HAITI: INTERNATIONAL DILEMMAS AND FAILURES Kindle Edition

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Management number 220810132 Release Date 2026/05/03 List Price US$90.00 Model Number 220810132
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Ricardo Seitenfus’ Haiti: International Dilemmas and Failures is an important and fascinating book. Seitenfus, a Brazilian academic, was the Special Envoy of the Organization of American States (OAS) to Haiti from 2008 to 2011—a critical period of the country’s recent history. Since 2004, Haiti has thus been under de-facto foreign control. It is in this environment that Rene Preval was elected for a second time President in 2006. By 2008, Haiti was slowly recovering from its political crisis; the country seemed embarked on a virtuous trajectory to political stability, national reconciliation, and modest economic growth. Things drastically changed in January 2010 with the catastrophic earthquake that destroyed most of the country’s infrastructure and killed over 220,000 people. In addition, a persisting cholera epidemic brought by United Nations troops spread killing over 10,000 people and infecting close to a million inhabitants. Nature’s rage was compounded by a new political crisis rooted in the internal and external machinations surrounding the presidential elections of November 2010. Seitenfus gives us a most informed, astute, and vivid account of 2010, which he aptly defines as “Haiti’s annus horriblis.” Seitenfus developed a great understanding of the rather byzantine world of Haitian politics. Moreover, he had access to critical information concerning the goals and strategies of the key members of the international community; he participated also in confidential meetings between international and Haitian authorities. Seitenfus verdict is clear: the international community failed Haiti. Not only did foreign powers misunderstood the country and portrayed it as more violent than it really was, but their policies weakened an already weak state and privileged foreign NGOs that were ill equipped to deal with Haiti’s problems. In other words, foreign assistance ignored Haitian preferences and knowledge, and imposed its own preconceived notions of what the country needed. The result is the transformation of Haiti into a dysfunctional ”de facto protectorate under United Nations tutelage.” After supporting Preval as the indispensable President of Haiti, the United States and France grew increasingly antagonistic to him and were bent on preventing the election of Preval’s handpicked successor, Jude Celestin. In fact, Seitenfus reveals that this antagonism reached the point where the Core Group led by Mulet attempted to remove Preval from office and send him into exile. Had it not been for the intervention of Seitenfus himself, Preval might well have had in Mulet’s words “to leave the presidency and abandon Haiti.” While the Core group failed to carry this gross and illegal coup, it nonetheless succeeded in creating a process that changed the results of the first round of the presidential elections and opened the way to Martelly’s election in the second round. Seitenfus’ explosive revelations are of great significance and deserve to be known by a wide audience. Seitenfus is not only critical of the foreign community; he has harsh words for the behavior of Haiti’s venal political class and predatory elite. Seitenfus has written a provocative and most persuasive and detailed account of the travail of the foreign occupation of Haiti. It will attract a wide audience; “Haitianists,” academics and professionals studying international relations, humanitarian interventions, the Caribbean, Latin America, and the UN will be interested in Haiti: International Dilemmas and Failures. The translation is excellent. I believe that Seitenfus has written an important and critical book that will become a must read for anyone interested in Haiti, development, and humanitarian interventions. This book will be a major reference in Haitianist circles for a long time to come. Which is an eloquent challenge to the prevailing system of foreign assistance and is the work of a brave man and real humanist. Prof. Robert Fatton Jr. Read more

XRay Not Enabled
Language English
File size 2.7 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 510 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Publication date June 1, 2020
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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