HOW THE WORLD HAS FAILED HAITI (Aug 2011)
By Janet Reitman, Rolling Stone Magazine, August 4, 2011
In March of last year, two months after the
devastating earthquake that killed 300,000 Haitians and left more than a
million homeless, Sean Penn was faced with a monumental challenge.
Penn, who had been spending most of his time in Haiti since the quake,
was running a large camp for internally displaced persons in the
foothills of a wealthy suburb of Port-au-Prince, on what had been the
city's lone golf course. Nearly 60,000 poor and middle-class Haitians,
most from Haiti's devastated capital, had migrated here, pouring over
the crumbled walls of the exclusive country club, and established a
spontaneous and overcrowded city of crude dwellings fashioned from
plastic sheeting.
One night, a heavy rainstorm reduced much of the golf course to mud.
Penn turned to Lt. Gen. Ken Keen, commander of the U.S. military's Joint
Task Force Haiti, a 22,000-strong deployment, which was helping to lead
the international relief effort. Keen immediately assigned the Army
Corps of Engineers to come up with a drainage plan. Before the work
could begin, however, some 5,000 refugees would have to leave the golf
course. The question was where to put them.
After Penn and Keen met with U.S. and Haitian officials, it was
generally agreed that the best option was to relocate the refugees to an
area roughly nine miles north of the capital called Corail-Cesselesse,
which had recently been commandeered by the Haitian government. The area
was secure, and believed to be less vulnerable to flooding than the
makeshift camp. "It wasn't the ideal circumstance, but it was safe,"
recalls Keen. "Given the choice of living in a riverbed that was surely
going to be flooded or being safe in Corail, it was a decision made out
of necessity."
It fell to Penn to explain the situation to the Haitians. So he took
his translator and walked to the bottom of the golf course, where some
of the refugees' leaders had gathered. The men were suspicious of Penn,
believing him to be in cahoots with Haiti's wealthy landowners, a small
and privileged elite who had ruled the country for generations and were
now trying to forcibly evict many refugees from their land, often at the
point of a gun. To the people living in Penn's camp, the "optional
relocation" he was proposing smacked of a prelude to a larger, mandatory
exodus.
"Look," said the actor, sitting down with the Haitians in a tent. "I
don't give a fuck about the rich guys who own this club." He didn't even
want them to leave, he said, but what was the choice? He pulled out a
map of the drainage plan the military engineers had devised. Those
ditches were a necessity, he said — without them, thousands of people
might die in a mudslide or flood. Then he took out a Google Earth photo
of Corail, a wide swath of land, some 18,000 acres, and laid out the
proposal: Each family that agreed to move to Corail would get $50,
courtesy of the American Red Cross, and a hygiene kit. They would also
get shelter, food rations, clean water, free medical care and a school
for their kids. And they would be first in line for jobs in Korean-owned
garment factories that the Haitian government pledged would soon be
built in the area.
"That's the plan," Penn said. "We'll step outside, you guys decide.
If it were me, I would take my kids out there rather than stay here."
Within
days, thousands of refugees had agreed to move to Corail. On
Saturday, April 10th, 2010, the first group left the golf course in a
caravan of buses, the exodus chaperoned by United Nations peacekeepers.
They arrived, disembarking onto a dusty, cactus-strewn patch of land in
the shadow of a denuded mountain that turned out to be as vulnerable to
the elements as the golf course. Their new homes — bright white tents
set up on the baking gravel — were both hot and flimsy; three months
after the refugees arrived, hundreds of the tents would blow away in a
heavy windstorm. There were no schools, no markets, and the closest
hospital was miles away. There were also no jobs, as the hoped-for
factories would not be built for months — or even years. To return to
the city meant a long walk to a bus stop followed by a several-hour
commute. They were marooned.
"I went out there with our engineers, and we were all like, 'What is
this? It looks like Chad,'" recalls Julie Schindall, a spokeswoman for
the relief organization Oxfam, which signed on to build latrines and
provide water to Corail. "I have no idea how they selected that camp. It
was all done very last minute — we had to set the entire structure up
in a week."
In the aftermath of the move, no one in the State Department or the
Haitian government seemed willing to take responsibility for the
relocation — or even for the rationale behind it. "I've yet to see any
evidence that proves that anyone was in more danger on the golf course
than they would have been anywhere else — though everybody in Haiti
thinks they were," says a senior U.N. official who asked not to be
identified. "What the move proved was that it's possible to 'save' 5,000
people if you say they're in a dangerous situation and put them in what
you call a safe situation. It was the most grotesque act of cynicism
that I've seen for some time."
Penn, for one, admits that Corail was a problematic choice. "It's a
very vulnerable area," he says, adding that he realized this
immediately, having toured the site soon after it was selected. "It
struck me as desolate, but we had an emergency, and this was an
emergency-relocation area — I never said it was anything else," he
insists. "I feel like shit. I hope those guys are OK when it rains out
there. I feel an extra responsibility — of course I do. But we were
betrayed." Penn says he was assured by international monitors and aid
agencies that Corail was a safe place to live, and that shelters would
be built within three months. A year later, the shelters, constructed of
crude plywood, were just being completed. There were still no hospitals
and no factory jobs: Corail, it turns out, doesn't have enough water to
supply the garment manufacturers who promised to locate there.
But the lure of would-be jobs has driven a mass migration of Haitians
to the land abutting Corail. By the first anniversary of the
earthquake, the population of the once-deserted territory had swelled to
more than 100,000 people. "It was like the gold rush," says one U.N.
official, close to the process. "Within about a week of people moving to
Corail, you had all these other people rushing out there to stake their
claim. People were up there buying and selling plots of land —
completely illegally." The going rate, she says, was about $1,000 a
plot.
Dubbed "Canaan," after the biblical promised land, the Corail region
is now one of Haiti's 10 largest cities, as well as its largest and most
squalid camp, a bitter irony lost on no one involved in the relief
effort. "Corail is a ton of people living in a flux state, without safe
shelter, who don't know what the future holds," says Schindall. "It's
Haiti post-earthquake in a nutshell."
It wasn't supposed to be
this way. In the immediate aftermath of the
earthquake on January 12th, 2010, the international community resolved
not only to rebuild Haiti, but also to establish new and more efficient
models for dispensing humanitarian aid. President Obama, calling the
tragedy "cruel and incomprehensible," pledged "every element of our
national capacity" to the response. Former Presidents George W. Bush and
Bill Clinton created a special fund for Haiti; the American Red Cross
launched a wildly successful appeal, raising close to $500 million in
one year. In total, an estimated one in two American households donated
more than $1.4 billion to Haiti relief, with close to $11 billion more
for reconstruction pledged by donor countries and financial
institutions. "We will be here today, tomorrow and for the time ahead,"
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton promised during a post-quake visit to
Port-au-Prince.
American and international officials gave their plan for Haiti a
simple and compelling name: Building Back Better, a term that came into
vogue after the tsunami that struck Asia in 2004, and that has since
become something of a mantra in the development world. In a radical
shift away from traditional approaches to foreign aid, "building back
better" attempts to go beyond simple relief and not only to rebuild
shattered structures, but to restructure, in a sense, shattered
societies.
At the forefront of this effort is private-sector investment
being leveraged to build the kind of infrastructure needed to promote
economic development and attract foreign corporations: roads, power
lines, factories, markets. "The hope," explains Matthew Bishop,
co-author of Philanthrocapitalism: How the Rich Can Save the World,
"is that using the private sector will be a lot more efficient.
Traditional aid has been extremely wasteful. When it is allowed to take
the lead, the private sector is more likely to try something new or
entrepreneurial."
But despite all that has been promised, almost nothing has been built
back in Haiti, better or otherwise. Within Port-au-Prince, some 3
million people languish in permanent misery, subject to myriad
experiments at "fixing" a nation that, to those who are attempting it,
stubbornly refuses to be fixed. Mountains of rubble remain in the
streets, hundreds of thousands of people continue to live in
weather-beaten tents, and cholera, a disease that hadn't been seen in
Haiti for 60 years, has swept over the land, infecting more than a
quarter million people.
In the midst of such suffering, only a fraction of the money devoted
to Haitian relief has actually been spent. This May, the U.S. Government
Accountability Office reported that of the $1.14 billion allocated by
Congress for Haiti last year, only $184 million has been "obligated." In
a letter to the Obama administration this spring, 53 Democratic members
of Congress blasted the "appalling" conditions in the refugee camps.
"The unprecedented relief effort has given way to a sluggish, at best,
reconstruction effort," said Rep. Barbara Lee, who is demanding an
accounting of how the relief money is being spent. There is, she said, a
"lack of urgency on the part of the international community."
As the relief effort has dragged on for well over a year, virtually
every actor involved has blamed the others: U.S. aid officials pitted
against Washington bureaucrats, U.N. agencies against private aid
groups. Some veteran insiders blame a new breed of technocrats who, with
little to no experience in development, have descended on
Port-au-Prince armed with bold theories and PowerPoint presentations, as
if the entire country were a case study from Harvard Business School.
Others say the goals were too lofty, the plans unrealistic; maybe Haiti,
the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere, was simply too damaged
to be fixed. Or perhaps the very idea of fixing Haiti at all is a flawed
concept, revealing not only the limits of Western humanitarianism but
the folly of believing any country and problems are ours to set
right.
Amid all the finger-pointing, however, nearly everyone taking part in
the relief effort is quick to place at least some of the blame on the
Haitians themselves. "Corruption is the reason those reconstruction
funds haven't broken loose," says one U.S. business consultant, who
describes most Haitian politicians as "pathological narcissists" with
little interest in helping their own country. Such accusations have been
made by outsiders for as long as outsiders have tried to help Haiti —
which itself may be the biggest problem. "Haitian people have always
found a way to get rid of those who've tried to control them," says
Raoul Peck, Haiti's former minister of culture. "It's very easy to point
at the Haitians for being corrupt or weak. What's much harder is
looking at what's wrong with those who say they are just trying to
help."
Last fall, a line of graffiti began to appear on walls throughout
Port-au-Prince: BON RETOUR J.C. DUVALIER ("Welcome back, J.C.
Duvalier"). It was a reference to Haiti's last dictator, Jean-Claude
"Baby Doc" Duvalier, who, prior to being deposed in 1986, presided over a
kleptocratic police state of such paranoid dimensions that writer
Graham Greene dubbed Haiti the "Nightmare Republic." Today, in a
testament to their current-day nightmare, some traumatized Haitians have
begun to yearn for the days of Duvalier in the same way that some
Iraqis, in the wake of the U.S. invasion, came to idealize life under
Saddam Hussein. "It's selective memory," explains my translator, a
cynical former businessman named John. "At least with Duvalier, we had
lights."
It is a broiling November day, and John and I are driving through the
wreckage of what used to be Port-au-Prince. Two-thirds the size of
Manhattan, Haiti's capital is still buried under some 8 million cubic
meters of rubble — enough, according to one expert, to build a road from
Port-au-Prince across the ocean to Los Angeles and back again. Enormous
piles of this debris, some sprouting odd pieces of metal or computer
parts, now comprise much of what used to be small neighborhoods. Choking
clouds of exhaust hover above the roads, which are clogged with idling
cars as well as people, dogs, cows, donkeys, the odd pig. Some 1,000
camps, or "informal settlements," have sprung up in seemingly every
available space in the city: vacant lots, basketball courts, soccer
fields, road medians, the large, gated plaza in front of the prime
minister's office, even the Champs de Mars park, across from the
National Palace, home now to some 10,000 people.
Whether it's human waste or the giant heaps of rotted mango
peels, empty water bottles and other refuse that line the roads and
ditches and canals — is as much a part of life in post-earthquake Haiti
as frustration and despair. "There are things in this country you just
can't believe," one exhausted aid worker tells me. "I'm at this river
the other day, and here's what I see: three men washing some Land Rovers
in the water, two pigs having sex, a group of children gutting some
pigs and cleaning their intestines right next to the pigs having sex,
and a few women washing clothes and bathing — all in the same tiny part
of the river. And next to all of that was a hand-washing poster put up
by some NGO to teach people good hygiene."
Haiti's dysfunction,
while undeniably exacerbated by the quake, goes
back generations. The first independent black republic in the world, it
has been hobbled for most of the past century by a series of repressive
dictatorships and military regimes, and so dependent on Western aid
groups that since the late 1990s, it has been known throughout the
development world as "the Republic of NGOs." The earthquake didn't so
much destroy Haitian society as it exposed how deeply broken that
society already was. In 35 seconds, the quake leveled government
ministries and the National Palace, killed an estimated 20 percent of
the country's civil servants, and severely damaged 50 of the nation's
hospitals. Schools collapsed on their students; churches collapsed on
their clergy; and houses built into the hillsides crumbled like sand,
sliding to the bottom of the ravines. From his home overlooking
Port-au-Prince, Charles Henri Baker, a Haitian manufacturing titan,
recalled seeing the dust rising from the city, and with it the cries of
"3 million people calling to Jesus."
During the first few days after the quake, not a single Haitian
official — not the president, the prime minister or any cabinet member —
emerged to make a public statement. "Their excuse was they were in
shock," says Raymond Joseph, Haiti's former ambassador to the United
States. "OK, you're in shock, I understand. But act like leaders. Summon
the people, tell them something of comfort — do something. No one did."
Over the next few weeks, the amount of aid pledged to Haiti began to
outpace the nation's ability to absorb it. Just a few days after the
quake, Doctors Without Borders shut down its appeal for Haiti relief
funds, informing donors that it simply couldn't spend any more. But most
aid groups continued to fundraise for Haiti long after their
emergency-relief capacities were maxed out. The American Red Cross has
raised $479 million for Haiti, for example, yet it had "spent or signed
agreements to spend" only $245 million by the one-year anniversary of
the tragedy. The rest remains in an interest-bearing account, awaiting
the commencement of "building back better."
Aid workers in Haiti concede that their efforts remain as focused on
relief as on reconstruction. "We are ramping up recovery — building more
stable housing, a medical infrastructure, that kind of thing — but
we're still out there digging ditches, sandbagging hillsides, replacing
tarps and tents," says Julie Sell, the Red Cross spokeswoman for
Port-au-Prince. "The relief phase, to be honest, is still ongoing. We
all wish we were further along than we are."
Sell, like most other aid officials, is trying to put a rational spin
on a situation that is both irrational and, by the looks of things,
completely unmanageable. On top of the earthquake, aid workers in Haiti
are contending with a cholera crisis, a disease of poverty spread
through poor sanitation and contaminated drinking water. These are all
things that NGOs like the Red Cross have expertise in fighting, but
larger structural issues often trump their best intentions.
Because
international NGOs get most of their money from large government
agencies, they are beholden to the broader policy imperatives of their
funders. "The big problem is that most NGOs are only really accountable
to their donors, when we should really be accountable to the people
we're trying to serve," says Dr. Louise Ivers, senior health and policy
adviser for Partners in Health, a Boston-based NGO that has worked in
Haiti for 25 years. Some organizations, she notes, "exist only to write
grant proposals that respond to specific donor requests. If your mandate
is just to follow the money, then the money determines what happens."
The money that poured into Haiti after the earthquake was focused
almost solely on relief efforts in and around Port-au-Prince. As a
result, dozens of health-oriented NGOs in Haiti focused their work in
the capital, all but ignoring the countryside. So last October, when
reports of people dropping dead of cholera in the rural Artibonite
Valley 90 miles from the capital began to emerge, many in the aid
community were blindsided. Even as the epidemic made its way to
Port-au-Prince, some relief organizations still didn't respond. "It was
as if, somehow, those 400 or 500 deaths in the Artibonite weren't
registering," says Ivers, who had an office in St. Marc, where the
outbreak started. "If you haven't really seen it with your own eyes,
it's hard to believe how quickly cholera can become a major
catastrophe." Within a month, cholera had become a national epidemic.
One morning, during the height of the epidemic, I attend a meeting
organized by the U.N. to coordinate efforts to contain the cholera
outbreak. About 60 relief workers from groups like Oxfam, the World
Health Organization, UNICEF, the American Red Cross and Save the
Children crowd the small room at the offices of Haiti's ministry of
water and sanitation, sitting on tables or on the floor. There is a
representative from USAID and another from the Centers for Disease
Control. There are also a few U.N. peacekeepers and a U.S. Army captain
in Oakleys. There are only a handful of Haitians in the room, half of
whom are translators.
The meeting, which is held in French, begins with a PowerPoint
presentation on the scope of the cholera epidemic, conducted by a
frazzled aid official named Pierre-Yves Rochât. Word has come down from
the Haitian health ministry that there are only 800 cholera cases in
Port-au-Prince, a number everyone in the room knows is a lie. "They're
dropping like flies," a CDC official whispers. At one hospital on the
outskirts of town, there were 1,200 cases in a single day.
Much of the meeting is spent complaining. An official from an
international aid agency notes that Port-au-Prince is now overflowing
with waste, yet 52 disposal trucks that have been imported to handle it
are still sitting in customs. Another says that waste from
cholera-treatment centers has been dumped at the Truitier landfill,
which happens to be located on a major aquifer. Rodrigo Silva, a
Portuguese waste-management specialist, offers what seems like a
reasonable proposal: Perhaps the NGOs should consider composting the
cholera waste instead of dumping it. In unison, officials from Doctors
Without Borders, the Pan American Health Organization and UNICEF shoot
him down, insisting that chlorine, an extremely effective
bacteria-killer, is the only sensible option to neutralize cholera
waste. Dejected, Silva leaves the room.
I find him outside smoking a cigarette. A skinny guy in his early
thirties, Silva has been in Haiti for months trying to initiate projects
that rely on "ecological sanitation," which many development
specialists advocate for undeveloped countries like Haiti. So far,
though, Silva has had almost no luck except with small NGOs like Give
Love, founded by the actress Patricia Arquette. "I go to these meetings,
and everybody's talking about problems, not solutions," he says. "I try
to make suggestions, but no one listens. I don't know why."
In the end, nothing is decided. After two hours, the aid workers, who
have spent most of the meeting arguing, make a dash for the door,
getting into their cars to sit for hours in Port-au-Prince's traffic en
route to the next meeting. These weekly gatherings, which are designed
to streamline relief efforts, wind up seeming like an exercise in
futility. "What sucks is that we spend all of our time sitting in
traffic going to all of these meetings," says one veteran aid worker,
who has been working in Haiti for a year, "and wasting even more hours
of our day when we could be doing something else — like helping Haiti."
Many of the decisions about how best to help Haiti, in fact, were
conceived well before the earthquake struck. In the spring of 2009,
Hillary Clinton, having recently assumed her post as secretary of state,
identified Haiti as a top priority. Both she and Bill Clinton shared a
deep and difficult history with the country. The former president "fell
in love" with the island during his honeymoon there in 1975, and the
Clinton homes in New York and Washington were decorated with Haitian
art. But his policies only drove the country deeper into despair.
Clinton imposed harsh sanctions on the island after its democratically
elected leader, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was deposed by a military coup
in 1991. He also backed an ambitious program of "structural adjustment"
designed by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund to turn
Haiti into a Caribbean Taiwan, refocusing its resources away from
farming toward more lucrative sectors like export manufacturing. It was
known as the "American Plan."
The strategy was a disaster. Small farms were crushed by a sudden
influx of subsidized food imported from the United States. No longer
able to sell their produce, hundreds of thousands of peasants were
driven off their farms and into the cities and shantytowns, mostly in
Port-au-Prince, where they competed for jobs at American-owned assembly
plants, earning less than $2 a day. Last year, Clinton apologized for
the plan. "We made this devil's bargain, and it wasn't the right thing
to do," he said. "It was a mistake that I was a party to. I did that. I
have to live every day with the consequences."
The earthquake, say some involved with the relief effort, seemed to
offer Clinton a chance to make amends. "Personally, I think Bill Clinton
wants to redeem himself," says Joseph, Haiti's former ambassador. "He
realizes he made mistakes. So now, if he can do something good for
Haiti, leave a legacy, then he can say, OK, I cleared my name."
In the fall of 2008, a year and a half before the earthquake, Clinton
appealed to world leaders and other members of his Clinton Global
Initiative to help Haiti recover from a series of devastating
hurricanes. By the end of the year, CGI members had committed more than
$100 million to Haiti relief. The U.N., which had launched its own
appeal, raised less than half that amount.
In the winter of 2009, U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon invited
Clinton to Haiti, and soon afterward asked him to serve as his special
envoy, using his unique brand of star power and political clout to
garner much-needed investments for the country. It was a job Clinton had
done before, drumming up aid after the catastrophic tsunami in Asia. In
Haiti, he hoped to do even more. "Clinton had this idea of a grid," one
adviser recalls. "He was going to figure out what all the needs were in
Haiti, chart them, and then match them up with the people who had the
money. The idea was to get every base covered, to fill in all those
boxes, not just the ones that were sexy. And he thought he could do it
quickly."
In Washington, meanwhile, Hillary Clinton was pursuing a Haiti
strategy that dovetailed neatly with her husband's efforts. Within the
State Department, Haiti was viewed, in the words of one official, as a
"laboratory": a petri dish in which America could prove that it could be
a force for good in the world. The impulse falls squarely within the
Clinton doctrine known as "smart power," which stresses the importance
of diplomacy and development to further U.S. interests. For too long,
Clinton believed, the West had embraced "development for development's
sake," throwing money at poor countries without demanding either
accountability or results. Haiti had received so much foreign assistance
over the years — more than $300 million annually from the U.S. alone —
that it had become a virtual, albeit dysfunctional, ward of the West,
and a poster child for the inadequacies of foreign aid.
In April 2009, Clinton ordered a thorough review of U.S. policy
toward Haiti. She wanted a new strategy grounded in "evidence-based
solutions." "The idea," recalls Cheryl Mills, Clinton's chief of staff,
"was that if we're putting in the assistance, we need to know what the
outcomes are going to be."
Mills was chosen by Clinton to steer the review. An elegant,
46-year-old graduate of Stanford Law School, Mills was as strong a
Clinton loyalist as anyone in Washington. She had worked in the White
House office of legal counsel throughout Bill's presidency, defending
him during his impeachment hearing. She also served as Hillary's chief
counsel and unofficial campaign manager during her 2008 presidential
campaign. "If something's on the other side of a brick wall and the
Clintons need it," said one former White House colleague, "she'll find a
way to get to it: over, around or through."
But Mills, to some minds, was a questionable choice to lead what
became the State Department's Haiti Task Force. She had no prior
experience in international development, nor did she think she needed
it. Her role, as she saw it, was as a problem solver: In order to come
up with the best policy possible, the United States needed to maximize
its resources, cut costs and leverage the expertise of as many people as
it could, including those in the private sector.
"Cheryl Mills came in and started asking very hard questions, like
'Why is it that we've put all this money and all this time into Haiti
and gotten nothing out of it?'" recalls Robert Maguire, chairman of the
Haiti Working Group at the U.S. Institute of Peace, who was part of a
kitchen cabinet of experts who met with Mills to discuss Haiti policy.
Mills was appalled, Maguire recalls, by the abysmal record of U.S. aid
in Haiti, and was particularly critical of the NGOs, many of which had
spent decades there without producing any lasting change. She was
unhappy that so much money was outsourced to private development
agencies, whose accomplishments rarely justified their exorbitant fees.
Mills was also frustrated with the inflexibility of development purists
in accepting new ideas.
The purists, in turn, criticized Mills as a political operative who,
for all of her good intentions, was "not qualified to engineer
sophisticated development approaches to Haiti," as one puts it. Maguire,
however, was impressed. "This old, established system had been
deficient in the worst possible way, and Cheryl was determined to figure
out a new way of doing things that would be more effective, both for
the U.S. and for Haiti," he says. "She was not accepting business as
usual. And because of that, she stepped on a lot of toes."
Mills was particularly unpopular at USAID, the long-troubled, deeply
understaffed agency that has been at the helm of development programs
for the past five decades. Since the end of the Cold War, USAID has
suffered tremendous budget cuts that have resulted in its role being
almost entirely absorbed by the State Department, which controls its
budget. For those at USAID who resented this loss of autonomy, Mills
became a symbol of their agency's emasculation. To those she favored,
Mills could be warm, funny, witty and supportive. But like the Clintons,
she could also be vindictive to those who crossed her. "I don't doubt
that Cheryl means well," says one State Department official, "but she
scares the shit out of everyone."
During the summer and fall of 2009, Mills dispatched several teams of
experts to Haiti to assess the best investment options. They paid
particular attention to a strategy drawn up by Oxford University
economist Paul Collier, who maintained that with its low-paid workforce
and loose labor regulations, Haiti could become a major supplier for the
apparel industry. The ideas weren't dissimilar from the policies that
had been foisted on Haiti as far back as the Duvalier era. "That same
model of T-shirt manufacturing was tried in the 1970s, and was an utter
failure," notes a U.N. official. "The entire model is based on paying
people so little that it doesn't activate the economy. It keeps the
labor force subsisting, but there's not enough surplus in their salaries
to do more than keep their family alive."
Mills nonetheless embraced Collier's idea, as did Bill Clinton, who
made a special trip to Haiti in the fall of 2009, escorting
international CEOs around Haiti's farms and factories and promoting its
tourism potential. Manufacturing, Clinton believed, was "a great
opportunity, not only for investors to come and make a profit but for
the people of Haiti to have a more secure and a more broadly shared,
prosperous future." He also envisioned a myriad of other possibilities,
from tourist hotels to outsourced call centers.
By that Christmas, Mills and her team had identified four key pillars
for aid — health, energy, agriculture and security — that promised what
seemed like the highest return, and were preparing to send a report on
the new Haiti strategy to the National Security Council for review. Bill
Clinton's hands-on approach had also begun to pay off: Two
international hotel chains had committed to projects in Haiti, and new
industrial parks were in the works with interest from American, South
Korean and Irish investors. The Vietnamese military was in negotiations
to buy a controlling share of Haiti's state-owned telephone company, and
the Hotel Montana in Port-au-Prince was making plans to open a shopping
arcade.
Then came the earthquake. The tragedy put "a dent in expectations,"
as one State Department official puts it, but it "didn't completely
destroy the underlying economic opportunities." Immediately after the
quake, in fact, Bill Clinton was not only talking about Haiti's
reconstruction but was casting the tragedy as an opportunity for the
country to "re-imagine" itself, using a modified version of the Collier
plan that had already been endorsed by both the U.S. and Haitian
governments. "Is this going to be hard? Yes," Clinton said in a
teary-eyed interview with The Miami Herald. "Do I think we can do it? Absolutely, I do.
Around the same time, Hillary Clinton met in Montreal with
representatives from a long list of donor countries and financial
institutions to begin to plan for Haiti's reconstruction. Bill Clinton,
meanwhile, attended the world economic forum in Davos, Switzerland,
where he appealed to private-sector leaders to invest in Haiti as part
of what Clinton and others would call a new "Marshall Plan." A 56-page
document, known as the "Action Plan for National Recovery and
Development," was released in March 2010. Its author was Haitian Prime
Minister Jean-Max Bellerive, a European-educated technocrat, well liked
by the international donors, with support from officials at the World
Bank and the U.N. The vision represented a radically overhauled Haiti: a
country bursting with mango-processing plants, fish farms,
solar-powered irrigation facilities, industrial parks and duty-free
zones, financed, to a large degree, by the private sector. "The plan
suggests social engineering on a vast scale," noted The Washington Post,
"which would involve levels of public and private investment in Haiti
never really imagined before." Leslie Voltaire, a former Haitian
minister and U.N. envoy who
consulted on the plan, put it more succinctly. "Disaster," he said, "is a
terrible thing to waste."
Shortly after the recovery plan was unveiled, the Haitian government
announced the creation of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission, a new
oversight body charged with managing the reconstruction. Though its
members were roughly split between Haitian officials and international
donors, it was clear from the outset that Bill Clinton, who was
appointed co-chair, would drive the IHRC. "There is a degree of
political pressure that only President Clinton, and Secretary Clinton,
can exert on the Haitian government," says Sam Worthington, the CEO of
InterAction, a consortium of American-based relief organizations. "It's a
crucial role, and Bill Clinton is at his best when he plays it."
Bill Clinton was already a major donor in Haiti, bestowing hefty
grants through both the Clinton Bush Haiti Fund and the William J.
Clinton Foundation. Now, as co-chair of the IHRC, he would have final
approval, with Prime Minister Belle-rive, of every major reconstruction
project. It was an extraordinarily powerful position for a single person
to hold. It was also, to many minds in both Washington and
Port-au-Prince, the best possible arrangement given the circumstances.
"Bill Clinton is the most powerful advocate that Haiti is ever going to
have," says Johnny Celestin, a Haitian-American investor who heads a
private philanthropy called the Haitian Fund for Innovation. "We can't
let this opportunity pass."
Still, handing over that much power to Clinton made others nervous.
"Behind closed doors, the feeling of the Haitian government was this was
just another foreign group they'd given permission to come in and take
over their country," says a senior international aid official. "But what
could they do? The Haitian government knew it didn't have the capacity
to tackle this reconstruction on its own."
Much of the work of coordinating the recovery effort fell to Cheryl
Mills and Rajiv Shah, the newly appointed head of USAID. Neither Mills
nor Shah, a 38-year-old physician and food-security expert who had
worked for the Gates Foundation, had any disaster-response experience.
Shah, in fact, had been at his post in the State Department less than
two weeks when the earthquake hit. "It all happened so fast. You do your
absolute best and listen and try to make the right decisions," says
Shah, who had received an orientation to USAID's emergency response
"situation room" the day before the earthquake. "The initial goal was to
save lives, move quickly, and be coordinated and aggressive in the
response. If you look at the response from early January to the middle
of March, it all came together in a pretty coordinated way, given the
challenges."
Moving beyond emergency relief, though, proved next to impossible.
Aid groups were maddeningly disorganized, and the Haitian government was
overwhelmed. While President René Préval had given the recovery
commission the authority to oversee the reconstruction, final approval
on every project had to be given by Haitian ministries, most of which
were so broken that they could barely support a staff. "There just
aren't a lot of talented bureaucrats," says an aide to Bill Clinton.
"And the ones they do have are so busy putting out day-to-day fires,
they don't have time to do any planning."
The dysfunction, say reconstruction officials, was like nothing
they'd ever seen. "I wish I could organize a trip of Tea Party activists
and take them to Haiti, so they could see what happens if they have a
country with no government," says Earl Kessler, an urban-disaster
consultant for USAID. A central complaint was the lack of strategy: The
"Action Plan," while laying out the core priorities for Haiti's
recovery, didn't go into many specifics. That left it up to Haiti's
ministries to devise their own plans. Some, like the health and
agriculture ministries, came up with robust strategies. But in other key
areas — housing, debris removal, waste management — nothing happened.
Some Haitian ministers simply refused to pick up the phone; others
demanded large payoffs before they'd sign off even on small plans.
"I've had two ministers come up to me this week, personally, and ask
what's in it for them," says a frustrated IHRC official. "But that's how
this game gets played down here. He who has the most money buys the
best minister, and gets the work. And since money grows on trees in this
disaster, the attitude among Haitian officials is: Just call up your
buddies in Washington, and they'll send another check."
Then there was another major obstacle to reconstruction: the Haitian
ruling class, a handful of prominent industrial families that
collectively control most of the country's wealth. Haiti's elite has
maintained dominance for generations through strategic alliances with
Haitian politicians who provide lucrative government contracts in
exchange for patronage. Some of those same influential Haitians owned
much of the land now needed to house refugees — and with national
elections coming up that November, government officials weren't going to
alienate their major benefactors. "Préval wasn't about to go around
seizing up property," says a U.N. official who has spent much of the
past year trying to find land for resettlement camps. "It became readily
apparent that he was not going to do anything to offend his
supporters."
With the Haitian government in disarray, some 98 percent of foreign
aid was directed to partners more trusted by donors — mostly to the
NGOs, which had worked in Haiti for years. But these groups, while
experienced in relief, were not as knowledgeable about what it takes to
rebuild a nation. "I got a call from a U.N. agency asking me how to buy
equipment for rubble removal," recalls Michael Wyrick, vice president of
the Haiti Recovery Group, a disaster-recovery firm that has been vying
for debris-removal contracts in Haiti. "These guys were essentially
planning to start a new company: They were looking to purchase
equipment, hire management personnel, rent office space. Much of the
money on these contracts to NGOs goes to their overhead. Before long,
you've spent tens of millions, and what's really been done?"
Things weren't moving much faster in Washington. Cheryl Mills had
marginalized many of the bona fide experts on Haiti at USAID, leaving
her with a random assortment of aid officials, many from far-off posts
like Panama and South Africa. For insight, she scoured the research on
previous recoveries: How long did it take for the debris to be cleared
after the tsunami in Indonesia? What about Katrina? It took more than
two years to remove the rubble from Ground Zero, she learned from her
reading, and the World Trade Center still wasn't rebuilt. While aid
officials with long experience in disaster relief understood that Haiti
would be a five- or 10-year effort, Mills, without prior experience in
disasters, had no idea what was "normal" in such a situation.
"There are a few things you must do in disaster relief," says John
Simon, the former U.S. ambassador to the African Union and an
undersecretary at USAID during the Bush administration. "The first is to
establish a clear chain of command; the second is to establish a
gatekeeper function that tells everybody — other than those people who
know what they're doing — to get out of the way. There are a number of
very competent and experienced people at USAID who know how to do this
work and could have easily done the job. Unfortunately, what you seem to
have had with Haiti is a lot of new people who were not in the business
of disaster relief and who took this as an opportunity to learn."
By the spring of 2010, it had become clear to many observers that
imposing a lack of expertise on a situation that required a tremendous
amount of it had become a hallmark of the State Department's "results"
strategy. There was significant grumbling in aid circles, for example,
when the department awarded a $1.5 million contract to a New York-based
consulting firm called Dalberg Global Development Advisors. Glenn
Smucker, an anthropologist who specializes in Haiti, was asked to brief
the Dalberg team, which included several summer associates from Harvard
Business School. "They were nice people, but they struck me as naive
about Haiti," he says. "They asked the appropriate questions and were
eager to learn, but from what I gathered, they had never lived overseas,
didn't have any disaster experience or any background in urban
planning, and they'd never carried out any program activities on the
ground. Only one of them spoke any French. They were being asked to do
extremely important things that they had no background to do."
One of Dalberg's assignments was to do an assessment of a broad,
bow-tie-shaped swath of land near the Corail camp, where thousands of
Haitians had moved earlier that spring. Even as refugees were streaming
onto the land and establishing squatter camps, the State Department
hoped to create new communities in the area as part of an attempt to
depopulate Port-au-Prince. It was the second time in three months that
consultants had assessed the area, and after Dalberg was finished, a
team of experts from USAID was brought in to reassess the assessments.
"One of the sites they said was habitable was actually a small
mountain," says Bill Vastine, one of the experts on the USAID team. "It
had an open-mined pit on one side of it, a severe 100-foot vertical
cliff, and ravines." After looking at the photos in Dalberg's report, he
said, "it became clear that these people may not even have gotten out
of their SUVs." The process of assessments and reassessments dragged on
for months. In the end, only one of the six sites approved by Dalberg
was deemed viable for relocation.
Vastine says the entire process could have been avoided if USAID had
simply relied on its own surveys of the area, which had been done on a
regular basis for the past 50 years. "I kept telling these State
Department people to go and look in their frickin' filing cabinets, but
it fell on deaf ears," he says. "It was truly astonishing to me. The
amount of previous study on Haiti is immense. But there was no
reflection on the existing knowledge base. Instead, they would go out
and hire some company to the tune of half a million dollars to barge in
equipment from the United States and go punch some holes in the ground,
even though we already knew what was down there. Then they'd hire some
Ph.D. to study it for six months and do a PowerPoint presentation. Haiti
doesn't need any more Ph.D.s to study it. What it needs are some
professionals who know what they're doing to go out and do the goddamn
work and rebuild it."
Vastine is sitting in the IHRC's headquarters, a large Quonset hut on
the grounds of the former U.S. Embassy compound in downtown
Port-au-Prince. The place feels like a deserted wind tunnel. A year
after the quake, only half of the IHRC's core posts had been filled,
making it almost impossible to assess, let alone approve, reconstruction
proposals. Within its first year, the IHRC greenlighted just 86
proposals, many of which had been in the works before the quake. When I
meet Vastine just before Thanksgiving, he tells me that he had arrived
at work that morning to find a "strategically placed dead body" lying in
the street just outside the compound. "Kind of says it all, don't it?"
he says.
Bill Clinton, by all accounts, was equally frustrated
with the slow
progress of reconstruction. But Clinton himself did not become the
semipermanent presence many Haitians had assumed he would. Instead,
Clinton's role was taken on, to a large extent, by staffers with little
background in development or disaster management. Laura Graham,
Clinton's 38-year-old chief of staff and chief point person for Haiti,
was his former White House scheduler. Clinton's director of foreign
policy, 34-year-old Amitabh Desai, had been one of Hillary Clinton's
legislative aides, and before that an intern in Ted Kennedy's office.
"It was a dual problem, really," a U.N. official says of the Clinton
Foundation staffers. "First, they had no background in development —
they didn't know what they were talking about in aid or humanitarianism.
Second, they didn't even realize it. They had come to Haiti in their
suits convinced they were going to fix the place, and then they looked
really confused when we would try to explain to them why the ideas they
came up with on the back of an envelope on the plane over wouldn't
work."
Graham maintains that the Clinton Foundation has "extensive
experience in post-crisis management and development." The foundation's
role, she adds, "is to assist the Haitians, not to prescribe or
implement solutions unilaterally." But on the ground in Haiti, Clinton's
surrogates managed to alienate almost everyone with whom they came into
contact. "When you listen to President Clinton, his rhetoric is right
on point," says a prominent Haitian. "But his people were incredibly
arrogant; they knew nothing about Haiti or Haitians. They acted like,
because they worked for a former president, they ruled the world." In
one incident, he says, Haitian ministers were shut out of an IHRC board
meeting after a Clinton staffer told them their names were not on the
list. "These are the ministers of Haiti — it's their country! What do
you mean 'not on the list'?"
U.S. officials, while acknowledging shortcomings in the relief
effort, insist they have made the best of a tragic situation. "No effort
of this scope will be perfect, and certainly, we would like to see even
more progress, but our commitment is ongoing and we are determined to
produce long-term results," says a senior State Department official who
refused to speak for attribution. "It is natural to feel impatient — we
are, too — but there has been considerable progress, particularly given
the magnitude of the challenge and Haiti's history."
Sean Penn also defends the State Department's efforts and believes
the reconstruction effort is about to turn a corner. "Cheryl Mills is
one of the most valuable players in Haiti," he says. "She has made an
incredible impact despite the things that have gone wrong. She's out
there pushing people's buttons, and she has been able to get things done
when others couldn't. Cheryl Mills is someone Haiti needs right now."
Penn himself, by most accounts, has been one of the most effective
players in Haiti. Some celebrities who threw themselves into the relief
effort, like Wyclef Jean, quickly discovered that even the
best-intentioned efforts to mobilize resources can go disastrously
wrong, undermined by mismanagement and corruption. But Penn, who arrived
in Haiti a week after the earthquake with a team of doctors and rescue
workers he had rounded up, forged a bond with both the U.S. military and
with Dr. Paul Farmer, the well-known advocate for Haiti's poor. At
first, many veteran relief workers were wary of Penn. "For all the usual
reasons, I was skeptical of a movie star working in Haiti," admits
Ivers, the senior health and policy adviser for Farmer's organization.
"I doubted his motivation, and I was frustrated that I couldn't do what
he was able to do." But Penn soon impressed Ivers and others with his
ability to break through bureaucracy, and humanitarian officials now
refer to his golf-course settlement, with its hospital, school,
water, sanitation, as a "five-star camp."
Such individual efforts, however, have not been enough to help the
680,000 Haitians who remain stranded in temporary camps. Tim Schwartz,
an American anthropologist who was doing a housing survey for USAID,
recalls a meeting of key development officials he attended in October,
10 months after the earthquake struck. "USAID basically announced that
the mission was failing," he says. At the rate they were going, U.S.
officials observed, it was going to cost $1.2 billion to keep Haitians
in the camps like Corail for another year. "They were blowing through
the money, and they couldn't afford to maintain the system like it was,"
Schwartz says. "They desperately wanted to get out from under this."
Many USAID officials wanted to return Haitians to their homes, a
project that would require rebuilding close to 100,000 damaged houses
that were still considered salvageable. To begin the project, the
government hired Kit Miyamoto, a California structural engineer, who
assessed the damage and trained Haitian builders to begin the repairs.
"People don't want to be in the camps — they want to get the hell out of
there," Miyamoto says. "What they are looking for is assistance to make
their homes more secure. There are people lining up to come back to
repaired houses." In fact, he adds, every person whose house was fixed
left the camps and returned home.
But only a few thousand such homes, as of May, had been repaired, and
millions of dollars have meanwhile been diverted to other "shelter
solutions." At one U.N. meeting in Haiti, everything from earthen huts
to vinyl-sided igloos were proposed as part of a grand project to
reimagine Port-au-Prince. With the streets still buried in mountains of
rubble, some planners even floated ideas for "model communities" that
would include high-rise apartment towers, walking paths, ample green
spaces and tennis courts. It was as unrealistic as it was predictable.
"Everyone comes to Haiti with some kind of plan to 'save' it and do all
these nice things for the poor people," says Schwartz. "But it never
works. You're never going to turn Port-au-Prince into Santa Barbara."
Increasingly, aid workers and experts like Schwartz watched as plans
for new communities were proposed and then scratched — sometimes because
the land was not available, other times for more prosaic reasons.
Sanitation remains a major problem. There is no functioning waste system
outside of Haiti's cities, making toilets that rely on water
impossible. In the Croix de Bouquets area near Port-au-Prince, where
USAID intended to build dozens of small dwellings known as "core homes,"
planners had come up with an alternative solution — compost toilets —
but USAID wouldn't accept it. "They claimed it didn't comply with U.S.
codes," recalls Vastine, who spent months working on the project. "But
you cannot provide the kind of toilet mechanisms we have in the U.S. in
most parts of Haiti. Simply to build the infrastructure would cost tens
of millions of dollars." The entire "core home" project, which cost $53
million, according to Vastine, wound up spending about a third of the
money trying to replicate American-style toilets for Haitian refugees.
"It was ridiculous," says Vastine.
It was also telling. "You have to wonder what is going on here," says
Alisa Keesey, the program director of Give Love, an NGO that focuses
exclusively on sanitation issues. "Millions of dollars were spent on the
predevelopment of that project. What did they think they'd do — give
people pit latrines, then suck out the waste and put it in the ocean?
The big question is how serious they really are about 'building Haiti
back better' — because at this rate, they're building back exactly the
same, with bigger and better slums."
In 1994, when I first visited Haiti, Port-au-Prince was a city of
750,000. By 2010, the population had ballooned to 3 million. People
lived practically anywhere, often building small homes on the sides of
the hills. This was easy to do, given Haiti's lax building codes — even
the hills of Pétionville, once an exclusive enclave, were filled with
deeply impoverished neighborhoods known as bidonvilles, inhabited by far more people than the terrain could support.
One area that was particularly devastated by the earthquake was
Ravine Pintade, a densely populated community built directly into a
rocky slope. Two-thirds of the homes in Ravine Pintade were destroyed,
and many of the surviving homes were in need of extensive repair. This
presents a unique opportunity to "give people something they've never
had," Ann Lee, the American field-office director for CHF International,
the NGO that has been working most diligently in Ravine Pintade, tells
me one day. We are walking through the area, across precarious cliffs
that, on closer inspection, turn out to be the remains of decimated
homes. The place looks like a bomb site. But within a year, Lee pledges,
CHF and other NGOs will have turned Ravine Pintade into a functioning
community with clean water, trees and footpaths.
Haitians have grown accustomed to greeting such bold promises with
skepticism: Although CHF has been meeting on the project since June
2010, the rebuilding progress in Ravine Pintade has been painstakingly
slow. Lee admits that the organization, a vast NGO with relief
operations in 25 countries around the world, has never done "micro-urban
planning," as she calls it — nor have the half dozen or so other NGOs
planning similar projects in Port-au-Prince. "It's a complete learning
experience for all of us," she says. All that's needed to make the
project a reality, she adds, are more funds.
Critics regard such claims with amusement: CHF, which works out of
two spacious mansions in Port-au-Prince and maintains a fleet of
brand-new vehicles, is generally considered one of the most ostentatious
NGOs in Haiti. It is also one of the largest USAID contractors in Haiti
and enjoys a cozy relationship with Washington: Its president and CEO,
David Weiss, is a former State Department official and lobbyist. "There
is a shocking lack of transparency and accountability in aid, and it's
crystallized in this relief effort," says Schwartz, the anthropologist.
"For an NGO in Haiti, the criteria for success is raising money, filling
out paperwork and making sure the money is 'accounted for' — meaning
they can show donors that they spent the money. But nobody goes out
there and judges the project, or even verifies that the project exists.
In the majority of the cases, nobody even talks to the community."
Bertin Voise, a 30-year-old carpenter, lives with his wife and five
other members of his family in the courtyard of what was once a spacious
home in Ravine Pintade. It is now marked with a giant red "X,"
signifying that it is not only irreparable but a hazard. Standing
outside his broken house, Voise tells us that he has every intention of
rebuilding it, as soon as he has enough money. This clearly bothers Lee,
who has just finished explaining how CHF wants to raze houses like his
and replace them with two-story steel-framed plywood shelters. While the
construction of new homes is taking place, Lee wants to move everyone
into temporary shelters in the area — what she calls "T-shelter hotels."
She seems excited by the idea. Voise, who would have to relinquish his
four-bedroom home for one slightly larger than a doghouse, is unmoved.
"Most of these NGO people genuinely dupe themselves into thinking
this is really going to work," says Schwartz, who spent six months on a
USAID-funded survey of Port-au-Prince's housing. What he found is that
roughly 85 percent of Haiti's damaged homes, including those deemed
irreparable, have been reinhabited by people who either returned to them
from the camps or, as with Bertin Voise, never bothered to leave them
in the first place, despite warnings that a strong storm could collapse
what remains of the structures. Such a disaster, notes Schwartz, could
be avoided if money were invested in repairing the homes rather than
replacing them. "We have to listen to these people," he says. "They are
telling us what they want, and we are ignoring it. That's the real
tragedy."
What Haitians want most are jobs. Even as people languish in the
camps in Port-au-Prince, the U.S. has increasingly worked to expand
economic opportunity outside of the capital. Last year, Secretary
Clinton, through Cheryl Mills, worked for months to broker a deal with
Sae-A, a Korean garment manufacturer that had expressed interest in
building an industrial park in Haiti to manufacture clothes for Gap and
other clients. In January, a day before the one-year anniversary of the
earthquake, the State Department announced that a deal had been reached
to build the park in the northern Haiti "export zone" near Cap Haitien.
The park promised 20,000 new jobs. "I know a couple places in America
that would commit mayhem to get 20,000 jobs today," Bill Clinton said at
the signing ceremony, flanked by Prime Minister Bellerive and the
chairman of Sae-A.
In Port-au-Prince, however, the one true achievement of "building
back better" was engineered not by the Haitian government or the IHRC or
the State Department, but by Haiti's largest employer — the
telecommunications giant Digicel. The company's founder, Denis O'Brien,
is a major Clinton Foundation contributor and chairman of the Clinton
Global Initiative's Haiti Action Network, a consortium of largely
private-sector partners who have committed more than $224 million to
reconstruction projects.
In February 2010, only a month after the
earthquake, O'Brien embarked on a project to rebuild the Iron Market, a
120-year-old marketplace in downtown Port-au-Prince, contributing $12
million of his own money to do so. The project took just 11 months. Bill
Clinton, who has cast O'Brien as the model philanthrocapitalist, lauded
the Irish billionaire as a "catalyst" for positive change. The
reconstructed landmark was the only project "of any scale" to be
completed in Haiti, said John McAslan, a British architect whose firm
worked to restore the Iron Market. "It's amazing it's been so fast," he
said. "It could have taken five years without such a determined client."
As such, the Iron Market, an ode to commerce and entrepreneurial
drive, is also a pointed symbol of the disproportionate influence that
foreign corporations wield over the future of Haiti. Under what might be
called the "New American Plan," reconstruction is driven not primarily
by the dictates of democracy but by the demands of the bottom line.
"Ultimately it all comes down to governance," says Bishop, the co-author
of Philanthrocapitalism. "There was this tremendous outpouring
of goodwill after the earthquake, and this idea of 'build back better'
caught on — but for all their consultations, no one really found out
what the Haitian people's concept of build better actually was."
In the absence of government leadership, Digicel has become an
influential force in Haiti. The company, which arrived in the country
only five years ago, is now its largest taxpayer. It has also built its
own infrastructure, outside of the government's purview, constructing
roads to and from its various sites, and powering its reception towers
with generators whose annual diesel costs run into the millions. With
more than $400 million invested in Haiti,
Digicel is now expanding its
brand by building schools, distributing tents, providing
cholera-education materials and sponsoring contests to promote Haitian
entrepreneurship. Digicel's bright-red banners and logos are far more
prominent than any other symbol in Haiti — even more, it's often been
said, than the Haitian flag. Throughout Port-au-Prince and its refugee
camps, Digicel salesmen drawn from the ranks of the homeless operate
thriving businesses. In Sean Penn's camp, for example, one enterprising
Digicel representative has set up a cellphone-repair shop under a tree.
"People love Digicel," says Schwartz, "and that's because Digicel is
involved in the community. They sponsor a soccer team, they have
parties, and they make a lot of money, but they also connect with the
Haitians." Recently, Digicel started giving free phone credit to people
who make a tremendous number of calls, often to relatives in the United
States. "If Digicel could run for president of Haiti," says Schwartz,
"it would win."
The man who was actually elected president in April — the 50-year-old
singer Michel "Sweet Micky" Martelly — also offers an indication of how
little control Haitians are likely to have over their own future. The
United States, along with Canada and the European Union, invested
roughly $29 million in the elections, pushing for a recount when
Martelly, viewed by many as the people's choice, was edged out by a
rival, government-backed candidate in the first round. The recount was
needed, Cheryl Mills explained at the time, to ensure that the people of
Haiti got "the kind of leadership that they need in the future."
Martelly also received robust support from Digicel and other
private-sector interests.
A political novice sometimes described as the Ronald Reagan of
Haitian politics, Martelly was an unorthodox if telling candidate to
lead the new Haiti. An imposing man with a striking bald head, he was a
celebrity who used his star power to appeal to Haitians across a wide
political spectrum. Martelly made his name singing kompa, an
Afro-Caribbean genre beloved throughout the country. For years, he'd
been one of the most popular entertainers in Haiti, famous for his
rum-swilling Carnival act, in which he would pull down his pants, make
crude remarks about women and dance in a kilt. Openly disdainful of
Haitian politics, he admitted to having smoked pot and crack cocaine in
the past. His anti-establishment rhetoric appealed to Haitian youth fed
up with the status quo. But Martelly, who had supported the military
coups that had twice overthrown the democratically elected leftist
government of Jean-Paul Aristide, was also attractive to right-wing
Haitians and Duvalierists, embracing distinctly authoritarian policies
like reinstating the Haitian army, an organization responsible for years
of brutality.
To Mills and others in the Obama administration, Martelly seemed to
be a man of action. "There was a great deal of frustration among
international actors that the current Haitian administration couldn't
just take land under eminent domain to dump rubble or build housing,"
says Maguire, the chairman of the Haiti Working Group. "Martelly set
himself up as the antithesis, he was going to be the 'decider,' and they
embraced him."
Martelly also positioned himself as a friend to U.S. business
interests, which won him support from right-wing think tanks like the
Center for Strategic and International Studies. A conservative
Washington operative named Damian Merlo, who advised John McCain on
foreign affairs in 2008, became Martelly's campaign manager. The U.S.
consultant quickly reshaped the candidate's image, replacing the
flamboyant "Sweet Micky" with the more sober "Michel Martelly," whose
conservative blue suits, red ties and reading glasses spoke of a serious
candidate promising a "results-oriented presidency" focused on fighting
government corruption and restoring order to Port-au-Prince.
With a sudden influx of $6 million into his campaign from American
backers and the Haitian diaspora — and with Haiti's largest political
party excluded from the vote, effectively disenfranchising a large swath
of the poor — Martelly won in a landslide.
Many Haitians, however,
questioned the legitimacy of the elections, and America's role in
determining the outcome. "For the U.S., elections have no meaning other
than to create the image that Haiti is democratically run," fumes Alex
Dupuy, author of The Prophet and Power: Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the International Community and Haiti.
"The interest of the U.S. in Haiti is to have a government that is
compliant. They pushed for Martelly, and now they are expecting him to
do their bidding — and he is."
Martelly was inaugurated as Haiti's 56th president on May 14th, in a
ceremony in front of the still-shattered National Palace. In his
inaugural speech, he made a point of saying that Haiti, as he put it,
was now "open for business." A few days later, he nominated his friend
Daniel Rouzier, the top executive of the private energy company E-Power,
to serve as his prime minister. A graduate of Georgetown and Dartmouth,
Rouzier is a member of Haiti's new cosmopolitan elite, one interested
less in politics than in fully integrating Haiti into the global
economy.
Shortly after being nominated, Rouzier announced that Haiti would
disband the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission, which he dismissed as
"dysfunctional." His assessment concurred with the findings of the U.S.
Government Accountability Office, which noted in a report released in
May that the IHRC was "not fully operational" more than a year after its
creation. Nor will it likely ever be, the GAO suggested, as the
commission's charter was set to expire this October. "I don't mean to
crucify the people who came up with the concept," Rouzier said, "but
sometimes when something doesn't work, you have to fix it."
Hours after Rouzier blasted the IHRC, however,
Martelly's office
rushed to walk back the criticism, maintaining that the Haitian
government remains "very open and willing to begin discussions" to make
the IHRC "more efficient." In July, when Martelly agreed to a year's
extension for the relief commission, the message was clear: The U.S.
government and private-sector interests like Digicel had found a
friendly ally in the new Haitian president.
Rouzier's nomination was ultimately blocked by the Haitian
Parliament, which is controlled by rival parties, and Haiti remains
without a prime minister — a political vacuum that has only increased
the sway of the private sector and the IHRC. In June, Martelly kicked
off a project called Building Back Better Communities, funded in part by
the Clinton Foundation, which seeks to construct 400 new homes in 100
days, using designs and structural engineering provided almost solely by
foreign firms.
The following month, he unveiled a plan, conceived by
Miami architect Andrés Duany and sponsored by Britain's Prince Charles,
to rebuild downtown Port-au-Prince as a series of "urban villages," each
with its own separate condominiums and neighborhood-watch committees.
The Clinton Bush Haiti Fund, which raised $50 million earmarked
specifically for emergency-relief efforts, meanwhile, raised eyebrows by
investing $2 million to finish the construction of a luxury hotel in
Pétionville. The 130-room Oasis "symbolizes Haiti 'building back better'
and sends a message to the world that Haiti is open for business,"
declared Paul Altidor, vice president of the Clinton-Bush Haiti Fund.
"For Haiti's recovery to be sustainable," he added, "it must attract
investors, businesses and donors, all of whom will need a
business-class, seismically safe hotel."
Haitians, however, know from bitter experience that the
business-friendly model of development currently being touted as their
salvation has repeatedly failed them in the past. In the 1970s and
1980s, during Haiti's industrial heyday, tens of thousands of rural
residents flocked to Port-au-Prince in search of jobs. Many settled in
Cité Soleil, an isolated shantytown on the edge of the city that had
been created to house workers for the type of factories located in the
so-called "export processing zone," much like the one that was promised
to the thousands of Haitians who flocked to Corail. But the factories
soon closed in the midst of Haiti's political upheaval, and today Cité
Soleil is the capital's largest and most notorious slum, one of the
poorest and most desperate places in the Western Hemisphere. There are
few Digicel banners here, and the ghetto is considered a "red zone," too
dangerous for most relief agencies to enter. A few workers from Doctors
Without Borders have struggled to contain the flow of cholera into Cité
Soleil's lone hospital.
To veteran Haiti watchers, Cité Soleil offers a stark lesson in the
danger of relying on grandiose notions about the largesse and staying
power of the private sector. "If you want to see what Haiti will look
like in 20 years, all you have to do is go down to Cité Soleil," says
Schwartz, the anthropologist. "In the past 50 years, very little has
changed in Haiti. There is absolutely no reason to believe that the
projects the international community is building today are any
different. Maybe even worse." Recently, Schwartz was out looking at the
new T-shelters being built in Corail — essentially tiny plywood boxes
with tin roofs. "They look like rows and rows of garden sheds," he says.
"What do you think this is going to look like in 10 years? You don't
need a degree in urban planning to anticipate a new Cité Soleil. If you
want to understand the future, just look at the past."
During the past decade, Cité Soleil has been the site of Haiti's
worst gang warfare, and the young men who live here remain stigmatized
by the violence. "When you say you come from Cité Soleil, people think
you are a gangster or a kidnapper," says a 32-year-old Haitian rapper
named Tche-Ke, whose brother, in fact, was a notorious gangster. Tche-Ke
eschews violence and spends whatever money he makes from his music and
other odd jobs on neighborhood kids, 10 of whom he is putting through
school. Despite being spared in the earthquake, much of the slum is
paved with crumbling asphalt, and some areas remain submerged under
several feet of mud. Green slime coats the puddles, and strewn across an
open field, a cornucopia of garbage and broken glass goes unnoticed by
the Haitian children who use one part of it as a soccer field, another
part as a toilet. "Do you smell it?" asks Tche-Ke. The stench is
overpowering.
At the end of one muddy path is a tiny makeshift shack, where a young
mother named Denise lives with her two toddlers and 10,000 flies. Like
many Haitians I meet, Denise says she has faith: Jesus will soon give
her a new home. Then she points to a somewhat larger shack next to hers —
a roofless hut fashioned from a USAID tarp draped over some plywood.
With no money to finish it and no job, she struggles to scrape together
the $10 a month in rent she pays for the privilege of living in her
shack.
This, then, is the legacy that decades of foreign investment have
bestowed on Haiti: a brutal and intractable poverty, borne of a
disastrous mix of well-intentioned aid and profit-driven development.
Every decade or so, it seems, the world comes up with a bold new plan
for saving Haiti — and each ultimately proves as ineffective and
fleeting as the last.
As Denise talks, a pig snuffles in the dirt next to her infant son,
who is gravely malnourished. A large white UNICEF vehicle, a rare sight
in the neighborhood, drives slowly past. A woman from the relief agency
peers out of the window, her expression one part revulsion and another
part fear. Then she moves on.
This story is from the August 18, 2011 issue of Rolling Stone.
Excerpted courtesy of Rolling Stone Magazine