It's good to see
order return to a nation once gripped by chaos - especially
when that nation is just a two-hour flight from your own coast. The
nation is Haiti, and it appears that interim Prime Minister
Gérard Latortue was a wise choice to lead it back from the
brink of anarchy. Unlike his predecessors, Latortue, a former
United Nations official who has traveled the world and studied the
problems of developing nations, seems more interested in helping
his homeland than looting it.
In office only since March 12, his administration has improved
services, re-opened schools and established a new electoral
council.
Heartened by Latortue's progress, international donors such as the
European Community and the World Bank exceeded his request for $1
billion of aid over the next two years to put Haiti's
reconstruction back on track. Already, the U.S. Senate has passed
the Haiti Economic Opportunity Act of 2004, which will provide more
duty-free access on Haiti-made apparel to the United States and
help stimulate the economy.
But before any big checks reach Port au-Prince, donors shouldn't
forget the experiences they had with former president Jean-Bertrand
Aristide, now in exile.
Overthrown within months of taking office by his security chief
after he associated himself with murderous street mobs, as opposed
to tending to public institutions, Aristide was restored to power
by President Clinton in 1994. Barely knowing who they had helped,
neither the United Nations nor the Clinton administration held
Aristide accountable for his actions. Forced to step down when his
term expired in 1995, he returned to office in 2000 after winning a
rigged election boycotted by the Organization of American
States - and most of Haiti's citizens.
At the same time, concerns over the legitimacy of Aristide's
government led the Clinton administration, the European Community
and other multilateral bodies to suspend direct assistance. At this
point, Haiti was a democracy in name only. Few public institutions
functioned. Mob justice prevailed. Three-fifths of the government's
revenues allegedly flowed directly to the president's office,
unchecked by parliament.
Thereafter, the OAS tried to broker agreements between Aristide,
domestic opponents and aid donors as the country slipped further
into chaos. Yet he broke all promises to clean up a dismal human
rights record, rebuild public institutions and guarantee the safety
of dissenters.
This February, his own street thugs sensed he favored some gangs
over others and marched against him. Aristide is gone now, but so
are hundreds of millions of dollars that should have been in
Haiti's treasury to help combat hunger, illiteracy and lost
opportunity.
Thankfully, Latortue is no Aristide. However, bitter experiences
with Aristide suggest that restoring aid to Haiti and providing
economic opportunity should come only with strings. Haiti's new
government must commit itself to public accountability and accept
oversight over how contributions are spent. Donors such as the
United States should agree to provide the supervision previously
absent and help focus the efforts of Haitian institutions, grantees
and contractors so initiatives do not work at cross-purposes.
Further, donors must insist that a permanent electoral
infrastructure be established. Democracy can't move forward unless
the people of Haiti can have confidence in their election
results.
Latortue understands this. In a July 20 Washington Post commentary,
he proposed a commission representing "government, Haitian civil
society and donors" to monitor "building institutions, developing
communities, and putting in place the conditions for free and fair
elections and respect for the rule of law."
Such a partnership would be a major improvement over the
arms-length donor-recipient relationship that existed 10 years ago.
But closer collaboration does not lend itself to the quick exit
strategies pursued by Clinton-era policymakers disappointed by
their dealings with Aristide. Instead, it implies a continuing
commitment to help Haiti establish a social contract based on
liberties, rights and equal opportunity for all.
Previous efforts failed because interested parties placed their
complete trust in a man they hardly knew. Future efforts will
succeed only if we match active donor participation with
accountability on the part of Haiti's governing officials. We owe
it to the poor people of Haiti and to U.S. taxpayers, who have
spent $3 billion on Aristide, to get it right this time.
Stephen Johnson is senior policy analyst for Latin America in
the Davis Institute for International Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.
First appeared on FOXNews.com