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<title> - POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS ON HAITI FOR THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION</title> |
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[House Hearing, 117 Congress] |
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[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office] |
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POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS ON HAITI FOR THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION |
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HEARING |
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BEFORE THE |
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COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS |
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HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES |
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ONE HUNDRED SEVENTEENTH CONGRESS |
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FIRST SESSION |
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March 12, 2021 |
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Serial No. 117-11 |
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Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Affairs |
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[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] |
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Available: http://www.foreignaffairs.house.gov/, http:// |
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docs.house.gov, |
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or http://www.govinfo.gov |
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U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE |
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43-702 PDF WASHINGTON : 2021 |
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COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS |
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GREGORY W. MEEKS, New York, Chairman |
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BRAD SHERMAN, California MICHAEL T. McCAUL, Texas, Ranking |
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ALBIO SIRES, New Jersey Member |
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GERALD E. CONNOLLY, Virginia CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH, New Jersey |
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THEODORE E. DEUTCH, Florida STEVE CHABOT, Ohio |
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KAREN BASS, California JOE WILSON, South Carolina |
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WILLIAM KEATING, Massachusetts SCOTT PERRY, Pennsylvania |
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DAVID CICILLINE, Rhode Island DARRELL ISSA, California |
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AMI BERA, California ADAM KINZINGER, Illinois |
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JOAQUIN CASTRO, Texas LEE ZELDIN, New York |
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DINA TITUS, Nevada ANN WAGNER, Missouri |
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TED LIEU, California BRIAN MAST, Florida |
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SUSAN WILD, Pennsylvania BRIAN FITZPATRICK, Pennsylvania |
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DEAN PHILLIPS, Minnesota KEN BUCK, Colorado |
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ILHAN OMAR, Minnesota TIM BURCHETT, Tennessee |
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COLIN ALLRED, Texas MARK GREEN, Tennessee |
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ANDY LEVIN, Michigan ANDY BARR, Kentucky |
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ABIGAIL SPANBERGER, Virginia GREG STEUBE, Florida |
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CHRISSY HOULAHAN, Pennsylvania DAN MEUSER, Pennsylvania |
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TOM MALINOWSKI, New Jersey CLAUDIA TENNEY, New York |
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ANDY KIM, New Jersey AUGUST PFLUGER, Texas |
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SARA JACOBS, California PETER MEIJER, Michigan |
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KATHY MANNING, North Carolina NICOLE MALLIOTAKIS, New York |
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JIM COSTA, California RONNY JACKSON, Texas |
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JUAN VARGAS, California YOUNG KIM, California |
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VICENTE GONZALEZ, Texas MARIA ELVIRA SALAZAR, Florida |
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BRAD SCHNEIDER, Illinois |
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Sophia Lafargue, Staff Director |
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Brendan Shields, Republican Staff Director |
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C O N T E N T S |
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INFORMATION FOR THE RECORD |
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Statement of His Excellency Bocchit Edmond....................... 4 |
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WITNESSES |
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Douyon, Emmanuela, Policy Expert, Activist, NOU PAP DOMI......... 15 |
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Jozef, Guerline, President, Haitian Bridge Alliance.............. 24 |
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Auguste, Rosy, Program Director, National Network for the Defense |
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of Human Rights (RNDDH)........................................ 34 |
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White, Honorable Pamela W., Former U.S. Ambassador to Haiti, U.S. |
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State Department............................................... 41 |
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APPENDIX |
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Hearing Notice................................................... 80 |
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Hearing Minutes.................................................. 81 |
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Hearing Attendance............................................... 82 |
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STATEMENT FOR THE RECORD |
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Statement for the record submitted from Representative Connolly.. 83 |
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ADDITIONAL MATERIALS SUBMITTED FOR THE RECORD |
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Statement for the record from the Center for American Progress... 85 |
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Article from the Miami Herald.................................... 89 |
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Letters submitted to the Honorable Michelle Sison for the record. 91 |
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RESPONSES TO QUESTIONS SUBMITTED FOR THE RECORD |
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Responses to questions submitted for the record.................. 99 |
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POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS ON HAITI FOR THE BIDEN ADMINISTRATION |
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Friday, March 12, 2021 |
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House of Representatives, |
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Committee on Foreign Affairs, |
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Washington, DC. |
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The committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:09 a.m., via |
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Webex, Hon. Gregory Meeks (Chairman of the committee) |
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presiding. |
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Chairman Meeks. The Committee on Foreign Affairs will come |
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to order. |
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Without objection, we are glad to welcome our colleague, |
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the Chair of the House Financial Services Committee, the |
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Honorable Representative Maxine Waters, to participate in |
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today's hearing after our Members have had their opportunity to |
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participate and question the witnesses. |
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Without objection, the Chair is authorized to declare a |
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recess of the committee at any time. And all Members will have |
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5 days to submit statements, extraneous material, and questions |
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for the record, subject to the length limitations in the rules. |
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To insert something into the record, please have your staff |
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email the previously mentioned address, or contact full |
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committee staff. |
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As a reminder to Members, please keep your video function |
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on at all times, even when you are not recognized by the Chair. |
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Members are responsible for muting and unmuting themselves. And |
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please remember to mute yourself after you finish speaking. |
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Consistent with House rules, staff will only mute Members, as |
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appropriate, when they are not under recognition, to eliminate |
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background noise. |
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I see that we have a quorum. And I now recognize myself for |
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opening remarks. |
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Pursuant to notice, we meet today to hear from |
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distinguished witnesses on their policy recommendations on |
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Haiti for the Biden Administration. |
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It has been more than 11 years since Haiti suffered the |
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devastating earthquake that killed hundreds of thousands, |
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displaced more than a million people, and cost billions of |
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dollars in damage. I am grateful that there is a continued U.S. |
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assistance to Haiti, and I am inspired by the resilience of the |
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Haitian people. We must sadly recognize that the situation in |
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Haiti has continued to deteriorate in the decades since the |
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earthquake. |
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Moving forward, we must be frank with ourselves and with |
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the Haitian people as we assess the strengths and the |
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shortcomings of our assistance programs in Haiti. |
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Today, Haiti faces a multi-pronged crisis. President Moise |
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has ruled by decree for 14 months. Top government officials |
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have been sanctioned by the U.S. Government for committing |
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human rights violations. And Haitian parents are afraid to send |
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their children to school or travel to work, not just because of |
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the pandemic, but because kidnappings and gang violence has |
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spiraled out of control. |
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Under the last Administration, a U.S. foreign policy--our |
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U.S. foreign policy turned a blind eye to matters of human |
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rights abuses and corruption. We witnessed the Haitian |
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Government cover up corruption allegations, tamp down on the |
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rights of journalists, and violently break up peaceful protests |
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with virtually zero condemnation. |
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With the Biden Administration, America is once again |
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willing to speak out against these actions. But there will be |
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little time to waste. |
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In the first year of President Biden's term Haiti is slated |
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to hold a constitutional referendum, as well as a parliamentary |
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and Presidential election. How the United States responds to |
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these challenges early on will play a pivotal role in |
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establishing buy-in and trust from Haitian civil society and |
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the Haitian people at large. However, the solutions to the |
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crisis in Haiti will not come from Washington, New York, or |
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Geneva, these solutions must come from and for the Haitian |
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people. |
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As Members of Congress, we must listen to Haitian civil |
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society, as well as our constituents in the Haitian diaspora. I |
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am proud to have a vibrant Haitian community in my district of |
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southeastern Queens, New York. And I value the perspective they |
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share. We must work multilaterally to elevate those voices and |
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take seriously their concerns. |
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One concern I hear frequently is skepticism about Haiti's |
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readiness for elections. While I would love nothing more than |
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to see free, fair, and inclusive elections held immediately, we |
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must listen to the outcry of Haitian voices who are telling us |
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that elections this year will be neither free, fair, or |
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inclusive, that the voices of civil society and the opposition |
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continue to be shown. |
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Instead of focusing on holding a constitutional referendum |
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that many in Haiti and in the international community have |
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denounced as unconstitutional, President Moise must take the |
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initiative and begin serious dialog to discuss what a peaceful |
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transition of power can look like. |
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I have called on the Biden Administration to recognize that |
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holding elections for elections' sake in Haiti will lead to the |
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same outcome as in the 2015 election. In order to move away |
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from the political paralysis that has gripped Haiti over the |
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last few years, the Haitian people need to believe that their |
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voices matter. |
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Finally, I want to reiterate my concerns that several of my |
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colleague, and I expressed to Secretary Mayorkas last month. It |
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was about the continued expulsion of Haitian migrants under |
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Title 42 of the Public Health Services Act. Last month at least |
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966 Haitians were deported to Haiti, the vast majority of which |
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were Title 42 expulsions, without any authority, no screening |
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whatsoever. Given all the challenges Haiti already faces, it is |
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untenable for the United States to continue expelling Haitian |
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migrants under Title 42. |
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The problems Haiti faces are complex and are only getting |
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more challenging. These difficulties will require a new |
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approach from the Biden Administration, with active engagement |
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from Congress, particularly this committee. An increased |
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collaboration with Haitian civil society, the Haitian-American |
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diaspora, and important regional partners like CARICOM. |
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In my capacity as Chair of this committee, I will be |
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working to make sure this Administration works closely with |
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Congress to do what is the best for the people of Haiti. |
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I look forward to hearing from our distinguished witnesses |
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on how we can make that happen. And I want to thank Ranking |
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Member McCaul for his partnership in addressing this important |
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topic. |
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Now, I will be submitting for the record a document from |
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the Government of Haiti. And I want to be clear, this document |
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does not reflect my views, nor my assessment of recent events. |
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But in the interest of a full and complete hearing record with |
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multiple views, I am submitting it for the record. |
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[The information referred to follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] |
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Chairman Meeks. I will now recognize the Ranking Member, |
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Representative McCaul, for his remarks. |
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Mr. McCaul. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. And thank you for |
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holding this hearing on a critical issue in the Western |
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Hemisphere. |
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Haiti is facing a political, economic, and humanitarian |
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crisis with its current President Jovenel Moise ruling by |
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decree for over a year. While this is legal, it complicates the |
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situation further. Current events are like the fragility of |
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Haiti's democracy. And, sadly, Haiti has struggled consistently |
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with political instability, extreme poverty, corruption, and |
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other endemic challenges since its transition from dictatorship |
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to democracy in 1987. |
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Haiti's progress has also been hindered by natural |
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disasters like the 2010 earthquake, and Hurricane Matthew in |
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2016. Haiti remains the poorest country in the Western |
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Hemisphere where nearly 60 percent of the population lives |
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below the national poverty line. And as a result of the COVID |
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pandemic, Haiti's economy has contracted by an estimated 4 |
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percent. |
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I am also concerned about the alarmingly high levels of |
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crime and violence in Haiti, and reports of local gangs, human |
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rights abuses, and systemic corruption, which are rampant. And |
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I worry about the capacity of Haiti's justice system to fully |
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investigate and hold criminals accountable. |
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No matter how difficult the situation, the United States |
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remains committed to supporting the Haitian people. Haiti is |
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the second largest recipient of U.S. assistance in the Western |
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Hemisphere, receiving over $180 million in Fiscal Year 2020. |
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These funds are used primarily for emergency food aid and |
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distribution, global health programs, education, and security |
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assistance. |
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U.S. assistance has also helped build the Haitian National |
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Police into a professional security force, and we should |
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continue to support its development. |
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However, given the continuing challenges facing Haiti, I |
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think it is fair to ask how effective our assistance has been |
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and explore how our aid could achieve the desired outcome. |
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I also want to recognize the Government of Haiti for |
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maintaining diplomatic ties with Taiwan, and standing with the |
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U.S. and the international community and acknowledging the |
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fraudulent nature of the legislative elections organized by the |
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Maduro regime in Venezuela last year. I commend them for taking |
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these principled positions. |
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It is important for us to pursue policies that support the |
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Haitian people in their efforts to address serious challenges |
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they are facing. So, I look forward to hearing from our |
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witnesses today. |
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And with that, Mr. Chairman, I yield back. |
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Chairman Meeks. Thank you, Representative McCaul. |
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I am honored to have a distinguished panel, four excellent |
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witnesses joining us today for our hearing. |
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Ms. Emmanuela Douyon is an economist, professor, and leader |
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in the Nou Pap Domi social movement, a collective of young |
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Haitians committed to fighting corruption, impunity, and social |
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injustice. |
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Ms. Guerline Jozef is the Co-Founder and Executive Director |
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of the Haitian Bridge Alliance, which elevates and empowers |
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Haitians and other Black immigrants from the Caribbean and |
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Africa through advocacy, organizing, and social and cultural |
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programs. |
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Ms. Rosy Kesner Auguste serves as Program Manager of the |
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National Human Rights Defense Network, a national institution |
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based on Haiti that advocates for the respect of human rights, |
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and conducts oversight of State institutions. |
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And, finally, Ambassador Pamela A. White. She is an |
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American diplomat who served as U.S. Ambassador to The Gambia |
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from 2010 to 2012, and U.S. Ambassador to Haiti from 2012 to |
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2015. |
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I thank you all for joining us today, and I look forward to |
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your testimony. |
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Witnesses will have 5 minutes to deliver your opening |
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remarks. We will also have an interpreter for one of the |
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witnesses. And I will make allowances for time used for |
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interpretation. |
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I will gently tap my gavel when you have 30 seconds left so |
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that you may conclude your testimony. |
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Without objection, your prepared written statement will be |
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made part of the record. |
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I now recognize Ms. Emmanuela Douyon for 5 minutes. |
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STATEMENT OF EMMANUELA DOUYON, POLICY EXPERT, ACTIVIST, NOU PAP |
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DOMI |
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Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Chairman Meeks, Ranking Member |
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McCaul, and Members of the committee. I want to thank you for |
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holding this hearing during a critical moment in Haiti's |
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history. My name is Emmanuela Douyon, and I am honored to be |
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here on behalf of Nou Pap Domi, a collective of engaged Haitian |
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citizens in the struggle against government corruption and |
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impunity. |
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Today is not the first time the U.S. Congress or this |
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committee has held a hearing to assess U.S. policy in Haiti and |
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gather recommendations. However, we see the present situation |
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as fundamentally different. Today, I am hopeful that the |
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Haitian people are on the verge of a new era, one with new |
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actors and a clear roadmap to end old practices that perpetuate |
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crisis after crisis and that can instead lead to the real |
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change the Haitian people deserve. |
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In Haiti, we are hopeful that the Administration of U.S. |
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President Joe Biden will also break with the past and, instead, |
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listen to the voices of civil society. |
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In my written testimony, I describe the current crisis and |
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provide a couple of recommendations that I summarize here. |
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We believe that the Biden Administration and the U.S. |
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Congress should take the following actions: |
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The U.S. should recognize that the situation in Haiti today |
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as a struggle by the Haitian people to take ownership of their |
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government and build democracy, not simply a fight between |
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politicians for power. |
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The U.S. should not be supporting Jovenel Moise, who is a |
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threat to Haiti's constitution and the rule of law because of |
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his tolerance for impunity and unconstitutional and |
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authoritarian acts, including: |
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Preparation of a constitutional referendum in violation of |
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the amendment process set forth in the constitution; |
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The appointment by decree of a provisional electoral |
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council, whose Members are not sworn in as legally required; |
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The recent dismissal and subsequent replacement of three |
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Supreme Court judges; |
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Attempts to undermine the controlling power of the Court of |
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Auditors; |
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Absence of political will to hold accountable those |
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involved in massacres, such as the La Saline massacre, and |
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several killings that happened during President Moise's term, |
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including the devastating assassination last year of the |
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President of the Bar Association of Port-au-Prince, Monferrier |
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Dorval. |
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His continued effort to grab power, whatever the cost, in |
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clear attempts to consolidate his power with no checks and |
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balances, including the replacement of elected local officials |
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by people accountable to him only, and unconstitutional decrees |
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that raise serious concern. |
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The U.S. Government must recognize that in the current |
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context the State-sponsored gang violence and human rights |
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abuses, increasing authoritarianism, and unconstitutional an |
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illegal provisional electoral council, and the failure to |
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register voters, free, fair, and credible elections cannot be |
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safely conducted within this year. It is simply not possible. |
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The recurrent electoral crisis and subsequent political |
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crisis have eroded citizens' faith in their government. |
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Rather than take sides in the constitutional dispute, it |
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will be more helpful to listen to and offer solidarity with the |
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Haitian people, who no longer recognize Jovenel Moise as their |
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President. Even before his constitutional mandate ended, after |
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years of calling on him to resign following reports from the |
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Court of Auditors providing his involvement in the PetroCaribe |
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corruption scandal, and because they are deeply concerned with |
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human rights abuse. Corrupt, incompetent, and authoritarian |
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officials should never be allowed to stay in power beyond their |
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term in the name of democracy. |
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The U.S. Government should recognize that past foreign-led |
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attempts aimed to strengthen democracy in Haiti have not led to |
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progress and often have been counterproductive. It is time to |
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follow the lead of Haitian civil society in determining when to |
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support elections in Haiti, and respect the current efforts to |
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solve the crisis as they want to. |
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Specifically, by organizing a nonpartisan, non-coerced and |
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consensus-based team of civil society and political actors |
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capable of ensuring the governance of the country, filling the |
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institutional void at the head of the country since the end of |
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President Moise's constitutional mandate on February 7, 2021, |
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and restore democratic order. |
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The U.S. should investigate money laundering and arms |
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trafficking, human rights abuses, and other illegal acts by |
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Haitian officials and private sector leaders and apply |
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sanctions, including under the Global Magnitsky Act where |
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applicable. |
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It is time to send a clear signal to those who are |
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squandering State resources with impunity, and those who |
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continue to shed blood and violate human rights. The United |
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States should support Haitian civil society's call for the |
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immediate release of those arrested on February 7, 2021, and |
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not give credence to the Government's narrative, given the lack |
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of credible evidence of the coup attempt. |
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To conclude, I want to state clearly that the people of |
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Haiti are resolute in their desire for a true democracy, a |
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democracy that works for all, and need to be able to count on |
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the support of their friends and partners, including the U.S. |
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Government, in this pursuit. |
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Thank you very much. And I look forward to your questions. |
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[The prepared statement of Ms. Douyon follows:] |
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domi |
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[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] |
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Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
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Ms. Guerline Jozef, you are now recognized for 5 minutes. |
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STATEMENT OF MS. GUERLINE JOZEF, PRESIDENT, HAITIAN BRIDGE |
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ALLIANCE |
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Ms. Jozef. Good morning. Thank you so much for having me. |
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My name is Guerline Jozef. I am the Co-founder and Executive |
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Director of the Haitian Bridge Alliance. |
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The Haitian Bridge Alliance provides direct service |
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advocating, organizing on behalf of Black immigrants from the |
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Caribbean entering Haiti, from the Afro-Latinx community, and |
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our brothers and sisters from Africa. |
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Today it is with a saddened heart that I am before you. As |
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we are speaking, there is a flight to Haiti carrying asylum |
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seekers who have made a dangerous journey coming to our borders |
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to ask for asylum. Today, this morning, as we speak, over 129 |
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people are on a flight to Haiti, including what seems to be a |
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newborn baby just a few days old. |
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It is unconscionable for us as a country, as a people, as |
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this great United States of ours, to continue the cruel, |
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inhuman practice and lack of respect to the lives of those most |
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vulnerable. |
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As we stand today, with all the faith, with all the hope, |
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as we heard from my colleague Emmanuela, the situation on the |
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ground in Haiti we understand that for too long we have been |
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silent. The partnership between Haiti and the United States |
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needs to be better. We understand that too many lives are at |
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risk. We understand that this cannot continue. |
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Haiti has not always been a migrant-sending country, but |
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due to ongoing natural disasters, as we all know, in 2010, the |
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earthquake that killed over 2,000--200,000 people, leaving the |
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infrastructure of Haiti completely destroyed. Consequently, the |
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storms and the cholera epidemic that was brought into the |
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country by, unfortunately, health relief workers from the |
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United Nations, sill we are dealing with those aftershocks. |
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Today, in 2021, we still feel the aftershock of the |
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earthquake. We see people leaving the country in search for a |
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place to live, and search for freedom, and in search for |
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refuge. But we, as the United States, turn our backs once again |
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to the Haitian community. |
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We understand that the immigration prison system as we know |
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it today was a direct response to the Haitian refugees arriving |
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on our shores in the 1980's. Enough is enough. Today, as we |
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look back, what is currently happening in the country, in the |
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middle of the uprising, in the middle of the people of Haiti |
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once again asking, fighting for life and for justice, we cannot |
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continue to do that. |
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I will share one quick story with you of a woman who shared |
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with us. She and her husband and her child, just 4 months old, |
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was deported to Haiti 4 weeks ago. She shared with us that she |
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was kidnapped. She was raped, barely escaped, was able to leave |
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the country. Went to Chile in 2017. In turn, she experienced |
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extreme racism which forced her again to leave to search for |
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safety. |
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Upon arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border she stayed a year- |
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and-a-half, 18 months waiting for a chance to ask for asylum. |
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Four weeks ago she finally mustered the courage and took |
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the chance. What she shared with me was that upon arriving she |
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was not even given the chance to state her case. They did not |
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even ask her, Why are you here? What are your fears? |
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She was immediately detained for 10 days without access to |
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any sanitary--access to any sanitation. She was held for 10 |
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days without access to a bathroom, to a shower, without access |
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to a toothbrush or toothpaste, with her child, her infant, who |
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ended up having to soil his clothes. And she was denied access |
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to change the infant's clothes, and denied access to change her |
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own clothes. |
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At 4 a.m. in the morning she was awakened and told to come |
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to get breakfast, which happened to be a bean burrito. When |
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asked, Can I leave my child to sleep because it is too early |
|
and it is cold? they told her no. She pled with them. They told |
|
her that--these are her words--if you do not bring the baby, we |
|
will drag her out. |
|
So, these are the conditions that we see Black immigrants, |
|
including asylum seekers, specifically Haitians, being treated |
|
as they come and ask for asylum. |
|
It is clear the conditions we see---- |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Jozef [continuing]. We see these conditions for Haiti. |
|
So, we are asking, we are demanding that we protect those |
|
lives. We are demanding that we have the cease to expulsion to |
|
Haiti immediately. |
|
We are asking that the flight that left today be returned |
|
to the United States with that infant, with the students. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Jozef. We are asking for---- |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Jozef. Thank you so much. |
|
[The prepared statement of Ms. Jozef follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] |
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Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
I now recognize Ms. Auguste for 5 minutes. |
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|
STATEMENT OF MS. ROSY AUGUSTE, PROGRAM DIRECTOR, NATIONAL |
|
NETWORK FOR THE DEFENSE OF HUMAN RIGHTS (RNDDH) |
|
|
|
[The following statement and answers were delivered through |
|
an interpreter.] |
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Ms. Auguste. Chairman Meeks, Ranking Member McCaul, Members |
|
of the U.S. House of Representatives, Members of the Foreign |
|
Affairs committee, good morning. My name is Rosy Auguste |
|
Ducena. I am a lawyer and program manager for the National |
|
Network for the Defense of Human Rights. Thank you for the |
|
opportunity to share with you accurate information about the |
|
human rights violations that are taking place in Haiti. |
|
We wish to present an abbreviated version of our testimony |
|
that has already been presented to the committee and is |
|
available to anyone who is interested. |
|
Since 2017, human rights organizations have continued to |
|
denounce what is happening in Haiti. However, despite these |
|
denunciations, the U.S. administration, the OAS, the U.N. have |
|
given, always giving their unconditional support to the de |
|
facto President Jovenel Moise to the detriment of the Haitian |
|
people. |
|
Today the Republic of Haiti is ruled by one man, who has |
|
granted himself the power of the legislative and judicial |
|
branches, in addition to those of the executive branch. |
|
There are three main reasons why elections cannot be held |
|
in Haiti in 2021: |
|
First of all, the Haitian State is unable to issue the |
|
electoral cards to voters. |
|
The electoral council is illegitimate and its Members have |
|
not been sworn in by the Haitian Supreme Court, and it has an |
|
unconstitutional mandate to organize a referendum. |
|
The current insecurity will not allow candidates to |
|
campaign or voters to cast their ballot without constraint on |
|
election day. |
|
Indeed, the insecurity in the country is characterized by |
|
acts of violence against life and property. In 2020 alone, more |
|
than 1,085 people, including 37 police officers, were |
|
assassinated in Haiti. |
|
In January and February 2021, at least 65 people were |
|
murdered, including three police officers. |
|
In June 2020, the armed gangs federated with the blessing |
|
of the current government. They were influential enough to |
|
appoint a director Social assistance funds- (which is a State |
|
institution created to help disabled and people in needs). The |
|
gangs demanded and obtained the dismissal of a minister. |
|
From 2018 to 2020, at least 10 massacres were perpetrated |
|
in Port-au-Prince, resulting in the assassination of 323 |
|
people, 98 others disappeared, 38 women gang raped, 251 |
|
children became orphans. |
|
Since 2020, 4 to 5 people are kidnapped every day, among |
|
them women and girls who have generally become victims of gang |
|
rape. People victims claim they were kidnapped by uniformed |
|
police and transported in government vehicles. Others said they |
|
were handed over, ransomed to people accompanied by police |
|
officers. |
|
Influential Members of the government are negotiating and |
|
arranging the transportation of the hostages. Furthermore, the |
|
Haitian judiciary system is completely dysfunctional. The |
|
impact of this dysfunction is enormous on the prison |
|
population, more than 84 percent of whom are awaiting trial. |
|
Anti-government demonstrations are systemically repressed, |
|
while those organized by armed gangs are secured by the police. |
|
Today, despite the fact that his mandate ended on February |
|
7, 2021, Jovenel Moise refused to leave office. Meanwhile, he |
|
controlled the country with his personal intelligence agency, |
|
the coalitions of armed gangs, a brigade created to monitor |
|
protected areas transformed into an arms villages. |
|
A specialized police unit created to provide security for |
|
the President. But now to his cause. He mobilized only a |
|
weakened and politicized police force. |
|
Based on what we have shared with you, we call on the Biden |
|
Administration to listen and respect Haitian civil society's |
|
demands, and recognize that the mandate of President--former |
|
President Jovenel Moise has ended; stop supporting an electoral |
|
process that will lead to political instability. Instead, |
|
support free and fair elections with a legitimate electoral |
|
council resulting from a political agreement. |
|
The U.S. Government must distance themselves from the |
|
process of an unconstitutional referendum. Prosecute Members of |
|
this regime involved in human rights violations, corruption, |
|
money laundering on American soil. |
|
Investigate the flow of illegal weapons from the U.S. which |
|
are easily smuggled into Haitian territory. These weapons |
|
emphasize insecurity and strike fear in the hearts of every |
|
Haitian. |
|
Thank you very much. And I look forward to your questions. |
|
[The prepared statement of Ms. Auguste follows:] |
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[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] |
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Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
I now yield 5 minutes to Ambassador Pamela White. |
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|
|
STATEMENT OF HON. PAMELA WHITE, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR TO |
|
HAITI, U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT |
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|
|
Ms. White. Good morning. Thank you so much for having this |
|
hearing. |
|
My name is Pamela White, and I am the former U.S. |
|
Ambassador to Haiti from 2012 to 2015. I first served in Haiti |
|
from 1985 to 1990, my first tour as a foreign service officer. |
|
I witnessed the removal of Baby Doc and the subsequent horror |
|
show that went on for years after his departure. |
|
Most of my career was working for USAID from 1978 to 2010, |
|
when I became Ambassador to The Gambia. That is 30-plus years |
|
of development experience, including serving as USAID Mission |
|
Director in Mali, Tanzania, and Liberia. |
|
These are my opinions and not the USG's opinions. |
|
As you all know, the situation in Haiti is highly volatile. |
|
Every single day there are reports of decapitations, rapes, and |
|
murders. Kidnappings are at an all-time high. The human rights |
|
situation is deplorable. Four million Haitians are suffering |
|
food insecurity, more than half are living on less than $2.40 a |
|
day. There is a weak judiciary, a threatened press, and no |
|
parliament. In short, Haiti is once again a mess. |
|
With this background in mind, I will touch on two issues: |
|
the elections and aid. |
|
First the elections. It is difficult for me to imagine |
|
having successful elections this year in Haiti. Putting aside |
|
for the moment the question of President Moise should have left |
|
in February, or should he leave next February, I do not know |
|
the answer, but I do not believe that right now the necessary |
|
institutions are in place to assure a smooth transition. The |
|
USG, the OAS, and the U.N. have all stated that Moise's term |
|
ends in 2022, but several Haitian constitutional experts as |
|
well as Harvard, Yale, and NYU law school clinics disagree. |
|
The CEP was appointed last year. That CEP does not have |
|
representatives from organizations that are critical, like the |
|
church. The last CEP resigned en masse, refusing to serve under |
|
President Moise. The Supreme Court refused to swear in the |
|
current Members. I do not believe the current CEP can be |
|
considered legit. This can be quickly corrected if parties come |
|
to the table. |
|
I have been told that 2.8 million voters have been |
|
registered, but only 1.7 million cards have been issued. Over 6 |
|
million voters were registered in 2016. The current government |
|
says they have the capability to register 2 million voters a |
|
month, but they are currently falling way short. An impartial, |
|
neutral audit needs to happen yesterday. |
|
There is also the money problem. The last elections cost |
|
over $150 million dollars. I wonder how international support |
|
there will be for elections that are so tainted. I do not see |
|
the USG giving $33 million, as it did in 2016, considering the |
|
current chaos. |
|
The international community will have to draw some firm |
|
lines in the sand that will hold Haitian leadership accountable |
|
for both a smooth transition and vastly improved security. If |
|
lines are crossed, money will stop. |
|
Helen La Lime, the very talented U.N. Special |
|
Representative, said in her last report that ``above all |
|
else,'' ``above all else, a minimal consensus among relevant |
|
political stakeholders would greatly contribute to creating an |
|
environment conducive to the holding of a Constitutional |
|
referendum and subsequent elections.'' |
|
Although I think the entire question of a referendum to |
|
change the constitution is extremely dubious, I completely |
|
agree with the rest of her statement. If we do not get minimal |
|
consensus among the relevant actors, Haiti will not be able to |
|
pull off credible elections, period. |
|
Here are a few quick suggestions. |
|
If President Moise will not step down, he should step |
|
aside. He must be completely transparent and honest. He must |
|
bring relevant actors to the table. A well-respected Haitian |
|
should be appointed prime minister. He or she should |
|
immediately dissolve the current CEP and call a summit with all |
|
relevant political actors to establish a legal CEP. |
|
I would hope the U.N. and USG could both help fund such a |
|
summit and commit to acting as mediators, if asked. The voter |
|
registration also needs immediate help. |
|
The new prime minister's team will also need to articulate |
|
a security plan. If President Moise stays in power, his job |
|
will be to maintain peace. Stop the brutal beatings and the |
|
gang violence. Start acting like a Statesman. |
|
Let me quickly also touch on the topic of foreign aid. I |
|
believe Haitians desperately need humanitarian aid such as food |
|
aid and basic health care. USAID can deliver both, even under |
|
the worst political conditions. But, I do not believe that |
|
regular, normal development activity can be carried out in this |
|
current violent atmosphere. |
|
Free and fair elections are important pieces to any |
|
democracy's complex puzzle. But having an election will not |
|
transform Haiti. It never has and it never will. |
|
Thank you so much for your time. |
|
[The prepared statement of Ms. White follows:] |
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|
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT] |
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|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you, Madam Ambassador. |
|
I want to thank all of the witnesses. Now, there are |
|
bipartisan witnesses, and all of them have basically just said |
|
Haiti's a mess. The people are suffering. This has to stop. |
|
There has got to be some order. |
|
That is the reason why we are doing this hearing. And this |
|
committee is going to continue to look so that the people of |
|
Haiti get better. They deserve better. And we have to work |
|
collectively to do that. |
|
So, now I am going to recognize Members for 5 minutes. And |
|
I just want to thank all of the witnesses for their testimony. |
|
It just breaks my heart listening. But now it is making me more |
|
determined that we have got to do something, and we have got to |
|
do it collectively. |
|
I am going to recognize Members for 5 minutes each, |
|
pursuant to the House rules. And all time yielded is for the |
|
purposes of questioning our witnesses. |
|
I will recognize Members by committee seniority, |
|
alternating between Democrats and Republicans. If you miss your |
|
turn, please let our staff know and we will come back to you. |
|
If you seek recognition, you must unmute your microphone and |
|
address the Chair verbally, and identify yourself so that we |
|
know who is speaking. |
|
I will start by recognizing myself for 5 minutes. |
|
Let me start with Ms. Douyon. You know, there is a lot of |
|
skepticism among Haiti's civil society that the Moise |
|
administration can preside over fair and credible elections. |
|
Tell me, what do you think, do you consider the current |
|
provisional electoral council to be independent, legitimate, |
|
and able to administer free, fair, and credible elections? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you. Thank you, Chairman Meeks. |
|
I do not recognize the CEP as legitimate to organize |
|
elections. First of all, the way it was constituted. It does |
|
not reflect the constitution, and the people who are involved |
|
were not sent by key sectors of civil society in Haiti. It was |
|
not presented at the court, at the Supreme Court, like it was |
|
supposed to do. |
|
This is an illegal CEP. And there is no way this CEP could |
|
organize fair, credible elections. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Madam Ambassador White, do you agree? |
|
Ms. White. One hundred percent. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Now, let me ask also, what role do you |
|
believe the multilateral groups, like Core Group or CARICOM, or |
|
other interested parties in the international community, should |
|
play in Haiti? |
|
And how can the United States best engage with our |
|
international partners so that we, the international, speak |
|
with one voice, not divided? No, we cannot be divided when it |
|
comes to Haiti. We have to all speak with one voice and be |
|
clear about it. |
|
Ms. White. Are you speaking to me still? |
|
Chairman Meeks. Yes. |
|
Ms. White. Absolutely, yes. Thank you, Chairman. |
|
The Core Group is essential to come together and speak with |
|
one voice. You are absolutely right. The U.S. Government has |
|
always been if not the leading voice, certainly one of the |
|
leading voices on that Core Group because no one gives more to |
|
Haiti than the United States of America, in many, many ways, |
|
not just monetarily. |
|
But I think that the leadership we need to have at that |
|
Core Group meeting, we need to have a clear view of how we are |
|
going to articulate our policy for the next 18 months at least. |
|
And I think your Chair, your leadership can help them define |
|
how to move forward. |
|
Because as I said in my statement, we need to have clear |
|
lines in the sand. If this does not happen, the money stops, we |
|
need to look at what our policies are going to be. |
|
I was,, reading about the United Nations, and the U.S., and |
|
the OAS all saying that they support means to stay for another |
|
year, but I did not hear what the conditionality for that was. |
|
And I would like to hear that articulated. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Jozef, what about this constitutional referendum? Now, |
|
I have heard that part of the constitution needs to be |
|
reformed. But what are your thoughts, should there be a |
|
referendum in June? Or should it not be? Are the people ready? |
|
Give me your thoughts on a constitutional referendum. |
|
Ms. Jozef. Chairman Meeks, as a Haitian-American woman, |
|
witnessing what is happening in the middle of this chaos, as we |
|
just heard from all those people, all those witnesses, for me |
|
the answer is no. I do not believe a referendum for the |
|
constitution right now is something that is going to make the |
|
changes that are needed. |
|
If the constitution as is is not even respected, what |
|
change will come from having a referendum in June, in less than |
|
6 months? |
|
So, my answer is no. |
|
I think we should continue to push for a free, elected--for |
|
free assistance in Haiti at this moment. I personally do not |
|
think, you know, a referendum on the constitution in June is |
|
warranted. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
And let me real quick go back to Ms. Douyon. What about |
|
this influx of returning Haitians--I think you testified to |
|
that--of Haitian immigrants, how does that impact the Haitian |
|
economy, especially given a loss of remittances in dollars, et |
|
cetera? |
|
You know, what are some of the alternatives that you think |
|
that we should be looking at in the Biden Administration other |
|
than the deportations? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Okay. First of all, I have to mention--thank |
|
you, Chairman Meeks--I have to mention since the political |
|
crisis is getting worse, more and more people are immigrating |
|
to the U.S. illegally. And with COVID-19 and other problems we |
|
have witnessed somehow a decrease in the amount of remittances |
|
that are being sent to Haiti. At some point the checks is |
|
increased, but later it decreased. |
|
But the current economic situation in Haiti, even the same |
|
amount that the people used to send in Haiti is not enough. And |
|
with deportation, it is not going to help Haiti because those |
|
people who fled they were, like, fleeing the worsening living |
|
condition in Haiti. And sending them back in with an increase |
|
in crime levels and a surge of kidnappings, I do not think this |
|
is the best thing to do for Haiti right now. |
|
And, also, this is why it is urgent to restore peace and |
|
democratic order in Haiti so we are not dealing with this kind |
|
of situation. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
My time has expired. And I will recognize the Ranking |
|
Member McCaul from the great state of Texas. |
|
Mr. McCaul. I thank the Chairman from the great state of |
|
New York, his acknowledging me. |
|
Let me just first say I agree with the Chairman, these |
|
stories have been very compelling and, quite honestly, very |
|
sad. It is a sad state of affairs. And I think that, Mr. |
|
Chairman, thanks for holding this hearing. I think it has |
|
caught those two delighted Members that had no idea that Haiti |
|
was in such bad shape. |
|
And I think we have a responsibility to do something about |
|
it, as does the United Nations, and the OAS as well. |
|
My first question is to Ambassador White. You know, in |
|
Mexico we had the Merida Initiative where we had financial |
|
assistance tied to metrics regarding governance and rule of law |
|
to help better shape the situation. And from the testimoneys I |
|
heard, there really is no rule of law in Haiti right now. |
|
Can you tell us how we could effectuate assistance better |
|
to get the situation under control? |
|
Ms. White. Yes. Thank you so much for your question. |
|
I think we need, as I said again, however you want to call |
|
it, I call it drawing lines in the sand, but we need a very |
|
clear map of what, what we are expecting out of government, the |
|
Government in Haiti. And if we do not get the minimum that we |
|
are hoping out of the Government of Haiti, we need to have some |
|
conditionality. |
|
And I was explaining this the other day to one of my |
|
friends, and I was saying because the word ``conditionality,'' |
|
conditionality linked to aid became a very dirty word in the |
|
late 1990's and early 2000's around give them the money, it is |
|
their country, let them do what they want to do. |
|
And I always believed that United States directive that no, |
|
you have to have conditions for aid. The U.S. taxpayer expects |
|
something to come out of their hard-earned money. And we have |
|
to articulate exactly what that is. And that needs to happen. |
|
Mr. McCaul. Well, I could not agree with you more. And I |
|
think the taxpayers deserve that and want that. And, otherwise, |
|
if you pour money into a corrupt government or system, it is |
|
not going to get the results that you are looking for and then, |
|
therefore, waste the money. |
|
Let me ask you about the Haitian National Police. |
|
Previously the military seemed to control and there was a lot |
|
of corruption with the military in Haiti. And they, one of the |
|
reforms I think that has been more positive is the Haitian |
|
National Police. |
|
Do you agree with that? And should we be doing more to help |
|
them? |
|
Ms. White. Yes. When I left Haiti in 2015, let me tell you, |
|
I was very proud of the Haitian National Police. They had a |
|
good reputation. They were working with a lot of our people, |
|
from SOUTHCOM, and from different police forces in the United |
|
States. |
|
It was a great partnership. And I think that New York, yes, |
|
New York, especially New York by the way, Chairman Meeks. And I |
|
thought they were, you know, an organization that was |
|
relatively not corrupt and did a really good job with very |
|
little resources. |
|
I think we need more resources in the National Police. And |
|
I think we need more of that mentoring. I do not know if it is |
|
still ongoing, but we need more of it. Because I have heard |
|
from my many, many Haitian friends, that at least big portions |
|
of the police are becoming more and more corrupt. And that is |
|
really, really sad because they were a very decent |
|
organization. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Yes. I think we need to focus on that, too. |
|
Mr. McCaul. My last question to anybody on the panel, we, I |
|
think the selection, one of the testimoneys was that $150 |
|
million to have an election down there, OAS is involved, the |
|
United Nations, and the United States. How can we use that $150 |
|
million wisely? |
|
And I do not think the President is going to step aside |
|
until his term is done. And I know, Ambassador White, that was |
|
your first premise. But I do not think that that is going to |
|
happen. So, short of that, what do we do with the $150 million |
|
to make sure this is as free, and fair elections that we can? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Ranking Member McCaul. If you will |
|
allow, I want to answer this question. |
|
Mr. McCaul. Sure. |
|
Ms. Douyon. First of all, about the term of the President. |
|
His term ended last February 7th. And about the election, with |
|
that amount of money I think it would be better for the |
|
international community, and anyone interested in founding |
|
elections in Haiti, to wait until a fair election can happen in |
|
Haiti. |
|
At the present time there is no possibility that we can |
|
have fair, credible, inclusive elections. If anyone spends |
|
money on organizing elections now, it will only lead to another |
|
crisis because people will not be able to participate. And we |
|
have a very low turnover in the last election. Less than 30 |
|
percent of people participated in those elections |
|
And if you have elections with kidnappings and this crime |
|
level, I do not know if many people would be able to join, to |
|
campaign, to participate in those elections. And I do not know |
|
who in the civil society is going to accept the result of those |
|
elections. |
|
And even if you spend this amount of money, I do not trust |
|
the government to be able to organize elections when they |
|
cannot even manage dire shortage in the country. How could they |
|
organize elections? I do not trust them to do that. |
|
Mr. McCaul. Well, thank you, Emmanuela. I think that is the |
|
answer. I do not think we can have free and fair elections with |
|
the current President in office. Until he steps down, perhaps |
|
you should not be having an election until that time it seems |
|
to me. |
|
So, thanks for that clarification. That is I think very |
|
helpful testimony. |
|
And thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield back. |
|
Chairman Meeks. Thank you. |
|
I now recognize the Chair of the Subcommittee on Western |
|
Hemisphere, Civilian Security, Migration and International |
|
Economic Policy, and all the work that he has been doing on the |
|
subcommittee, particularly as it is focused on Haiti, |
|
Representative Albio Sires from New Jersey for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Sires. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am glad you are |
|
holding this as a full committee hearing because I see a lot of |
|
people are participating in this process. And people need to |
|
know what is going on in Haiti. |
|
You know, I visited Haiti a couple, a few years ago. And I |
|
met with the President. And back then he told me point blank |
|
that he wanted to revise the military. And I said to him, with |
|
the needs that you have in this country, why would you want to |
|
revise the military? |
|
I said to him, look, Costa Rica does not have an army and |
|
they are thriving. Why do you feel that Haiti has--needs an |
|
army? |
|
He said, well, it is the constitution. |
|
The other thing, we visited the National Police. They were |
|
doing a great job then. But it seems to me that this President |
|
step by step has been creating the military, get rid of judges, |
|
creating central intelligence, so he can maintain himself in |
|
power. |
|
Now, my question to the panel is, how do we stop that? |
|
Because are the Ambassadors of the country speaking up enough |
|
about it? Is the European Union speaking up about it? Are the |
|
neighboring countries speaking up about it? |
|
You know, we have invested a great deal of money in Haiti. |
|
And for this President to say that he needs a military, you |
|
know, to me was just ridiculous. |
|
So, I was wondering if somebody can take that question? |
|
Ms. White. I can. |
|
Ms. Auguste. Can I answer? |
|
Today the questions that are being raised are very |
|
important questions. First, we must acknowledge that it was a |
|
PHTK regime that unilaterally agreed to demobilize the Haitian |
|
army. |
|
We also know the former Haitian army was involved in grave |
|
human rights violations. There was nothing done to hold them |
|
accountable against the crimes committed against the Haitian |
|
population. |
|
Today we have a weakened police force because the |
|
Government has decided to support armed gangs within the |
|
country instead of providing resources to the Haitian police. |
|
The criminal gangs we have in the country have more weapons |
|
than the police forces themselves. |
|
Mr. Sires. Ambassador White, can you tell me if other |
|
Ambassadors---- |
|
Ms. Auguste. Today, when we are talking about the mandates |
|
of former President Jovenel Moise, he used the constitution to |
|
say that the mandate of parliament ended. Today, the Haitian |
|
population is using the same calculations to say that his |
|
mandate has ended. |
|
Mr. Sires. All right. Ambassador White, can you just speak |
|
to the question of have other Ambassadors spoken up about what |
|
is going on in Haiti? |
|
Ambassador White. |
|
Mr. Meeks. You are muted, Ambassador White. Please unmute. |
|
Ms. White. Sorry. Yes, they have certainly spoken out |
|
against about all the violence. They have spoken out about |
|
human rights abuses. What I am not sure about is, you know, |
|
what are the consequences? You know, you can say, well, you |
|
know, this is horrible and the situation is horrible and |
|
Haiti's a mess, but what exactly do we do about it? So I have |
|
not seen that articulated and it might have been articulated, I |
|
have not personally seen it. |
|
And just, if you will, this question of the army came up |
|
when I was Ambassador there, and they kept saying, we want an |
|
army, we want an army, and I kept saying, why would you want an |
|
army? It just seems ridiculous. |
|
Mr. Sires. Exactly. Well, thank you very much, Chairman. I |
|
am finished. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman yields back. And now I recognize |
|
the Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Africa, Global |
|
Health, and Global Human Rights, Representative Chris Smith of |
|
New Jersey, for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Smith. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and thank you |
|
for convening this important hearing. You and the Ranking |
|
Member, and Albio Sires, Chairman, have asked a lot of the |
|
important questions about the political leadership. I would |
|
like to just focus for a moment with our distinguished |
|
witnesses. We all remember in 2010 when 200,000 people died |
|
from the earthquake and 10 months later, there was a horrible |
|
outbreak of cholera. And for about a century, Haiti had not |
|
known cholera. |
|
And after a great deal of investigation, Ban Ki-moon |
|
finally came to the conclusion from an expert panel that it was |
|
brought to Haiti by the peacekeepers from Nepal. It was a |
|
strain that was found in Nepal and their camp was so, |
|
unfortunately, unsanitary, their waste led to contaminated |
|
water and about 800-plus thousand people got sick, 10,000 |
|
Haitians died--and there were commitments made. |
|
I know CDC worked very hard on this as did our U.S. |
|
Government State Department and USAID, to make sure that |
|
sanitation was improved. But I wonder, just as a snapshot, has |
|
it been improved to the point where there is robust sanitary |
|
conditions in Haiti as a result of lessons learned so that |
|
there is never again waterborne illnesses like the cholera that |
|
was taken to so many people? |
|
Second, there was talk of reparations and was even a |
|
lawsuit, sadly, that was dismissed by a Federal judge about |
|
reparations because this had a causation and it was U.N. |
|
peacekeepers, and I am wondering if anyone would like to speak |
|
to that issue. And, finally, on human trafficking, Mr. |
|
Chairman, Haiti is a tier 2 country as per the last report by |
|
TIP, trafficking in persons, but there is a very, very ongoing |
|
serious problem of children being put into forced labor, |
|
domestic servitude. |
|
In 2014, Haiti passed a law, and I know the Ambassador |
|
knows about that, on TIP. Enforcement has been lackluster to |
|
say the least. There were no prosecutions during the reporting |
|
period to the last TIP Report, the 2020 report, and I am just |
|
wondering if our distinguished witnesses could shed light on |
|
the status of victims and the prosecutions of traffickers and |
|
the prevention strategies in Haiti. |
|
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I yield to the answers. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congressman Smith. I do not have |
|
enough data to comment on improvement in general sanitation |
|
but, and number of instances of human trafficking, but what I |
|
can say is that there is no real prosecution of criminal in |
|
Haiti at this time. There is a lot of impunity and even people |
|
who are involved in massacres are not pursued. They do not face |
|
charge and are not held accountable, so I will not even mention |
|
for all the cases. |
|
And this is directly linked to corruption, rampant |
|
corruption and impunity in Haiti. The overall situation is that |
|
if we want to tackle some specific problem like human |
|
trafficking and even bad living condition, it has a lot to see |
|
with leadership and the governance of the country. And for the |
|
past 4 years, Haiti has been in a crisis of leadership with a |
|
President that himself is accused of being involved in |
|
corruption. Therefore, there is little chance that we could see |
|
any improvement in term of prosecution against people involved |
|
in human trafficking or any other type of crime. |
|
Mr. Smith. Thank you. Anybody else like to respond? |
|
Ms. Jozef. Thank you so much. This is Guerline, Congressman |
|
Smith. The reality is, as we know in Haiti when we speak of the |
|
cholera, when we see what has happened, nothing has been done. |
|
No reparation has been provided for those in impacted community |
|
Members. It is unacceptable to see how not only, you know, what |
|
we call the corruption in Haiti, but the way that the |
|
international community always deals with issues in Haiti |
|
whether it is things that are happening on the ground for that |
|
the chaos, or even things such we see the United Nations, you |
|
know, worker, unfortunately, with cholera due to lack of |
|
sanitation, due to lack of infrastructure, to make sure that |
|
the people that we are serving are protected. |
|
So this is a clear example of how negative the entire |
|
international community including as we can see the U.N. treats |
|
Haiti when it comes to those types of issues. |
|
Mr. Smith. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman's time has expired. Hold it. The |
|
gentleman's time has expired. I now recognize Representative |
|
Brad Sherman of California for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Sherman. Thank you, Mr. Chair. Thank you for holding |
|
this hearing. Haiti and the United States have a long |
|
relationship. It is, after all, our first sister republic here |
|
in the Western Hemisphere. Unfortunately, Haiti is one of the |
|
poorest nations of the Western Hemisphere. |
|
Haiti has only 14,000 to 15,000 police in its Haitian |
|
National Police which is less than international standards |
|
would call for the policing of such a populated country. |
|
Between 2008 and 2019, there were 3,200 Indian policemen who |
|
were there as part of the U.N. And then our colleague Chris |
|
Smith points out how U.N. peacekeepers from Nepal were a |
|
problem for Haiti. |
|
So I will ask first, Ms. Douyon, would international |
|
peacekeepers or international police assistance be helpful in |
|
providing for the rule of law in Haiti? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congressman Sherman. Of course, help |
|
is always welcome, but I would say that we need to focus more |
|
on improving the capacity of the Haitian National Police. |
|
Because what I notice, is that every time we have foreigners |
|
coming, helping, when they leave, the local stuff is not better |
|
off. We do not see any real improvement. It is like they come |
|
here, do the job, but they do not really reinforce the capacity |
|
of the police. |
|
And at this time, the Haitian National Police is suffering |
|
from bad reputation and some policemen are denouncing bad |
|
working condition. They need increase in their salary. They |
|
need the health care. They need a better environment to work |
|
and we need even more police officer. So if I recommend |
|
something or recommend that we work on the Haitian National |
|
Police and show that every police officer can take care of his |
|
family and they can get perfect training instead of bringing |
|
more police officer from anywhere. |
|
Mr. Sherman. The written reports say that there have been |
|
251 COVID deaths in Haiti. That seems like a very low number. |
|
Ms. White, should I believe that number or is it dramatically |
|
understated? |
|
Ms. White. Well, yes. I think--I do think you should |
|
believe the number. Now I cannot quite figure it out myself |
|
because there is at least eight or nine times that many of |
|
COVID deaths right across the border in the DR. And as we all |
|
know Haiti does not have exactly the most efficient healthcare |
|
system in the world. But for whatever reason, a very, very |
|
trusted doctor from, you know, that has ties to Cornell that is |
|
a Haitian doctor, has confirmed to me that the number of COVID |
|
deaths have been relatively low. And, you know, this is true in |
|
Africa too. |
|
Mr. Sherman. While I have you, I have one more question |
|
that is Haiti is one of the 15 nations to recognize Taiwan. We |
|
have the Beijing offering free assistance, concessionary loans. |
|
Is Haiti better off sticking with Taiwan, and should we be |
|
concerned with China trying to develop a relationship with the |
|
Government of Haiti? |
|
Ms. White. Is this for me again? |
|
Mr. Sherman. Yes. |
|
Ms. White. I do not know the extent of what the Chinese is |
|
doing in Haiti anymore, to tell you the honest to God truth, so |
|
I cannot really comment on that. But I have the Chinese slowly |
|
creeping in all across Africa and Haiti, and I personally do |
|
not think this is a good thing. |
|
Mr. Sherman. They have sent hundreds of thousands of face |
|
masks, thousands of tons of rice. That is to say Taiwan has to, |
|
well, I guess there is only 15 nations with who they have a |
|
relationship. |
|
But then, finally, for whichever witness--oh, I have only |
|
29 seconds. That is not enough time for anybody to answer a |
|
question. I yield back. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you. The gentleman yields back. I now |
|
recognize the Ranking Member of the Subcommittee on Asia, the |
|
Pacific, Central Asia, and Nonproliferation, Representative |
|
Steve Chabot of Ohio, for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Chabot. Mr. Chairman? |
|
Mr. Meeks. Yes. |
|
Mr. Chabot. I am not sure if you can hear me. My screen |
|
just went--froze. |
|
Mr. Meeks. I hear you, Mr. Chabot. I do hear you. We hear |
|
you. |
|
Mr. Chabot. That was not a very judicious time for this |
|
thing to freeze. I am not sure if anybody can hear me or not. |
|
Mr. Meeks. We hear you, Mr. Chabot. |
|
Mr. Chabot. I am just frozen here. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Okay. |
|
Mr. Chabot. Well. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Mr. Chabot, can you hear me? |
|
Mr. Chabot. Maybe we can come back to me, because I assume |
|
you are probably not hearing me. |
|
Mr. Meeks. We will come back to Mr. Chabot. So I will go |
|
right now to Representative Brian Mast of Florida. You are now |
|
recognized for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Mast. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for recognizing me, and |
|
thank you to our witnesses for participating today as well. My |
|
question goes to this, and it is open to any of our witnesses. |
|
It is a general question for you and---- |
|
Mr. Sherman. I yielded back 29 seconds. I have never done |
|
that before. Really. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Mr. Sherman, put yourself on mute, please. |
|
Mr. Mast. I think he muted. I think we are--it was just a |
|
quick error. We will get over that one. |
|
My question goes to our witnesses, generally, and I would |
|
ask for reflection for America and overcoming our challenges |
|
with the inception of our Nation and the founding of our |
|
independence and creating of our democratic systems that we |
|
rely on here, and what it is that individuals, just off my |
|
shore as a Floridian, see that draw to come to here in the |
|
United States of America, which I have a large Haitian |
|
community as well within my area of south Florida. |
|
What do you think can be learned and brought back to Haiti |
|
to help replicate what it is that is drawing people here to our |
|
shores? |
|
Ms. Jozef. Thank you so much, Congressman Mast. This is |
|
Guerline. I would like to take part of the question. First of |
|
all, you know, we always talk about Haiti being the poorest |
|
country in the Western Hemisphere, but we always fail to look |
|
at the root causes of that fact going back 200 years, within |
|
the relationships, and the fact that from the very inception of |
|
Haiti, France forced with the international powers to Haiti to |
|
pay, because we freed ourselves, to pay France for lost wages |
|
of slavery that was created on our backs. So these are the very |
|
root causes of Haiti being in the state that it is. |
|
So we see from there, the continued, you know, in action, |
|
misaction, and straight-out abuse of Haiti, in Haiti, on Haiti, |
|
and we see that people leaving. As I previously mentioned, |
|
Haiti was not a sending country. Haiti was a receiving country, |
|
lighting the way for freedom not only for Haiti but other |
|
places. Haiti was the only country that provided citizenship |
|
for the Jews to escape so that they can get freedom. |
|
So when we come back to what we experienced earlier this |
|
year in this great United States of ours, and I must say that I |
|
am both a proud Haitian woman and a proud American woman, so |
|
there is a lot to be learned. There is a lot that can be used |
|
to provide assistance and provide relief in Haiti. I believe |
|
we---- |
|
Mr. Mast. Thank you for your response, ma'am. I just want |
|
to pause you and ask you to continue, what is that piece to be |
|
learned? That is what I want to get at. What is that piece to |
|
be learned that you just said there is a lot to be learned? |
|
What is that that needs to be brought back to Haiti to result |
|
in success? |
|
Ms. Jozef. Not to be brought back in Haiti, per se, but to |
|
work with Haiti to be able to create a sustainable, you know, |
|
solution. When we look into what we have, we are experiencing |
|
here in the United States, how do we work with the Haitian |
|
people to implement those things that can be successful so that |
|
themselves can be able to live for themselves. |
|
Mr. Mast. Very important point. I want us to work with the |
|
Haitian people and I think we do do that very well. And there |
|
is definitely room for improvement, but I know as a Floridian |
|
this is something that touches us very close to home. I would |
|
never, however, say that it is not more important, or rather |
|
that--that it isn't more important that Haitians individually |
|
within Haiti look in the mirror and say we cannot rely on |
|
America, we cannot rely on France, we cannot rely on others. We |
|
are hopeful for their assistance, but we have to look in the |
|
mirror and say, how do we do this? |
|
And that is what I hope we can really get to a root of is |
|
what does Haiti have to look in the mirror and decide is going |
|
to occur there, whether they get the assistance from the U.S. |
|
or anybody else. What is it that they can look in the mirror |
|
and do to correct what is missing there? |
|
And in that, Mr. Chairman, I thank you for the time. And I |
|
have nothing to yield back, but thank you for the time. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Can I add something? Can I reply to that? |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman's time has expired. The |
|
gentleman's time has expired. |
|
Mr. Mast. The Chairman allows you. |
|
Mr. Meeks. No, no. I cannot. We have a lot of Members |
|
waiting to ask questions. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Because this is so important. |
|
Mr. Meeks. We will get to it. I will get it when someone |
|
asks you the question next, maybe Mr. Connolly or someone else. |
|
But I have got to yield the time now to the President of the |
|
NATO Parliamentary Assembly, Representative Gerry Connolly of |
|
the state of Virginia, for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Connolly. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank you to our |
|
panel. You know, part of this discussion, it seems to me, we |
|
have sort of ignored the America historical context with |
|
respect to Haiti. And, Ms. Douyon, you may want to comment on |
|
that as well as Ambassador White. You know, the American |
|
history with Haiti is wretched. |
|
After brutal French colonialism was overturned, we refused |
|
to recognize a black, formerly enslaved government in Haiti |
|
because it threatened slavery in America in the 19th century. |
|
We refused commerce. We denied them access to trade and |
|
investment, credits, and helped to impoverish the country and |
|
keep it impoverished. We have invaded the country. We have |
|
occupied the country. And we have installed governments and |
|
taken down governments, and reinstalled governments. |
|
And maybe I can start with you, Ambassador White, because |
|
surely you are aware of that historical perspective. But it is |
|
not like we--the current condition of Haiti is intrinsically |
|
dysfunctional. There are historic reasons why it is in the |
|
condition it is in, and a lot of it can be traced to American |
|
policy and intervention, very little of it good over the |
|
panoply of history. |
|
So given that, shouldn't we tread a little lightly on |
|
things like conditionality and dictating terms of what Haiti |
|
needs to do and how best can the United States try to influence |
|
positive and desirable outcomes in terms of democracy, in terms |
|
of lifting people out of poverty, in terms of trying to promote |
|
a more robust, economic growth that benefits everybody? |
|
Ambassador White and then Ms. Douyon. |
|
Ms. White. Yes, it is too bad we just do not have three or |
|
4 hours for discussion because it is a long one, but you are |
|
right. The history between the United States and Haiti is a |
|
love-hate affair and has been for a long time. I distinctly |
|
remember like I was saying, in 1986, when Bebe Dok left and I |
|
remember sitting in the embassy and the Ambassador Adams, who |
|
was a fabulous Ambassador, but he said we are going to have |
|
elections. |
|
And I remember saying, ``Elections? There is no political |
|
party. There is no judiciary. There is no police except the |
|
Tonton Macoute. How in the heck are we going to have |
|
elections?'' ``That is what we do for a democracy.'' And I |
|
think, you know, elections ever since have been, you know, |
|
difficult. |
|
But we--I know this idea of conditionality is one that |
|
raises eyebrows, but I do think that if we are not saying |
|
clearly what it is we are expecting of the Government of Haiti, |
|
then we do not have a road map and we definitely need a road |
|
map. Now we might be doing that. I am not in on any |
|
discussions. I am not part of the core group. No one calls me |
|
from Haiti--well, my Haitian friends, but not my American |
|
friends, for advice. |
|
So I do not know. We may be doing more of that. But they |
|
deserve to know, you know, what they are getting for their |
|
money. |
|
Mr. Connolly. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Douyon, I know you wanted to respond to both Mr. Mast |
|
and hopefully my observation as well. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congressman Connolly. I totally |
|
agreed with the fact you shared about the history between U.S. |
|
and Haiti, and it is true that it has been complicated. And to |
|
reply to Congressman Mast comment, Haiti is not waiting for the |
|
U.S., France, or any other country in the international |
|
community. We have already decided what we want to do. |
|
What we are asking is for the international community to |
|
listen and respect our choice. We have a President whose term |
|
ended last February. He has benefited from the support of OAS, |
|
the U.S. State Department, and despite the fact that most of |
|
Haiti's civil society acknowledges that his term ended |
|
according to the Constitution, this is what we are facing now. |
|
And this is a perfect example of when we do not listen to |
|
Haitians, we cannot judge them later and blame them for the |
|
outcome. And it is also important to differentiate between the |
|
people who always stand for the country and most of the elected |
|
officials who are usually corrupt and are minding their own |
|
business and are defending their own interests, usually with |
|
the support of the international community who is always saying |
|
that they are supporting institutions, why they are supporting |
|
people, people who are often decried by their own population. |
|
This is the perfect case study with Joyenel Moise. But for |
|
more than 2 years, people have been calling on him to resign. |
|
Now we are not even calling on him to resign because his term |
|
ended, we call him to vacate office. And he has the support of |
|
the international community. We want to end with all those, the |
|
corruption and impunity. We want to end with the old practices |
|
and so many people do not want to give this chance to decide |
|
for ourselves. |
|
And this is why we are saying, we are having this hearing |
|
now. This is our point. This is what we are defending, the |
|
right to decide for ourselves and for the international |
|
community to listen and follow the Haitian civil society lead, |
|
because we know better. We know what is good for us. We know |
|
where we made mistakes in the past. We are learning from this. |
|
And it is trial and error. It is a young democracy. We are |
|
learning and we are adjusting, and now is the turning point and |
|
this is why we need solidarity, not the kind of comment like |
|
this---- |
|
Mr. Connolly. Thank you for that. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman's time---- |
|
Mr. Connolly. I yield back. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman's time has expired. I think we are |
|
still working to get Mr. Chabot on camera, so while we continue |
|
to do that I will now recognize the Ranking Member of the |
|
Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere, Civilian Security, |
|
Migration, and International Economy Policy, Representative |
|
Mark Green of Tennessee, for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Green. Thank you, Chairman Meeks and Ranking Member |
|
McCaul, for holding this hearing on Haiti. It is an honor to |
|
serve as the Ranking Member on Western Hemisphere, and, |
|
obviously, this focus on Haiti is a critical aspect of our |
|
subcommittee. I thank Chairman Sires for his comments as well, |
|
his wisdom and experience. |
|
When I founded my medical foundation, Align MD Foundation |
|
and then Two Rivers Medical Foundation, we sent medical |
|
missions, trips to Haiti. And the country was then challenged |
|
with poverty, rule of law issues, and governance issues and, |
|
unfortunately, the situation is only worse now. It is tragic |
|
for many reasons. History makes it even more so. |
|
Their first, you know, Haiti's first Constitution was |
|
influenced by our own Alexander Hamilton who grew up in the |
|
Caribbean himself. Unfortunately, pervasive corruption and |
|
desperate poverty have long played the country. It remains one |
|
of the poorest nations in the Caribbean, lagging far behind its |
|
neighbors in basic measures of economic and political well- |
|
being. The Haitian people need and deserve better. As a |
|
neighbor, friend, and partner, we should do what we can. |
|
But as we have all noted today, it is sadly an uphill |
|
battle. The turmoil and instability, including the recent |
|
prison break, underscore the absence of the rule of law. Haiti |
|
ranks toward the bottom of many international comparisons for |
|
transparency, economic development, and ease of doing business. |
|
Sadly, recent events have shown us that Haiti still has a long |
|
way to go. |
|
My questions today are really for anyone who wants to chime |
|
in. We are hearing that the prisons in Haiti are now at 384 |
|
percent capacity and my first thought is that some of these |
|
arrests may very well be politically motivated, but also are |
|
seeing large increases in violent crime. Can you share with us, |
|
any one of the witnesses, about the state of criminal justice |
|
in Haiti and what portion of those criminals are actually |
|
criminals versus political prisoners, and also, you know, the |
|
status of prisons? They are so full, you know, how is that |
|
impacting criminal justice? |
|
Ms. Auguste. Thank you very much, Congressman Mark Green. |
|
We want to take your questions regarding the prison system in |
|
Haiti. The people who are incarcerated are living an inhumane |
|
condition. The current prison that we have can hold about 3,000 |
|
people and today we have 12,000 people incarcerated, so then |
|
you can just imagine the deplorable condition that these |
|
inmates are in. |
|
And also given the dysfunction of the judicial system, |
|
there is a lot of violations of the rights of those inmates |
|
that are occurring on a regular basis. Like I said earlier, 84 |
|
percent of the incarcerated populations are awaiting trial. |
|
There are people in there who have been incarcerated for 10 |
|
years and have not seen a judge. The worst thing for us today |
|
is that yes, indeed, we have political prisoners. They are |
|
people who are incarcerated because of their political belief |
|
and their stand against this government. |
|
So think about someone who spent 10 years in prison without |
|
appearing before a judge and now individuals will also be |
|
incarcerated for their political belief what that situation is |
|
like. It is worsening daily. Unfortunately, no matter what |
|
promises the government has made, they have done nothing to |
|
resolve the issue of prolonged detentions for those inmates. |
|
Thank you. |
|
Mr. Green. If I could, I would also like to ask the |
|
Ambassador if she might share a little bit of her perspective |
|
on the spillover effects of what is going on in Haiti, how it |
|
is spilling over in the region and the rest of the Caribbean |
|
and, particularly, neighboring Dominican Republic. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Ambassador White, please turn on your camera and |
|
off mute. |
|
Ambassador White, still with us? |
|
Ms. White. Can you hear me now? |
|
Mr. Meeks. Yes, I hear you now. |
|
Ms. White. Okay, sorry. I have like three devices going |
|
here and they are all running out of power. Let me just go over |
|
here. |
|
Yes, there is always spillover in the region. I mean the |
|
DR, you know, has a booming economy and the Haitians are going |
|
back and forth over the border every day. And what is worrying |
|
me more and would worry me if I was still the Ambassador there, |
|
is the amount of the huge increase in Haitians trying to get to |
|
the United States. |
|
And, you know, they use, you know, means to get there. They |
|
are highly dangerous, you know, they die all the time. And we, |
|
you know, the only way to stop immigration whether it is from |
|
Haiti or Guatemala or wherever, Mexico, is to create better |
|
conditions in the country so they do not want to leave. And so |
|
the violence that is going on in Haiti right now, the lack of |
|
rule of law, the lack of human rights, is driving Haitians out |
|
of the country to almost anywhere else they can do to get any |
|
kind of opportunity for their families. |
|
And then in my statement, I said it is very hard to do |
|
regular development activities in the midst of a violent |
|
country so, you know, just one feeds off the other, and that is |
|
why it is just so critical that the human rights situation, the |
|
violence, the gangs, that situation has got to be looked at |
|
immediately because I do not think you can do anything else |
|
until you stop that. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Ms. White. Including elections. |
|
Mr. Green. My time has expired. Thank you, Chairman. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman's time has expired. I now |
|
recognize the Chair of the Subcommittee on Africa, Global |
|
Health, and Global Human Rights, Representative Karen Bass from |
|
California, for 5 minutes. |
|
Ms. Bass. Well, thank you, Mr. Chair. I actually want to |
|
continue right with the Ambassador right where she was going, |
|
because I understood what you said in terms of the gangs and |
|
all of that. The question is what should we do? I know that we |
|
have mentioned the police, but it is my understanding that the |
|
people we have trained, be it the police or the military, they |
|
are the ones that shot live rounds into the protesters, and it |
|
is questionable as to whether or not they were colluding with |
|
the government. So the question to you is, what can we do as |
|
the United States? |
|
And then when you were Ambassador, I know that you |
|
facilitated a number of rounds of negotiations between |
|
conflicting parties, and I want to know based on your time |
|
there, what lessons learned? What could you have done to have |
|
prevented what you saw at the time and what should we be doing |
|
now? |
|
Now are you able--can you hear me? Yes, okay. Go ahead. |
|
I do not want to lose my time with her technical problems. |
|
Can we---- |
|
Ms. White. Sorry. I have got like three going. They are all |
|
ready, they just keep---- |
|
Mr. Meeks. Your time is held until such time---- |
|
Ms. Bass. Thank you. Thank you. |
|
Ms. White. I can hear you. Can you hear me? |
|
Ms. White. Yes. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Now we can hear you. |
|
Ms. White. Do you want me to talk really fast? |
|
Mr. Meeks. Yes, go now. |
|
Ms. White. Okay, go. So I, yes, I had lots and lots of |
|
meetings with the opposition even to the point of getting |
|
attacked by mobs, I remember. If you are not bringing the |
|
opposition to the negotiating table then you cannot make |
|
progress. And I have no idea. I presume that they are doing |
|
that all the time. You know, you have got to get out of your |
|
office into their offices and open up the dialog. I just assume |
|
that is being done, I do not know. |
|
And it is a good question about the police. That I think |
|
that we need--we cannot give up on the police. We have invested |
|
millions of dollars in the police. They can be reinforced. They |
|
can be--when I--they were in a very good position. We have got |
|
to get---- |
|
Ms. Bass. Well, you know, I realize we have invested a lot |
|
of money, but if our investment results in shooting innocent |
|
people and colluding with the existing government that does not |
|
sound like a good return on investment to me, so I am just |
|
wondering if you have a thought. I have a couple of other |
|
questions for our other witnesses, but if you have a thought as |
|
to what we can do differently. |
|
What did you learn during that time what can we do |
|
differently? I do not want to reinforce an abusive police |
|
force. |
|
Ms. White. Yes, right. Right. Yes, yes. Got you. |
|
Well, like I said, we have got to root out, tell them to |
|
root out the bad actors. I mean you are right. They have been |
|
seen shooting into, you know, into crowds. Root out the bad |
|
actors. We did that before. We did that. There were bad actors |
|
when I was there too. And we had this fabulous New York |
|
policeman that would come down and they would do audits. They |
|
would do interviews. They would do training. And I just think |
|
we have to go back to that. |
|
Ms. Bass. All right. Thank you, Madam Ambassador. |
|
Let me move on to Ms. Douyon. And, you know, one, it is |
|
clear we do not need to have a referendum for the Constitution, |
|
the elections are going to be shaky, so the question is what |
|
should we do? Not change the Constitution, postpone the |
|
elections, what is it? And I also believe very deeply that we |
|
need to address root causes. But for right now, if no election, |
|
then what? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congresswoman Bass. First of all, |
|
what you can do is cancel the CEP. Recommend. It is not up to |
|
you to cancel it. You have to recommend. |
|
Ms. Bass. Cancel what? |
|
Ms. Douyon. I said that you have to cancel the CEP, but I |
|
correct my language and I said, it is not up to you to cancel |
|
it, it is to not support Joyenel Moise with that CEP. The CEP |
|
is electoral council. We do not, we cannot continue with an |
|
illegal electoral council. We cannot have a referendum that is |
|
illegal and we have to listen to civil society. |
|
And the solution now is, since the term of the President |
|
ended last month, we have to consider the nonpartisan |
|
consensus-based team that is capable of leading the country on |
|
a nice fair election, restore peace, improve on---- |
|
Ms. Bass. Do you have respected leaders that if the |
|
President was called on to step aside are their respectable, |
|
unifying leaders that we could call for should be a part of |
|
that team that you just mentioned? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Of course, it would be a disaster if there were |
|
no qualified, serious, and noncorrupt Haitians capable of |
|
leading our country. |
|
Ms. Bass [continuing]. Qualified people, the question is-- |
|
-- |
|
Ms. Douyon. Serious and noncorrupt people, yes. They exist. |
|
People like this exist. There are many people like this. And |
|
actually there is a consensus among civil society that we can |
|
have such team, all we need to do is to have Joyenel Moise to |
|
vacate and---- |
|
Ms. Bass. Can you tell us--my time has run out, but can you |
|
tell us who those people are, what the team would be? And you |
|
do not have to answer right this second, but can you send it to |
|
us? |
|
Ms. Douyon. I cannot name anyone because of the current |
|
situation in Haiti. I am afraid if I identify them now they |
|
might be arrested. |
|
Ms. Bass. All right. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Just like the judges. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentlelady's time has expired. The |
|
gentlelady's time has expired. I now recognize Representative |
|
Andy Barr from Kentucky for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Barr. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I really appreciate |
|
your leadership on this issue in bringing this issue to the |
|
attention of our committee. It is such an important issue. |
|
And I represent in central Kentucky a faith community that |
|
has invested considerable time and resources in mission trips |
|
to Haiti. They bring back beautiful stories of a wonderful |
|
people, yes, impoverished people, people who are struggling, |
|
but wonderful people who deserve better. And so many churches |
|
around this country have sponsored mission trips similar to |
|
those of my constituents and we want the best for the people of |
|
Haiti. And the very regrettable track record of human rights |
|
violations and violence and corruption is obviously something |
|
we are all interested in. |
|
But let me start by asking Ambassador White kind of a |
|
fundamental question which is, aside from the obvious |
|
humanitarian interest that we have in improving the conditions |
|
in Haiti, what would you say is, if any, the strategic national |
|
security interest of the United States in that country and is |
|
it the historic connection between Haiti and Taiwan and |
|
potentially countering a Chinese Communist Party Belt and Road |
|
initiative in Haiti? |
|
Ms. White. Well, that is a real possibility. But I think |
|
more, you know, more to the point is that if we do not develop |
|
Haitians and give Haitians a decent quality of living, |
|
including giving them something to do, you know, employment and |
|
basic health care and human rights, that we are going to find |
|
them on our doors in huge numbers and we just are not able to |
|
do that. |
|
Mr. Barr. Let me ask you a question about the comment that |
|
you made, I would really appreciate it, Ambassador, about |
|
conditionality with foreign aid. And Mr. Connolly's recitation |
|
of American history with respect to Haiti, you know, the |
|
American people, American taxpayers, not just in terms of these |
|
mission trips, but the taxpayers deserve substantial credit and |
|
generosity here. |
|
You know, what I am reading is just since the earthquake |
|
alone, the United States taxpayer has invested $5.1 billion, |
|
and since 2011, USAID, $1.8 billion, a hundred million in 2020 |
|
alone. I would just argue and, Ambassador, I invite your |
|
feedback, if U.S. foreign aid was the answer to Haiti's many |
|
problems, then those problems would have been solved a long |
|
time ago. |
|
I mean there absolutely no shortage of American and |
|
international funding here. It has just been so badly |
|
mismanaged and subject to corruption. And so, please, amplify |
|
your testimony about the critical importance of conditionality |
|
associated with any additional taxpayer investment in Haiti in |
|
terms of anticorruption efforts. |
|
Ms. White. Yes, people usually ask about this. And I must |
|
say that after the earthquake, we had about two billion dollars |
|
after the earthquake. It killed 300,000 people. I mean |
|
everything was gone. The port and the roads were gone. The |
|
airport was gone. And I mean that people kept saying, ``But you |
|
had two billion dollars.'' And I said, ``I needed 20 billion to |
|
rebuild the Nation after an earthquake of that size.'' |
|
So though it looks like a tremendous amount of money, it |
|
is, you know, to rebuild from nothing, believe me, we did a |
|
fantastic job. We did get Haiti together again. Fifty percent |
|
of Americans, they emptied out their pockets to help make that |
|
happen. And by the way, the NGO's and the religious groups get |
|
a bad name in Haiti, but thank God for the religious NGO's who |
|
are doing a fabulous job down there---- |
|
Mr. Barr. And reclaiming my time, I do not have much time |
|
left, Ambassador White, but I do want to followup on |
|
Representative Sherman's important question about Taiwan. Are |
|
we seeing an active Belt and Road initiative from the Chinese |
|
and post-pandemic, a Chinese malign influence in the Caribbean |
|
impacting Haiti in a way that would, you know, separate Haiti |
|
as an ally of Taiwan, and as one of only 15 countries |
|
maintaining official recognition with Taiwan? Is there any |
|
information you can give us on that? |
|
Ms. White. I am sorry, but there really isn't. I do not |
|
know what Taiwan is up to. I do not. |
|
Mr. Barr. Okay. All right. Well, thank you again, Mr. |
|
Chairman, for the hearing. It is very illuminating. And I yield |
|
back. |
|
Mr. Meeks. The gentleman's time has expired. I now |
|
recognize the Chair of the Subcommittee on the Middle East, |
|
North Africa, and Global Counterterrorism, Representative Ted |
|
Deutch from Florida. |
|
Mr. Deutch. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thanks for calling |
|
this important hearing. Thanks to all the witnesses for your |
|
candid and powerful testimony. I share the concerns several of |
|
my colleagues have already expressed over the current situation |
|
in Haiti. And as a representative of south Florida as my |
|
colleague from south Florida, Mr. Mast, mentioned a little |
|
while ago, this is an issue that hits close to home for so many |
|
in the Haitian diaspora community in my district. |
|
And I would like to start by continuing the conversation |
|
about protocol concerns for the proposed elections. I think we |
|
can all agree elections are sorely needed. We all agree that |
|
the Haitian people deserve free, fair, and credible elections. |
|
And I have heard the concerns of our witnesses today that the |
|
current proposed CEP is illegitimate, even illegal, and I have |
|
heard similar concerns from Haiti civil society and from the |
|
diaspora community in my district. |
|
So, Ms. Auguste, in your view, are there any reforms that |
|
would make the current provisional electoral council as |
|
proposed by the administration independent, legitimate, and |
|
able to administer free, fair, and credible elections? |
|
Ms. Auguste. |
|
Ms. Auguste. Yes. Thank you, Congressman Deutch. With |
|
regard to the current CEP, it is not possible to have election |
|
with this illegal CEP and we have already enumerated the |
|
various reason why that cannot happen. Earlier, when I was |
|
talking about insecurity, I would like to add a few points for |
|
you to better understand what is going on in the country. |
|
Today, the Ouest Department and the Artibonite Department |
|
represent 60 percent of the Haitian electorate. The majority of |
|
these voters are being housed in the same place where there are |
|
many gangs, gangs that are associated with the current |
|
government. That also means all candidates who are not |
|
associated with those gangs and the government will not be able |
|
to go into those neighborhoods to campaign. |
|
Within 2 years, the government made three million electoral |
|
cards. So far, they have distributed less than two million. |
|
They were supposed to have done 7,500,000 cards for the voters |
|
to be able to participate in the election process. If we are |
|
saying that election will take place in September, that will |
|
mean in August all the electoral cards have to be distributed. |
|
It is virtually impossible within the current situations for |
|
the Haitian Government to realize that. |
|
Mr. Deutch. Ms. Auguste, I appreciate that. I just have a |
|
bit, excuse me, a bit more time. So let me just, if I may, |
|
thank you, and--sorry, everyone. I want to just, given what you |
|
just said, Ms. Auguste, I just want to address the position |
|
that has been emphasized by some of our Members and witnesses |
|
here today, which is that any election or referendum that is |
|
overseen by the Moise administration would automatically be |
|
seen by the Haitian people as illegitimate. |
|
We have seen on the ground, I have heard, firsthand, human |
|
rights groups and opposition leaders maintaining that Moise's |
|
term ended February 7th and an interim government is necessary |
|
to organize elections now. The question, Ambassador White, that |
|
I have for you is, if the provisional electoral council cannot |
|
meet the standard of being free, fair, and credible, but the |
|
current President does not step down, how can Congress and the |
|
Biden Administration and the international community play a |
|
responsible role in ensuring that any election that is held is |
|
credible and legitimate and then facilitating the public |
|
acceptance of the results and in mediating between the Moise |
|
administration and the opposition? |
|
That is what we are trying to do. I think that is what we |
|
need to do. Ambassador? |
|
Ms. White. Yes. Well, as I said in my testimony, I think |
|
that we, you know, it would be nice if he would step down, but |
|
I do not think that is going to happen. So I think if we sort |
|
of put him aside, you know, in the best of all worlds, and we |
|
have a prime minister appointed that is noncorrupt, that is not |
|
from the political sector, is not from the private sector-- |
|
there are several really good candidates. I am not going to |
|
name them, but there are several--and then we have this summit |
|
that we get to and we put out the old CEP, we have a summit |
|
where the actors come back to the table and we discuss how we |
|
can get the right representation to inform it to have a CEP |
|
that is credible, I mean that is one solution that I can see |
|
happening within the very near future. |
|
I think the problem with transitional governments is then |
|
we are in that mess again and it slows down everything here. It |
|
is not that I am--in fact, I wrote a piece, or talked for a |
|
piece in the New Yorker, a couple years ago, when I said I |
|
think that is exactly what we need. But I think right now we |
|
could use the prime minister option. |
|
Mr. Deutch. Thank you very much. I think my time has |
|
expired. Thanks, Ambassador. Thanks to all the witnesses. Mr. |
|
Chairman, thanks for this very important hearing today. Yield |
|
back. |
|
Mr. Meeks. And, you are right. The gentleman's time has |
|
expired. I am going to, after I recognize the next member, I am |
|
going to ask Representative Levin to Chair the meeting briefly |
|
as I have to step away to another briefing. But I shall be back |
|
shortly, but Representative Levin will Chair. I now recognize |
|
Representative Greg Steube of Florida for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Steube. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
|
My questions are for Ambassador White. Haiti's poorest |
|
border with the Dominican Republic is extremely vulnerable to |
|
illicit trade. Haiti's maritime borders also remain virtually |
|
unregulated which contributes to economic insecurity. How can |
|
the Haitian Government increase customs control at its borders? |
|
Ms. White. Oh, boy. And a good question. Very good |
|
question. We worked with that so much when I was there and we |
|
were making progress. A lot of it consulting with people that |
|
had set up custom border patrols in the United States, and we |
|
were making some real progress, but then the funding ran out |
|
and I think it all just went backward. |
|
But, you know, you can set up honest custom control across |
|
along the Haitian border if you have enough money to do it and |
|
that is the big problem. And, you know, especially U.S. Custom |
|
Patrol people were incredibly knowledgeable, incredibly |
|
generous with their time in helping us and advising us, and I |
|
think that that, you know, if you can get that back on track |
|
again it would be fabulous. And neither. |
|
Mr. Steube. Well, could you describe how serious this |
|
problem is to Haiti's future development prospects? |
|
Ms. White. You know, I have not been to Haiti in 3 years. I |
|
do not know what is going on right now. I can certainly tell |
|
you what was going on when I was there, but the migration of |
|
workers and the migration of goods, and, you know, even though |
|
there was a major scale-up of migration called disease, is |
|
something all that really needs to be looked at. At least in my |
|
tenure it was an enormous problem. |
|
Mr. Steube. So what could the Biden Administration do to |
|
help buildup border security there? |
|
Ms. White. Yes, I think we should go, I mean what we would |
|
do, you know, is really quite a good strategy in like I think |
|
we could go back to it very easily, and that is building up |
|
structures and training. And, you know, not only was it great |
|
because it was going to increase border security, but it also |
|
gave an opportunity for wonderful employment opportunity. |
|
Mr. Steube. Adam Hoffner of the U.S. Border Patrol Miami |
|
Sector stated, ``We continuously warn migrants about the |
|
dangers associated with traveling by sea. Smuggling |
|
organizations are not concerned with the safety of the people |
|
there smuggling, rather they continue to put the lives of |
|
migrants at risk.'' What could the Biden Administration do to |
|
address this issue? |
|
Ms. White. Well, you know, it all goes back about the core |
|
reasons that, you know, why are people leaving Haiti to start |
|
with? And, you know, we went through a period when I was |
|
Ambassador that migration to the United States was almost zero. |
|
It was very seldom. And, you know, that is when we were having |
|
a lot of development dollars and we were pumping a lot of money |
|
into the economy and lots of jobs were opening up and stuff |
|
there and we were paying people to, you know, remove the rubble |
|
and make new roads. |
|
And so if Haitians, you know, the whole answer is that |
|
Haitians do not want to migrate. |
|
Mr. Steube. OK. If there are any Republicans, I am happy to |
|
yield time if they want more time. If not, I will yield back to |
|
the Chair. |
|
Mr. Levin [presiding]. Thank you, Representative Steube. |
|
The gentleman yields back. I now recognize the gentlewoman from |
|
Pennsylvania, Representative Wild, for 5 minutes. |
|
Ms. Wild. Thank you, Mr. Chair. I appreciate it. I would |
|
like to address my first question to Ambassador White. And, you |
|
know, we have been hearing a lot of frustration about the |
|
current state of things and money that continues to flow to |
|
Haiti and so forth, but I want to take a little bit of a |
|
historical tour with you. |
|
In 1825, France used the threat of military force to force |
|
Haiti to make massive financial payments with interest as a |
|
price for their independence, including the value of enslaved |
|
people freed. In today's dollars, the amount Haiti was forced |
|
to pay for its freedom exceeded 20 billion dollars. So my |
|
questions to you are these, and I will tell you my questions |
|
and then you can answer them in whatever fashion wish. |
|
I would like to know what the impact of these payments was |
|
on Haiti's development and whether you believe that is |
|
difficult to accurately assess Haiti's current structural |
|
challenges without factoring in that history. And I would also |
|
like you to address the fact that in 2015, former French |
|
President Hollande acknowledged a moral debt toward Haiti, but |
|
I believe the debt is very tangible, and I am wondering what |
|
you think France's responsibility is here of whether we and |
|
other Members of the international community should play a role |
|
in urging the French Government to seriously address this |
|
issue. |
|
That is for Ambassador White. Is she with us? |
|
Mr. Levin. Ambassador White, could you hear the question? |
|
She is looking like she does not hear you. |
|
Ms. White [continuing]. Never got over the fact that--yes. |
|
Ms. Wild. I am sorry. I did not--okay, but we cannot hear |
|
you. If you---- |
|
Ms. White. Can you hear me? |
|
Ms. Wild. Yes, could you start---- |
|
Mr. Levin. Try again. Try again, Ambassador White. Go |
|
ahead. |
|
Ms. Wild. Okay. |
|
Ms. White. Can you hear me now? |
|
Ms. Wild. Yes. |
|
Ms. White. Can you hear me? I am not on mute. |
|
Ms. Wild. I can hear you. |
|
Ms. White. I am not on mute. |
|
Ms. Wild. Mr. Chair, can I reclaim a little bit of my time |
|
in relation to that? |
|
Mr. Levin. Yes, go ahead. |
|
Ms. Wild. Ambassador, we can hear you. Go ahead, please. |
|
She cannot hear me. |
|
Ms. White. Let me stop the video. |
|
Ms. Wild. Okay. Did you hear my question? |
|
Ms. White. Now can you hear--yes, I was always shocked-- |
|
yes, I did. |
|
Ms. Wild. Okay, go ahead. |
|
Ms. White. Yes, so I was always shocked that Haiti was made |
|
to pay those reparations. It was amazing to me. And, you know, |
|
actually, interestingly enough, the French had played a role in |
|
Haiti but they do not play as big of role that you always |
|
thought they probably would. |
|
During my time in West Africa, the French were the major |
|
donors and the major players in West Africa and that is where |
|
their major international interest in the Third World is today. |
|
So I just do not enough about why France does not play a bigger |
|
role in Haiti, to tell you the truth, but they have not for a |
|
long time. |
|
Ms. Wild. Well, in your opinion, do you believe that we |
|
should be urging the French Government to address this issue? |
|
Ms. White. Sure. |
|
Ms. Wild. Okay. I am going to move if--I cannot see the |
|
timer, Mr. Chair, but I assume I have another couple of |
|
minutes. |
|
Mr. Levin. Yes, another couple of minutes. Go ahead. |
|
Ms. Wild. Thank you so much. |
|
So I would like to direct this to Ms. Jozef. Our |
|
immigration system has treated Asians, excuse me, Haitians |
|
differently than immigrants of other nationalities in the |
|
region, particularly Cuba and Venezuela, including by limiting |
|
access to asylum. And we have not recognized, historically, |
|
Haitians as facing political persecution. |
|
Could you talk about how the U.S. response to Haitian |
|
migration has shaped our own immigration rules and processes? |
|
Ms. Jozef. Absolutely. Thank you so much, Congresswoman |
|
Wild. The reality is we can look back as I mentioned |
|
previously, the immigration prison system as we know, it |
|
started, created for incarcerating Haitian refugees in the |
|
1980's fleeing political unrest and political abuse and |
|
persecution. And as we see today, the majority of the people |
|
who have fled are directly connected with political unrest, |
|
lack of security, and also the aftermath of the earthquake, the |
|
storms, the cholera that we continue to see today. |
|
So yes, as black immigrants we know very well how Haitian |
|
migrants, Haitian asylum seekers have always been treated |
|
unfairly. As we are looking today, we have Haitian migrants who |
|
have been waiting at the border between a year and a half to 5 |
|
years. They have literally been waiting. The majority of the |
|
children that are being deported and expelled at the U.S. |
|
Mexican border right now are children who were born on the way, |
|
whether in Brazil, in Chile, in Venezuela, and in Mexico. Yes, |
|
black immigrants, particularly Haitian immigrants, have always |
|
been treated unfairly comparing to other people. |
|
So now you mention Venezuela. We applaud the demonstration, |
|
you know, providing CPS for Venezuela as we are looking in the |
|
middle of the unrest and chaos, political unrest and chaos in |
|
Haiti, yet we do not see where this designation of CPS for |
|
Haiti. |
|
So we understand that anti-Black and racism is also |
|
ingrained in every system and every part of who we are as a |
|
people as a country, but that is why we are imploring and |
|
demanding that we break away from the same way of treating |
|
Haitian immigrants, understanding the value in what we as a |
|
people contribute to the United States. When--[Audio |
|
malfunction.]--to today elected officials and people fighting |
|
on behalf of this Nation. |
|
Ms. Wild. Thank you so much. I appreciate that. Thank you, |
|
Mr. Chair. I yield back. |
|
Mr. Levin. I now recognize for 5 minutes, the gentlewoman |
|
from California, Congresswoman Kim. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. I think I am unmuted now. |
|
Mr. Levin. There you go, yes. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Levin. Go ahead. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Thank you, Congressman Levin, and I |
|
want to thank all of our witnesses for joining us today. You |
|
know, for years, as it is has been noted, Haiti has been the |
|
second largest recipient of the U.S. assistance in the Western |
|
Hemisphere. We have provided over $172 million allocated in |
|
Fiscal Year 2020. But despite these enormous amounts of |
|
financial assistance from multiple U.S. agencies and |
|
international aid organizations, Haiti remains the poorest and |
|
least developed nation in the Western Hemisphere. |
|
So question to you, Ms. Douyon, could you provide insight |
|
as to which of our agencies is doing the most effective and |
|
efficient job in spending U.S. taxpayer dollars in raising that |
|
standard of living in Haiti and, additionally, which incentives |
|
are in need of reform or refocusing? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congresswoman Kim. I will let maybe |
|
someone like Ambassador White comment on the work of the U.S. |
|
Government entities, but my comment will be that several or |
|
many people raised this concern about the amount of money sent |
|
to Haiti in general development assistance and the lack of |
|
result. |
|
And I will say that it is not about the money, the amount |
|
of money you spend to Haiti, it is about how it is spent, where |
|
it spent, who will get the money to do what, and there is a |
|
huge problem of the way we allocate that in Haiti. It does not |
|
go to the real project. And this is also, it was not with the |
|
U.S. Government money or United States taxpayer money, but it |
|
happened with Venezuela, the people cried because they helped |
|
us, they sent us a lot of money and that money was mismanaged, |
|
and this was like the largest corruption scandal in the |
|
country. |
|
It will happen with any other kind of development |
|
assistance fund until we send a clear signal that we are |
|
fighting corruption. And this is exactly what we are doing now |
|
in Haiti and until we do that, you can send money, the U.S. can |
|
help send almost whatever the amount of money they want. The |
|
same thing will happen. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Thank you so much. Given the limited |
|
time, I would like to pivot to Ambassador White, if you have |
|
any input on this and can I hear your thoughts on this? |
|
Ms. White. Yes. I think, like I said before that, you know, |
|
the tremendous amount of money that we are allocating to Haiti |
|
now is going to humanitarian aid, food aid, basic health aid, |
|
education, and I think that that is all critical. We do not |
|
give money to the Haitian Government directly. We explored that |
|
when I was there. We realized that there was just too much |
|
corruption in the government and so we do not do that and we |
|
should not. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. All right. You know, I would like to |
|
touch on the lack of infrastructure in Haiti impacting the |
|
accessibility to basic services. You know, as you say, we can |
|
pour as much money as we want into Haiti but, you know, and try |
|
to help them improve medical treatment or nutrition, but if |
|
Haitians are unable to reach food banks because of the poorly |
|
constructed roads or access medical care due to poorly |
|
constructed hospitals, this money will be concentrated in the |
|
city centers and leave much of the country to on its own. |
|
So how is the U.S. cooperating with Haiti on the |
|
infrastructure projects to ensure that aid reaches the |
|
populations that need it the most and which agencies are best |
|
suited to accomplish this job? |
|
Ambassador White, are you still on there? |
|
Ms. White. Yes. Sorry, sorry. I did not know if you were |
|
asking me or not. I do not know, currently, what is going on in |
|
that direction in Haiti. I wish I did, but I do not. When I was |
|
there, the PEPFAR money that both AID and CDC ran, you know, |
|
was doing a tremendous amount of trying to get money to every |
|
clinic across the Nation. And, you know, we had at least two or |
|
three hundred clinics that we were working with, you know, |
|
increasing training to the nurses, getting the right drugs to |
|
these clinics, and I do not know if that is still ongoing or |
|
not. I believe that it is. |
|
But the problem is just as you say. Even if you have a |
|
clinic and, you know, Village X, if people are having problems |
|
accessing that village, then you still have a problem. But any |
|
kind of infrastructure improvement of the roads is a |
|
multibillion-dollar project and there is just not enough money |
|
for that. Not U.S. money. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Let me put in one more question. I |
|
know I want to touch on the human rights situation. Ms. |
|
Auguste, as everyone here has testified that the human rights |
|
situation on the ground in Haiti is dire and unstable. The rise |
|
in violence against vulnerable populations through homicide, |
|
kidnapping, and sexual violence is clearly---- |
|
Mr. Levin. Representative Kim, your time has expired. It is |
|
really--do you have a very, very quick question for Ms. |
|
Auguste---- |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Yes, yes. |
|
Mr. Levin [continuing]. Like in 10 seconds? |
|
Ms. Kim of California. May I ask that the gentleman from |
|
Florida, Mr. Steube, can I ask how much time he had left to |
|
yield? |
|
Mr. Levin. His time is expired, Ms. Kim. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Okay, let me just--yes. May I finish |
|
my question then? |
|
Mr. Levin. I will come back to you if there is time at the |
|
end, but we---- |
|
Ms. Kim of California. Okay. |
|
Mr. Levin. There is still a lot of people who want to ask |
|
questions. |
|
Ms. Kim of California. All right, thank you. |
|
Mr. Levin. If that is okay. Yes, thanks so much. All right, |
|
and actually it is my turn now to ask my questions. I want to |
|
thank Chairman Meeks and Ranking Member McCaul. I just cannot |
|
tell you how pleased I am that the two of you called this |
|
hearing on the full committee level. I know that Chairman Sires |
|
of the Subcommittee agrees with me that a whole committee |
|
hearing shows a level of concern that is truly warranted for |
|
this crisis in Haiti. |
|
I want to make clear before I begin, one thing for the |
|
record. I am grateful to all the people who are testifying |
|
before us, and I know witnesses could face intimidation or |
|
threats because of your honest testimony. I have zero tolerance |
|
for that and I request that any witness who experiences any |
|
form or retaliation for your testimony, please alert the |
|
committee immediately. Your willingness to appear and your |
|
candor are essential to our work and your well-being is a |
|
priority for us and I think I probably speak for every member |
|
here on that. |
|
Second, I want to emphasize that we have already made a |
|
little history in this hearing today. We have real bipartisan |
|
agreement here, which is often helpful and powerful in |
|
effective congressional input to change the direction of U.S. |
|
foreign policy. Our bipartisan panel of witnesses has made it |
|
perfectly clear that both a constitutional referendum and |
|
elections organized under de facto President Moise will not |
|
work and will not be seen as legitimate by the Haitian people. |
|
Ranking Member McCaul stated in his usual straightforward |
|
way his agreement with this position, so this hearing is truly |
|
providing the basis for a new way forward for U.S. policy. The |
|
panel has already made clear that Haitian civil society broadly |
|
considered Mr. Moise's term to have ended on February 7th, |
|
2021, that he is widely considered illegitimate by the Haitian |
|
people, that the CEP he created unilaterally is not legal or |
|
legitimate, and that Haiti needs not simply elections but the |
|
conditions that can lead to legitimate elections. |
|
The United States needs to stop talking about squabbling |
|
between politicians and listen to human rights, business, |
|
labor, legal, and other civil society groups. These groups are |
|
actually trying to come together to create a plan that would |
|
work to restore the rule of law and a path to democracy. So |
|
following Congresswoman Bass, let's talk about the way forward. |
|
Ms. Douyon, can you briefly explain how Haiti has had |
|
transitional governments before and what a broad cross-section |
|
of Haitian groups believe should happen now? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congressman Levin. We have had |
|
transitional government before because even in the past, |
|
elected leaders failed to organize election, timely election, |
|
so we have to fill the void. And we had it in 2004, we had it |
|
in 2015, and this time around is the same problem. Joyenel |
|
Moise, despite the fact that he enjoyed a comfortable majority |
|
in parliament, failed to organize election. So now we have to |
|
replace the parliament, we have to elect local officials, and |
|
we have to elect a new President because his term ended. |
|
So a traditional government will have, we start democratic |
|
order, will have improved overall security situation and |
|
organized election, and---- |
|
Mr. Levin. Can I just ask? I do not know if I--if Ms. |
|
Auguste is still here, but if so, I would like her to weigh in |
|
on my last minute on whether she, you know, if she can add to |
|
what you said or whether she agrees with you, to see if the |
|
panel broadly agrees on this. |
|
Can you hear me? Okay, go ahead. |
|
Ms. Auguste. Yes. I hear you very well. Thank you very |
|
much, Congressman Levin. I would like to start with the |
|
threats, so especially those of us who are in the human rights |
|
community, generally. However, the people who are living in the |
|
impoverished communities who pull themselves together to stand |
|
against the human rights violations and against this |
|
unconstitutional government are threatened by them. |
|
One thing that I would like to emphasize on is that us |
|
within the Haitian civil society, we realize that it is the |
|
international community that allows Joyenel Moise to continue |
|
to remain at the palace. The impunity is so daring that on |
|
February 13 they arrest Fednel Monchery, who has already been |
|
cited in the La Saline massacre, they release him a few hours |
|
thereafter. That means we cannot count on this government to go |
|
by security and ensure that the population gets what they need. |
|
Like Chairman Meeks has said before, the former President |
|
Joyenel Moise have lost all credibility and is not able to |
|
govern the country at the moment. |
|
Mr. Levin. All right, I am afraid my time has expired and I |
|
am going to hold myself to the same rules. So if we have time |
|
later, Ms. Auguste, we will come back to you. |
|
And now my understanding, there are not currently any of |
|
our Republican colleagues who wish to ask questions and that |
|
means I get to turn it over to my esteemed colleague from |
|
Pennsylvania, Representative Houlahan, for 5 minutes. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. Thank you, Representative Levin, and I |
|
appreciate the opportunity to ask questions. |
|
My first question is for Ms. Douyon. I was hoping to be |
|
able to dive a little bit deeper into the role that women can |
|
play in policy discussions in Haiti around governance and |
|
around constitutional reform and how can we here in the U.S. |
|
and in this body help to promote women's participation in the |
|
government, in the Haitian Government and its civil society? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congresswoman Houlahan. I do not |
|
know if I pronounce it correctly. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. You did. |
|
Ms. Douyon. And as a feminist myself, I believe women have |
|
a large role to play in Haiti politics and this is actually the |
|
case already, but much is needed to be done. And I also need to |
|
acknowledge that several feminist organizations were concerned |
|
over the situation in Haiti, the current situation in Haiti. |
|
Women need to be represented in the electoral council, but what |
|
happened is that respected organizations refused to adhere to a |
|
process that was then legal, and the government picked some |
|
other women from organization that no one knows about to |
|
consider that electoral council. |
|
And what happen is that you have organization that are |
|
legitimate and recognized that have been underground for many |
|
years. They are not involved and they are left behind in the |
|
process. And they kept saying it, and there is several press |
|
note. And the civil society in their plan to have a |
|
transitional government actually specified that there need to |
|
be a quota of women because several times they violated this in |
|
the law, we need to have at least 30 percent of women, but many |
|
times they do not follow--they do not respect this quota and |
|
they are advocating for it. |
|
And we believe, and even for the new constitution that puts |
|
us because it is not legal, those respected organizations are |
|
not involved, but in the future when the society will agree to |
|
make change to the Constitution maybe we will have provision |
|
for increased women participation in Haiti politics. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. Is there anything that you can think of that |
|
we can be doing to be helpful in driving that process? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Yes. First of all, maybe you can question why |
|
does legitimate organization are not involved, and how you can |
|
have--you can do anything with including women and those who |
|
have been defending women's rights in the country for so many |
|
years. And I think we can start here and later making sure that |
|
whether it is in terms of the local system or anything that or |
|
any decision that is being taken, if women are on the table, |
|
because it is very important that we do not have the kind of |
|
situation where only men are deciding what is the fate of the |
|
country. |
|
And just, and I have to note that there is something really |
|
positive happening with the young activists, organizers, and |
|
like mine has many women involved and we are actually ensuring |
|
that we are equally qualified and we can have like leadership |
|
position, we can assume our responsibility just like men, and |
|
there is no reason we shouldn't have equal opportunities. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. Agreed. And I am not sure, Representative |
|
Levin, how much time more time that I have. |
|
Mr. Levin. A minute-twenty. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. All right, great. With my minute-twenty, I |
|
would like to direct my last question to Ms. Auguste. My |
|
question is how can we best be utilizing our relationships in |
|
Latin America and the Caribbean to help support democracy in |
|
Haiti? What can we be doing to be helpful there and what |
|
international organizations are most useful? And thank you. |
|
Ms. Auguste. Okay, thank you, Congresswoman Houlahan. I |
|
think there is a lot of things that the U.S. can do to change |
|
their relationships with Haiti. First and foremost, I think the |
|
U.S. administration needs to listen to the Haitian civil |
|
society who have a lot of recommendations and demand that they |
|
can share with them that can be significant to the chance that |
|
we are seeking. |
|
With your permission, I would like to quickly address the |
|
issue of women's participation within the elections system. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. Representative Levin, I do not know if I have |
|
the time for that, but perhaps we could go back to that? |
|
Mr. Levin. No, you have a bit of time left. It is a little |
|
different when there is translation because they stop the clock |
|
for the translation. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. Oh, Okay. Okay. |
|
Mr. Levin. So do not worry. I will stop you. Go ahead. |
|
Ms. Auguste. Okay, thank you. One thing that I would like |
|
to add is that the current insecurity that we have will not |
|
allow women to participate in this election neither as |
|
candidate or as voters. At the same time, the Haitian political |
|
parties have to come and put forward the mechanisms to allow |
|
women to be able to participate fully in the electoral process. |
|
Mr. Levin. And with that--oops. With that, I think we have |
|
to move on. I am sorry. Again, if we have more time, we will |
|
come back. It is such a rich conversation. And I will just |
|
point out that all four of our panelists and our translator are |
|
women and they are doing an outstanding job in this hearing, |
|
whatever that, you know, whatever that means. |
|
Ms. Houlahan. I yield back. Thank you. |
|
Mr. Levin. And, Mr. Fitzpatrick, if you have questions, you |
|
are up next, or if you want to wait because I know you just |
|
popped on. |
|
Mr. Fitzpatrick. Thank you, Mr. Levin. If Representative |
|
Young Kim is still on, I am happy to yield my time to her. I |
|
know she was looking for extra time. |
|
Mr. Levin. Yes, she was. I do not know if she is or not. I |
|
do not see her name. We will wait a minute. |
|
All right, well, you know, we can come back to that as |
|
well. So let me recognize the gentlewoman from Nevada, |
|
Representative Titus, for 5 minutes. |
|
Ms. Titus. Well, thank you, Mr. Chairman. It has been |
|
indeed an interesting conversation. And I would like to shift a |
|
little to maybe Ms. Jozef and ask her about the refugee |
|
situation. |
|
One of President Biden's first actions in office was to |
|
sign an executive order rescinding some of the Trump |
|
administration's immigration enforcement policies and he also |
|
directed Homeland Security to reexamine our own policies and |
|
priorities. DHS instituted a hundred-day pause on deportation |
|
with limited exceptions during this review process, but a legal |
|
challenge, unfortunately, lifted that pause so deportations are |
|
continuing. |
|
I just wonder if the Haitian Government is doing anything |
|
to ensure the safety of returning individuals, many of whom |
|
left saying they feared for their lives because of the gang |
|
violence throughout the country. |
|
Ms. Jozef. Thank you so much, Representative Titus. The |
|
reality is even when President Biden's moratorium did not cover |
|
the expulsion of migrants under Title 42, which is the CDC |
|
Title, and we are asking for that Title to be rescinded so that |
|
we can provide protection for the most vulnerable people. |
|
I also would like to mention that it is extremely |
|
concerning for the Haitian President, for the Haitian |
|
Government to be agreeing to receive a people who have |
|
literally fled due to violence, due to political unrest, and |
|
due to persecution. As I mentioned during my first opening, one |
|
of the women who was kidnapped and raped and fled was returned |
|
to Haiti and is currently in hiding unable to leave her house |
|
because of fear that what will happen to her. |
|
So with all of that being said, what is happening with the |
|
migration, what is happening at the border with the |
|
deportation, with expulsion, we are asking for all of that to |
|
stop because it is unbelievable. And we believe that it is |
|
borderline criminal for the Haitian Government to be receiving |
|
people in these conditions at the present moment. |
|
And would also like to highlight that even people who were |
|
not born in Haiti have been deported to Haiti. We are demanding |
|
accountability on both sides, from the U.S. side and our |
|
Haitian side, understanding it is a sending and receiving |
|
relationship and we are asking for that to stop immediate. |
|
Ms. Titus. So are NGO's involved in that whole process with |
|
you either through the courts in legal cases or advocating for |
|
some of these people who have returned? |
|
Ms. Jozef. We are advocating. However, when people are |
|
returned to Haiti, it is extremely impossible for them to get |
|
any type of relief when they are returned, released with |
|
nothing, and they have to find a way to fend for themselves, to |
|
go into hiding, to try to find another way so that they can |
|
probably even leave the country again. There is absolutely no |
|
relief, no protection for people who are being returned to |
|
Haiti at this moment. |
|
Ms. Titus. Sounds like that is something that we may be |
|
able to look into to provide some help at our end. |
|
Ms. Jozef. We definitely have, not just had looked, but we |
|
must provide help now and we must provide, you know, a way for |
|
people to legally, safely get protection in asking asylum. We |
|
must redesignate a CPS for Haiti to cover those who are here |
|
and really, really to make sure that we have a strong Haitian |
|
American community. |
|
Ms. Titus. Thank you very much. Just a little bit of time |
|
left, I would like to ask about education in Haiti. We have a |
|
figure that one of every two Haitians age 15 and over is |
|
illiterate, yet we know education is the way to get out of |
|
poverty to create a better future. Is there anything that we |
|
can do to help, or to help NGO's or help any of you, help with |
|
the expanding education opportunities? |
|
Anybody? |
|
Ms. Auguste. Thank you very much, Congresswoman Titus. |
|
Today, education is a problem just like all the other issues |
|
that we are dealing with. The current educational system we |
|
have does not provide a good system for everybody to learn idea |
|
quickly, and it is also not a system that is fair to able to |
|
address everyone's problems regarding so whatever discrepancies |
|
or challenges that they may have. |
|
We also have a system that is corrupted because there was |
|
the national educational funds that was created by the Martelly |
|
government. Money is taken from the Haitian diaspora on a |
|
regular basis. No report has been given on that money and it |
|
has not been utilized to assist the Haitian children to make |
|
sure attending school. |
|
Mr. Levin. And again, I need to step in and say the |
|
gentlewoman's time has expired. But again, that answer is on |
|
such an important question. I understand---- |
|
Ms. Wild. Thank you, Chairman. |
|
Mr. Levin. Thanks, Representative Titus. I understand that |
|
even school children now are being at risk of kidnappings which |
|
is just incredible. |
|
Now let me recognize my wonderful colleague from the state |
|
of Minnesota for 5 minutes, Representative Omar, for her |
|
questions. |
|
Ms. Omar. Thank you so much for calling this important |
|
meeting, Chairman. I am especially grateful that we have the |
|
opportunity to hear directly from folks who are being impacted |
|
by our policies. I wanted to start with--direct my question to |
|
Ms. Auguste. |
|
The last President changed U.S. policy to make it easier |
|
for American gun manufacturers to export guns to other |
|
countries including Haiti. Many of us are pushing for our new |
|
President to reverse this. In Haiti, how do gangs and organized |
|
crime get their guns, and do guns--do these guns used to commit |
|
violence in Haiti mostly come from the United States? |
|
Ms. Auguste. Thank you very much, Congresswoman Omar. I |
|
will start by answering your question. Yes, there are a lot of |
|
weapons that arrive on the Haitian territory that comes from |
|
the U.S. They come from our different various ports. There are |
|
also other weapons that enter the country through our borders |
|
because both our ports at the borders are just open. |
|
There was a resolution that was taken that Haiti should not |
|
be entering weapons in the country. Despite the fact that there |
|
is an arms embargo on Haiti, to this day no authorities in the |
|
Haitian Government can tell us where these weapons are coming |
|
from and who is entering them in the country. It is the gangs |
|
who said that they are better armed than the Haitian National |
|
Police, and that is why we are saying that the Haitian National |
|
Police is currently weakened and politicized. |
|
Ms. Omar. Thank you for your answer. |
|
And to Ms. Douyon, should the United States be supporting |
|
elections in Haiti this year regardless of the context and, in |
|
your opinion, what are the changes that election in Haiti this |
|
year, what are the chances that the elections this year would |
|
be free, fair, and legitimate? |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congresswoman Omar. If the United |
|
States want to waste money and support the new political |
|
crisis, yes, they can invest in election in Haiti this year. |
|
Otherwise, the best alternative will be to listen to civil |
|
society who could indicate when it is OK to hold election. |
|
Because with gangs member we have--our President does is acting |
|
like a strongman in clear violations of human rights and many |
|
areas are under gang control, there isn't any possibility that |
|
we could have fair and inclusive elections. Who can campaign |
|
without gang support, and we do not want the kind of officials |
|
that have gang support to be elected or--but if we call |
|
elections now, those people are the one who have real advantage |
|
by the current insecurity and climate of fear that is going on |
|
in Haiti. |
|
And also we need to audit the electoral system and we have |
|
an illegal electoral council. All those problems need to be |
|
solved if we want to have election that could lead us to the |
|
chance that the Haitian people deserve. |
|
Ms. Omar. I really appreciate your answer. |
|
And to Ms. Jozef, I know that you have just addressed this |
|
question in regards to deportations. I am wondering if you can |
|
maybe expand on how these deportations are impacting the |
|
situation on the ground in Haiti especially in the context of |
|
the COVID pandemic. |
|
Ms. Jozef. Thank you so much, Congresswoman Omar. Thank you |
|
so much for being here. The reality is we started asking to |
|
stop deportations and expulsions to Haiti under Title 42 back |
|
in March when we realized that was going to be a major |
|
catastrophe for Haiti with a lack of infrastructure for medical |
|
care. And I also want to highlight that the numbers that are |
|
being seen or reported are not actual numbers. So in Haiti, |
|
there is no way for people to literally know how many people |
|
have been affected and died from COVID, for many different |
|
reasons. |
|
However, we also understand that in May 2020, we had words |
|
that at least three of those people who were deported to Haiti, |
|
upon arriving in Haiti tested positive for COVID-19. And I |
|
personally saw a spike in COVID-19 as relation to this flight. |
|
We also understand that a lot of people that were deported to |
|
Guatemala also were tested positive for COVID-19 upon arrival |
|
in their home country. |
|
So this is a major concern as we understand transfers |
|
between detention centers and prison and flight carries over |
|
the grave, grave injustice that can be seen when it comes to |
|
medical assistance and medical care. So that is why we are |
|
asking for the stopping of those expulsion and those |
|
deportation in the spirit of good neighbor or in the spirit of |
|
protecting in health care. |
|
Ms. Omar. Thank you all for your wonderful insights. Thank |
|
you, Chairman. I yield back. |
|
Mr. Levin. Thank you. The gentlewoman yields back. Now to |
|
the first of our fabulous freshwomen, the gentlewoman from |
|
California, Representative Jacobs. |
|
Ms. Jacobs. Well, thank you, Mr. Chair. And thank you to |
|
all of our witnesses for being here. This has been incredibly |
|
interesting and I share my colleagues' concerns about the |
|
current situation. But I wanted to ask Ms. Douyon a question. |
|
You know, I too have been part of conversations around |
|
Haiti for many years where we have been having similar |
|
conversations over and over again, but I noticed that in your |
|
opening you said that you think this is not the same moment as |
|
other crises and that we have an opportunity to fundamentally |
|
change things. And I was wondering if you could elaborate on |
|
why you think that is the case and what specifically it would |
|
take so that this really would fundamentally change things and |
|
we would not continue this cycle. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Thank you, Congresswoman Jacobs. I think we |
|
could only go back to maybe the time when we were fighting |
|
dictatorship to find the same spirit that is going on in Haiti |
|
now that called for change, that the involvement of so many |
|
different kind of people. For example, speaking on behalf of |
|
the collective of angry citizens who have never done politics |
|
before, we were never involved so actively in activities then. |
|
But back in 2018, we have noticed that something needed to |
|
be done, like we needed to be involved to save what is left to |
|
be saved of Haiti, and this is why we are doing it and we have |
|
been doing it constantly since 2018. And this is because of |
|
people like us in Nou Pap Domi, the people challenging, those |
|
people who fought dictatorship and are still fighting the ways |
|
of dictatorship, now that I believe that something different is |
|
happening. |
|
We are tired, like there is a--no one want to keep going |
|
with the same cycle and it is obvious that the system that we |
|
are fighting can no longer renew itself. For like 4 years in |
|
power, the President, despite the fact that he has a |
|
comfortable majority, he has not been able to achieve anything. |
|
Like he has not been able to satisfy any need from the |
|
population and he does not even have like support as to go on |
|
the street to say, we are with him, we are supporting him. |
|
Like everyone realized like the majority of people, there |
|
is a broad consensus that we need to change something if we |
|
want to develop this country. And I believe that this new era |
|
can start now, and this is why we are asking for the U.S. |
|
Government to recognize that the civil society is taking the |
|
lead, to recognize that this time around is different, and they |
|
need to be on the side of change. |
|
Ms. Jacobs. Thank you. Thank you so much. |
|
And then I would like to ask if Ambassador White is still |
|
on, what she thinks the United States can learn from its |
|
previous interventions and in terms of how we should approach |
|
things differently. And, you know, I know you talked about |
|
conditioning aid and some other things, but I guess what I am |
|
just trying to make sure is that we do not like do the same ten |
|
things we have done in every think-tank report we have had |
|
since the earthquake, and then have this same hearing again in |
|
3 years from now when it does not work. |
|
Ms. White. Thank you. Yes, I do think we have a unique |
|
opportunity right now to get tough. And, you know, when I look |
|
back even when the, you know, some of the final months of when |
|
I was in Haiti, because we were going through the same, you |
|
know, the powers that there was no parliament. The CEP was |
|
first made up of a cast of characters that weren't acceptable, |
|
but we got it right, finally. But I think we have to hold their |
|
feet to the fire and we have to be tough and we have to be |
|
outspoken and I think the Biden Administration is ready to do |
|
that. I hope so. |
|
But let me just mention one other thing that I, during this |
|
hearing, could not tell if it was a Republican or a Democrat |
|
asking the questions. And I, normally, I am really good at |
|
that. So congratulations to you, because I really do feel that |
|
this is a bipartisan committee hearing and thank you for that. |
|
Ms. Jacobs. Well, thank you. And with that, Mr. Chair, I |
|
yield back. |
|
Mr. Levin. And I believe Mr. Meeks is back to take the |
|
gavel back. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you, Mr. Levin. I now recognize the Vice |
|
Chair of the Subcommittee of the Middle East, North Africa, and |
|
Global Counterterrorism, Representative Kathy Manning of North |
|
Carolina, for 5 minutes. |
|
Ms. Manning. Thank you, Chairman Meeks. I want to thank all |
|
of the witnesses for their testimony today and I am delighted |
|
that we have had this hearing so early in this session of |
|
Congress. The situation that was described by all the witnesses |
|
was, is heartbreaking and discouraging. |
|
And we have talked at length about the political situation, |
|
Ambassador White, you had some very specific suggestions of |
|
things that could be done to address the political situation |
|
and I am wondering if you have similarly specific |
|
recommendations for steps the U.S. could take to improve the |
|
economic situation in Haiti. |
|
Ms. White. Yes, I do. I think, overall, USAID, it has |
|
always been my contention that we should spend more money on |
|
getting people jobs because countries do not move forward |
|
without jobs. But in order to get people into jobs, we need to |
|
do some--pay attention to at least giving people skills that |
|
they can use to rebuild the country. |
|
And when I was head of USAID in Liberia, we had this |
|
fabulous program that linked literacy skills with basic skills |
|
in electricity, in brickmaking and building, with car |
|
mechanics, et cetera, et cetera, so that we could--we taught |
|
people literacy at the same time we were training them in basic |
|
skills with unrelated skills and |
|
[inaudible] Congress has been over and over very reluctant |
|
to give money to job training skills, and I think that is a |
|
mistake. |
|
Ms. Manning. Would any of the other witnesses like to |
|
comment on that? I am looking for specific ways the U.S. can |
|
help improve the economic situation in Haiti. |
|
Ms. Douyon. Representative Manning, if you allow me to add |
|
a few points, if we want to improve the economic situation in |
|
Haiti, there is a need to attract investment, but we cannot |
|
attract investment if the current President is still |
|
undermining rule of law and if the other law security situation |
|
is still as whatever it is. |
|
This is why so many people do not come to invest in Haiti |
|
and we cannot have like people in the diaspora coming back home |
|
to improve, to work, to invest, and this is one--we cannot |
|
disassociate the economic situation from the political and |
|
social situation and which will improve and solve this |
|
political crisis. |
|
If we want to attract investment, restore peace so that |
|
economic activists can thrive, because what is happening now |
|
with people who like fearing to even leave their house, there |
|
is great concern that we could see any improvement anytime |
|
soon. |
|
Ms. Manning. Thank you. Yes? |
|
Ms. Jozef. I would like to briefly add that again we need, |
|
as my fierce justice warrior Emmanuela mentioned, we need to |
|
look at the root causes of where we are right now and really, |
|
you know, work with the people of Haiti to create the |
|
infrastructure that is needed in order for us to move forward, |
|
including education, including access to health care, including |
|
rebuilding a culture, which open, which Haiti has always |
|
flourished. |
|
Sending rice to Haiti, sending all those things, that all |
|
literally diminished the farming industry. We need to look into |
|
building sustainable structural in Haiti from education to |
|
access to health care, to farming, to our culture so that we as |
|
the Haitian people can reclaim their place and really create a |
|
system where people will be able to stay at home safe and |
|
others can come in and then investing into the community as |
|
well. |
|
Ms. Manning. Thank you. |
|
And, Ms. Ducena, would you like to comment on that as well? |
|
Ms. Auguste. Yes. Thank you so much, Congresswoman Manning. |
|
The economic situation has currently ties to the social |
|
political crisis that we are dealing with. |
|
If you do not have political ability, you cannot have |
|
economic stability just like my colleague Jozef and Douyon have |
|
already explained. The first step we need to take in terms of |
|
changing the economic situations in Haiti is to once |
|
acknowledge Article 134-2 from the Constitution. It had |
|
demanded for former President Joyenel Moise as ended on |
|
February 7th, 2021, then the country can work toward building a |
|
greater nation. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you. |
|
Ms. Manning. Thank you, Mr. Chair. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you. The gentlelady's time has expired. I |
|
now recognize the Vice Chair of the Subcommittee on Western |
|
Hemisphere, Civilian Security, Migration, and International |
|
Economic Policy, Representative Juan Vargas from California, |
|
for 5 minutes. |
|
Mr. Vargas. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I hope you can |
|
hear me. Mr. Chairman, I want to thank you very much for this |
|
hearing. Being toward the end here, I have had the opportunity |
|
to listen to not only our presenters but also all the questions |
|
from our colleagues. And I have to tell you, I do not know what |
|
we should do, I really do not. |
|
But I know that what we should not do, we should not deport |
|
Haitians back to Haiti. That is what we should not do. We |
|
should not do that. And why should not we do that? From all the |
|
testimony that we heard here people are afraid to go buy |
|
groceries. People are afraid to get out money to get on the |
|
bus. People are afraid to make even small buys of anything |
|
because the gangs figure out they have money and they will get |
|
kidnapped to take that money away. They have closed some of the |
|
schools not so much even for the fear of COVID-19, but because |
|
children and their parents get kidnapped. |
|
We should not deport people back into that situation. That |
|
is outrageous. The administration should allow them to stay and |
|
until the situation changes in Haiti. Now I have to say also, |
|
in my own opinion, I could be wrong, but I think it is also |
|
discrimination and I think it is discrimination because |
|
Haitians are black. I think that that is a reality. I think |
|
that there is a terrible discrimination going on here that |
|
shouldn't happen. |
|
So anyway, I think we should urge the administration to |
|
quit deporting people back to Haiti. I mean does anyone agree |
|
with me at all? I mean isn't--how about Ms. Douyon? Do you |
|
agree that we should not deport people back to Haiti? |
|
Ms. Douyon. I agree. I agree that even though the |
|
conditions in Haiti right now it is not fair to deport people |
|
back to Haiti, and if we really want to avoid dealing with this |
|
kind of situation like having people migrating illegally to the |
|
United States we need to support efforts to restore peace in |
|
Haiti and make Haiti livable for the people. |
|
Mr. Vargas. And I agree with that. I mean I think we need |
|
to do all we can to help Haiti. I am completely in favor of |
|
that. But I just do not understand why we are deporting |
|
Haitians back to Haiti in these conditions. That does not make |
|
any sense to me. That does not make any sense. And also we have |
|
been talking about how to have fair and free elections that, |
|
you know, we cannot trust the situation as it is right now to |
|
have free and fair elections. I agree with that. |
|
I think that will take some time to sort out, but in the |
|
meantime, why are we deporting people? I mean that does not |
|
make any sense to me and that is something I think that we |
|
should put pressure on this administration. This administration |
|
has the opportunity to do that. I mean they do it for Cubans. |
|
They do it for Venezuelans, for others. Why not for Haitians? |
|
Ms. Jozef. Congressman Vargas, thank you so much for making |
|
those points. |
|
Mr. Vargas. Yes. |
|
Ms. Jozef. The reality is, we absolutely believe that it is |
|
anti-black racism play a big part of why people are being |
|
deported to Haiti and also the fact that we continue to see |
|
some type of support to the current administration in Haiti. |
|
And as I mentioned before, it is borderline criminal for both, |
|
you know, the U.S. sending people in for Haiti to be receiving |
|
people. |
|
We are asking as you have said, to provide a safe and |
|
welcoming, you know, a plan for those people who have left, who |
|
have ran, and have literally been at the border between a year |
|
and a half to 5 years. It is unconscionable to see the |
|
condition that black people continues to be treated, not only |
|
in the United States but around the world. |
|
And we see a direct relation between how they are deporting |
|
people to Haiti under the rules of Title 42, which literally |
|
allow people to be tested negative before being deported based |
|
on what ICE is saying. It is absolutely no reason for the |
|
United States after President Biden promised the Haitian |
|
American community that he was going to lead the way, we cannot |
|
continue to repeat those just inhumane treatment of Haitians. |
|
It is unacceptable. |
|
Mr. Vargas. Amen. And I would add this too. I live on the |
|
border here in San Diego. The discrimination that goes on also |
|
in Mexico when Haitians arrive here also is terrible, the |
|
discrimination that they face in Mexico when they have every |
|
right to present themselves at the border and say, I am here |
|
for asylum, and apply for asylum. |
|
Anyway, again I--my time is up. But I hope we can do |
|
something about this, Mr. Chairman. Thank you. I yield back. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you. The gentleman's time has expired. Our |
|
last member to talk is the distinguished Chair of the Financial |
|
Services Committee, who has been an advocate for Haiti from the |
|
time that I have known her and that is why she spent the time |
|
here today. The honorable Maxine Waters, you are now recognized |
|
for 5 minutes. |
|
Ms. Waters. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman. I am so |
|
pleased for the leadership that you are providing on this |
|
issue. I am a friend of Haiti and I have been for years and I |
|
have been through some of the better times, but all of the |
|
worst times. I know Andy Apaid and I know he is down there |
|
exploiting the people, still. |
|
I helped to get Guy Philippe put in jail and Toto Constant |
|
that they are sent back here to the United States, who we |
|
should have kept here. He was the death squad leader under |
|
Sadras when that coup d'etat took place. I have been with |
|
Aristide. I went, rented a plane alone with Randall Robinson. |
|
Remember when we had TransAfrica, Mr. Chairman, and we went to |
|
the jet and we went up and we got Aristide and I brought him |
|
back from the African republic that he was--Central Africa |
|
Republic that he had been banished to. |
|
Now knowing all of this, I also understand Haiti, and I |
|
understand the mulatto's elite and I understand their |
|
relationship to some of the worst people in government, and |
|
that is who Moise and all of them work with because they are |
|
all about the money, exploiting Haiti, and basically about the |
|
fraud and about the corruption. I get all of that. |
|
But I want you to know that, you know, people have been |
|
killed. The last time I was there it was April 2019, and I met |
|
with the victims of La Saline, the massacre that took place, |
|
and they told me about everything that happened November 2018. |
|
And this was all because they were part of Lavalas. And so, you |
|
know, that is the old party of President Aristide that was so |
|
prominent in trying to get democracy in Haiti. |
|
Someone asked today about what was going to be done or what |
|
had ever been done about the fact that the French basically |
|
piled all of this debt on Haiti and what was going to be done |
|
to work in getting that back. Well, that is one of the reasons |
|
Aristide was ousted was because he was talking about stuff like |
|
that. |
|
But I want to tell you that there have been a lot of |
|
reports of similar massacres such as the one that was held in |
|
La Saline. I met with people whose houses had been burned down. |
|
They had no place to go. All they had was the clothing on their |
|
back. And so whether we are talking about Bel Air or we are |
|
talking about Cite Soleil, all of them are under absolute, you |
|
know, violence that has been perpetrated on them by this |
|
President and his police force. |
|
In May of last year, the death squad that was headed by |
|
Jimmy Cherizier, but everybody knows him as Barbeque, he is |
|
running wild down there. He is killing people. He is carrying |
|
out multiple attacks on civilians all through the Port-au- |
|
Prince neighborhoods of Tokyo, Delmas, Pont-Rouge, burning |
|
houses and killing people and doing these violent attacks. |
|
Members of the Haitian National Police allied with Barbeque |
|
reportedly stood by and did nothing. No one has been |
|
accountable for these killings either, so there is a lack of |
|
accountability. |
|
Now I know the question has been raised, what can we do? |
|
Mr. Chairman, I think you are in a great position to help |
|
provide some leadership. I do not know exactly how it should |
|
take place, but I think there is some recommendations that may |
|
make good sense. No. 1, the State Department is very key. I |
|
realize Haiti is a sovereign nation. We cannot just go in there |
|
and tell them what to do and what not to do, what have you, but |
|
we do support Haiti and we do have a State Department there and |
|
so they have got be involved in some way. |
|
The other thing is this, France and Canada, I have seen |
|
them involved when they thought it was in their best interest |
|
to be involved, but I think if Canada and France, the State |
|
Department, the U.S. Government led by you, and the civil |
|
society of Haiti get together and form some kind of a task |
|
force of some kind, you have got to get President Moise to stop |
|
this April referendum. This cannot happen. |
|
This will destroy any efforts to have a Constitution, a |
|
real--it will undermine the Constitution of Haiti. I mean this |
|
has got to be stopped. And if everybody can get together and |
|
maybe some people from the diaspora along with civil society |
|
and with the State Department, the United Nations, and you, and |
|
others, maybe we can stop this referendum. It has got to stop. |
|
Now when you talk about some of the people in civil |
|
society, Dr. Marie Antoinette Gautier, Marie Louise Gautier, |
|
these people are all in jail. They picked them up in the middle |
|
of the night and took them to jail. Louis Buteau and, of |
|
course, the court, the Supreme Court Justice Dabresil, he was |
|
arrested also, but they let him go on his recognizance. But the |
|
rest of them are still in jail and they are talking about they |
|
are going to stay there for 90 days until they can decide what |
|
to do with them. |
|
But in response, and I do not know, but I worked with one |
|
of the past Prime Ministers, Ceant. Ceant, I guess, was up for |
|
a while and somehow he got kicked out by Moise. I do not know |
|
what he is doing. But between those of you who are here today, |
|
some of the names that I am mentioning and with some of the |
|
people that you trust in civil society, get together and |
|
everybody says to Moise, you will not have this referendum, it |
|
will not take place, I think then there can be a start to deal |
|
with how to follow the Constitution, how to get a legitimate |
|
CEP, and how to go forward with elections. |
|
The Ambassador is correct. The Ambassador is right, you |
|
cannot have it in this atmosphere. There is no way it can take |
|
place. And all of the international interest should contribute |
|
the resources that are necessary at the right time, stopping |
|
this referendum and making him step aside. You know, he is the |
|
President, but if all, everybody comes together to say you |
|
cannot do this, that is not kicking him out as President, but |
|
the people will do that when you get the elections going and |
|
you have him step aside and stop the referendum. |
|
And so I just wanted to add that I love Haiti. I will visit |
|
Haiti with my friends and I know that this is not political, |
|
but I am Lavalas. That is it. That is what I have worked with. |
|
I love President Aristide. He is building a university there |
|
that is educating doctors and lawyers and it is fabulous. When |
|
I was there, there was over five or six hundred graduates that |
|
were coming from that university. |
|
We can do this, but we have got to come together with all |
|
of the interest. We have got to stop him in his tracks. We have |
|
got the international community to come together and supply the |
|
dollars and move with an election in an atmosphere where people |
|
will not be killed. |
|
And with that, I know that I have taken up enough time, I |
|
would like to submit for the record, a letter that I sent to |
|
U.S. Ambassador Michele Sison that was signed by 14 of us and |
|
an op-ed that I wrote in the Miami Herald entitled ``Haiti's |
|
President Joyenel Moise's shameful assault on democracy.'' And |
|
I would just like to say that--include CARICOM in that group of |
|
people who will get together, so that was three letters that I |
|
had sent. |
|
Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I am going to follow your lead. I |
|
am going to do what I know you can--I support you in what I |
|
know you can do, and I think you have to take the leadership in |
|
having to bring this group of people together. As I said, civil |
|
society will be central to that. But all of these others who |
|
play a role, I think we can force him to step aside while we |
|
get together to plan an election. |
|
Thank you so much. I yield back the balance of my time. |
|
Mr. Meeks. Thank you. The gentlelady's time has expired. |
|
All questions have now been had and all questions are now |
|
concluded. I now call upon Ranking Member McCaul, if you have |
|
any comments before we close. |
|
In closing, let me do this. I do not think Ranking Member |
|
McCaul is with us. I want to thank all of our witnesses today. |
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No. 1, your insight has been invaluable. I want to thank all of |
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the Members of this committee who have been engaged on this |
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critical situation in Haiti. There is clearly a lot of work to |
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be done and we are going to need to stay focused on Haiti, and |
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I want all that have been witnessing and listening to this |
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hearing today to note that this committee is going to stay |
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focused. |
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This is not just a one hearing and off and then we are not |
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going to continue to pay attention to what is going on. I too, |
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as I said in my opening statement, am very concerned about |
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moving forward with a referendum and what the current make up |
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of is the CEP, of the CEP, because we have to have free and |
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fair elections that involves everyone. Civil society must be a |
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part of this. |
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The Haitian people must have confidence in an election. You |
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cannot have an election just for election's sake because we |
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would still be in the same place. There has got to be |
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integrity. So this committee will work with the State |
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Department and the administration bringing folks together so |
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that we will know that there will be a change of what is going |
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on. |
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So the Haitian people face a big deal and it is a priority |
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of mine that we work to elevate the voices of civil society who |
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want democracy and the rule of law. And I thank each and every |
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one of you for being with us today and I now adjourn this |
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hearing. |
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[Whereupon, at 1:11 p.m., the committee was adjourned.] |
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