee
sovereign Haitian elections. This small but telling episode
augured much about Rudy Hériveaux’s future.(To
be continued) |