Sunday, November 28, 2021

Diaspora Unity is the only way - Pa gen Wout pa Bwa

I hold the firm and deep belief that molding our broken pieces can create a beautiful mosaic.
As the discussions are evolving on finding a solution to Haiti’s multi-faceted crises, a few voices have risen to question the legitimacy of the process that the “Commission pour la recherche d’une solution haitienne a la crise - CRSC (the Commission to find a Haitian Solution to the Crisis). These voices are also questioning the process that resulted in the diaspora representation in the “Conseil National de Transition – CNT (National Transitional Council).”

It is not a given for everyone to follow all the emails and conversations that are taking place in our very wide and disparate community and hence why I am always cautious to accuse fellow Haitians of bad faith. Nonetheless, it is unfortunate and worth noting because of this lace of information, there are actors who have used this gap to create fake news and defame the good name and work of other groups. Of course, this is often the case as one group tries to promote its own agreement (accord) – as is the case for a number of groups in Haiti and in the diaspora that are putting forth new proposals to resolve the crisis. This piece will outline the history and process that led to the identification of three representatives who will represent the diaspora within the CNT.
Engaged citizens in the CRSC are heroes.
The “Commission pour la recherche d’une solution haitienne a la crise - CRSC” is made up of a heroic group of citizens who, despite the risks to lives and limb, decided to come together to find a Haitian solution to the Haitian Crisis. This effort started while President Moise was still alive and accelerated after he was savagely assassinated.

It is true that despite the Herculean efforts the CRSC and its supporters made to communicate and share with the Haitian public the process and goals of this initiative, there are still many people who do not know about it. It is a difficult problem to overcome and especially so if folks are not interested in the political process. On the other hand, there are those who do know but act in bad faith because they have their own political agendas. I will assume that there are more people who do not know then those who are being deceitful for selfish political reasons. I hope this note will provide the history of the work of the Commission and particularly of the Forum Haitien pour la Paix et le Développement Durable (FOHPDD).

Keeping the Haitian diaspora well-informed remains a major challenge.
The Commission was created https://lenouvelliste.com/article/228966/creation-dune-nouvelle-commission-pour-la-recherche-dune-solution-haitienne-a-la-crise?fbclid=IwAR3GMA215Evdj324fUaqNwFhZtVowUDJ9iT258rJt8lKyxtt7DHTmnSgZRA

  • May 17, 2021 : The commission pour la Recherche d’une Solution à la Crise (CRSC) was officially launched. The Forum Haitien pour la Paix et le Développement Durable (FOHPDD) was a founding member to represent the diaspora.
  • July 17,2021 : CRSC held the first major inter-Haitian Conference. FOHPDD was there to represent the diaspora.
  • July 28,2021 : CRSC held the second session of the inter-Haitian Conference. FOHPDD was there to represent the diaspora.
  • August 30, 2021: The “Montana accord” was signed. FOHPDD was there and signed as a member of the Commission. https://www.facebook.com/110708491198576/photos/a.112103764392382/161928772743214/

As part of the “Montana accord,” each sector had to delegate three representatives. This task fell to FOHPDD as the group that had been part of this effort to ensure the diaspora was present.
Pa gen wout pa bwa
I will close with one last word of caution. While many people will sit on the bench and criticize how the game is being played. One fact remains, the game is being played with the players who are on the field. In sum, whether the diaspora gets involved or not, the political process that is underway will continue in its course. Some folks are proposing an electoral process to select diaspora representatives. This idea was floated and discussed in the 90s with the concept of the 10th department. It resurfaced after the 2010 earthquake and is raised whenever one group from the diaspora attempts to unite the diverse and often seemingly disparate organizations. Yet, there is more that unites that divides us.

The selection of diaspora representatives hasn't happened for many reasons but I will note just one. In a normative sense, it is extremely difficult for civil society to undertake its own electoral process because the question of legitimacy and partisanship will arise as it is happening with the CRSC and with FOHPDD. There are always groups that question the legitimacy of other actors or groups that try to initiate such the process of coalition building. At the roots of this legitimacy question is the division and mistrust that exists in our community. Additionally, folks prefer to sit on the sideline to comment rather than participating in what will inevitably be a difficult but imperative conversation -- pa gen wout pa bwa. I believe that we must find a way to overcome the instincts of mistrust. The Haitian diaspora could be an influential actor if it can find its collective voice. But to achieve this goal will require honest conversations among the different “Haitis.” I believe that this is the only path if we are to ever grow as a diaspora community and fully participate in the affairs of Haiti.

I hold the firm and deep belief that molding our broken pieces can create a beautiful mosaic.

Johnny Celestin
FOHPDD, board member



Tuesday, October 12, 2021

President Trump’s racist claims about Haitians is part of his political strategy


As a Haitian-American,  I condemn President Trump’s reprehensible comments on Fox news, October 7th.  Mr. Trump falsely claimed that hundreds of thousands of Haitians immigrants were entering the United States and that many were bringing HIV/AIDS.  Both claims are lies. 

We ignore President Trump at our own risks

Whilst we have all come to expect lies from the former president, these dangerous comments stoke fear and inflame racist sentiments and cannot go unanswered as his tropes are part of a more insidious plan.   President Trump, in his search for political relevance, purposely stoops to the depths of indecency, accusing dark-skinned people of being disease carriers.   This is not an accident and it is a well-thought out strategy with clear patterns, and we ignore him at our own peril.

 

For many fellow Haitians, the president is ranting and is to be ignored. For others, President Trump is right because it is the fault of Haitians themselves for not being able to provide a safe country for themselves.  Therefore, we deserve the calumny we get. What is being missed in the first argument is that the more cerebral/intellectual approach to politics is lost in the debates in the public square.   America is being torn apart and race continues to be centerpiece in the battle for its soul. President Trump feeds and is sustained by division as he understands its power to tap into and play on Americans worst instinct.     

 

The latter argument is understandable because the cognitive process of self-blame is real.  As Haitians, we have lived traumas after traumas.  From the moment our ancestors were captured in Africa, to the dehumanizing transatlantic voyage, to life on the plantations as slaves in an unknown land, to the bloody wars for freedom, to the great powers’ abuse through their blockades of the nascent nation of Hayiti, to the bloody US occupation followed by the even bloodier Duvalier regime, to earthquakes, hurricanes and other natural disasters, and finally the many self-inflicted wounds by selfish politicians.  The traumas this small nation has experienced are enough to drive us all raging mad.  

Haitians are survivors

Haitians have been a people who have survived despite these traumas but their impact cannot be erased with the stroke of a pen.  President Trump is standard bearer of one of our country’s two political parties. What he says matter because it set the frame within which we are seen as Haitians but also as people of African ancestry.  

 

HIV/AIDS is no longer a stigma and living with the disease is no longer a death sentence.  However, President Trump's disgraceful comments evoke painful memories for those of us in the Haitian-American community who experienced life in America in the 1980s.  A common trope early on during the HIV/AIDS pandemic was the term “Four-H”, widely used as a shorthand for they called the four major risk groups in the United States – gay people (homosexuals), haemophiliacs, heroin-users, and Haitians.  This stigma took years to change. 

Telling our story

President Trump vile attack on Haitians sets a narrative that serves two purposes. First, it vilifies black and brown people – we may remember his comment about Mexicans being rapists.  We are seen as others who do not deserve the same human decency as those who bring their tiki torches to the pity party.  Second, his approach also serves to strengthen the narrative of the victim ideology of white supremacy.  When the president says that the US is being overrun by these Haitians and tells his audience that “It's like a death wish for our country," it is not a slip of the tongue.  He is stoking the fears of the 'tiki torchers' and reaffirming that they are indeed being replaced. He is making a call to arms that must be pushed back every time and everywhere.

 

Silence is never an option.  As black people and as Haitians, we must tell the long story of our contribution to weaving the fabric of American society.  Haitian freemen fought alongside colonial troops against the British in the Siege of Savannah on Oct. 9, 1779.  Haiti’s founding father, Dessalines’ trashing of Napoleon’s army forced France to sell the entire territory west of the Mississippi River. This purchase allowed the US to more than double its territory.  As the first nation to overthrow slavery, Haiti was a beacon for the world and set the path for the ideals that we are indeed all created equal. 

Conclusion

Decades of failed foreign intervention have fostered a corrupt regime in Haiti, leading to the most terrifying levels of violence and insecurity the country has seen since the Duvalier era.  That insecurity was compounded by two earthquakes.  Thousands of people, in fear for their lives, flee their homes to seek refuge in the United States.  After a traumatizing trip across 11 borders and through the most dangerous terrains, many arrived on the border of the country which sets itself up as the beacon of human rights.  Without any due process, those who risked everything, including pregnant women and children, were met by armed men on horseback who pushed them back little cattle. The picture of those border patrol agents captured the long legacy of the friendship between Haiti and the United States.

 

 

The people of Haiti need – and deservethe solidarity of the US.  Instead, they are greeted by a former president citing the same old jingoistic tropes.  Just as people of all color, race, sex, sexuality, disability and national origins rallied together during the 2020 elections, we must stand together once more and reject President Trump’s xenophobia.

Thursday, September 16, 2021

The press has fallen into disrepute

The headlines over the past few days have been inundated by Haiti’s public prosecutor (commissaire de gouvernement) requests to interview de facto PM, Ariel Henry.  

The news organization, “Vice” has gone as far as to publish that “Haiti’s Prime Minister is now a suspect in the president’s assassination.”  That is not just misleading, it is patently false.  The allegation is that the PM received a call from one of the persons who is alleged to be implicated in President Moise’s assassination.  Allegations are not facts and those who have been accused, not even charged yet with a crime, are presumed innocent.


The haitiand and international press have done a terrible job explaining this very simple principle to their readers.  As a result, they participate in the erosion of the public's trust in rule of law which is fundamental to a functioning democracy. 

I don’t care much for de facto PM Ariel Henry, but that does not negate the fact that the public prosecutor’s (subpoena) request to interview him is illegal.  According to Art. 90** of Haiti’s penal code, only the president can authorize a prosecutor to interview a senior official.  

That is the law and the prosecutor, entrusted with tremendous power, is legally and ethically bound to ensure that the law is followed.  

As a country, we can either follow the law in which case the prosecutor has no authority to compel the PM to testify and he certainly did not have the authority to bar the de facto PM from traveling.  The other option is to agree that the laws are suspended in which the prosecutor definitely does not have the authority to compel the de facto PM to testify. 

Clearly, the PM has a moral obligation to tell the public the purpose of the call between him and a person who is allegedly connected to the president’s assassination.  However, the press has generally done a terrible job explaining to the readers the prosecutor’s illegal request to the PM.  Worst, the headlines lead the readers to understand that the de facto PM was implicated in the assassination. 

It is unfortunate that the press like all the other sectors of Haitian civil society has lost its way. 

There is nothing important than the rule of law and the press is a key actor in helping to inform but also educate the public. 

**Art. 90.- Will be punished with detention, all officers of the judicial police, all officers of the public prosecution, all judges who have provoked, given or signed a judgment, an order or a warrant, tending to the personal prosecution or accusation, either of a senior civil official, without the authorization of the president ... 

Art. 90.- Seront punis de la détention, tous officiers de police judiciaire, tous officiers du ministère  public, tous juges qui auront provoqué, donné ou signé un jugement, une ordonnance ou un mandat,  tendant à la poursuite personnelle ou accusation, soit d'un grand fonctionnaire, sans l'autorisation du  chef de l'État .

ilo.org/dyn/natlex/docs/ELECTRONIC/69022/67662/F1385137885/HTI-69022.pdf


Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Keeping in check our confirmation bias

con·fir·ma·tion bi·as

noun
the tendency to interpret new evidence as confirmation of one's existing beliefs or theories.

I was on a call the other day when someone said the that Red Cross (RC) raised nearly $500 million after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti and built only five (5) homes. Another participant on the call, a doctor who works in the development sector, added that Senator Grassley's investigation revealed that Red Cross used 80% of the 2010 of the earthquake fund for its own internal management needs.

I wrote the good doctor separately to share with him senator Grassley's own press release that stated:

"Grassley’s inquiry found that of the $487.6 million donated for the Haiti relief, the Red Cross spent $123.9 million or 25.4 percent on three categories: management, general and fundraising expenses; program costs; and a contingency fund. The remaining funds — approximately $363.7 million — were provided to partner organizations, which took their own cut for administrative expenses."  
https://www.grassley.senate.gov/news/news-releases/grassley-releases-memo-red-cross-haiti-earthquake-relief-response-finds-red

From the hundreds of organizations that received grants from the Red Cross, only one JP HRO publicly admitted to receiving said funds, which I found amazing. As RC was getting pilloried I learned a big lesson in crisis communication. RC likely recognized that there was no putting genie back in the bottle and so they [RC] stopped fighting in the press and didn't bother even releasing the names of the organizations it funded. RC opted to let the fire burn itself out.

Most people rightly do not get all those details and, unfortunately, Red Cross did waste a lot of money as it got involved in doing development when it is a purely relief organization (lesson is that organizations should stay in their lanes). Red Cross has been around since 1881 and most Americans who donated their dollars in 2010 trust it then and still do so today because if their homes burn down or their communities get flooded or hit by hurricane, the first organization that will respond is the Red Cross and it is really good at that. We also need to remember that Haitian Red Cross, founded in 29 May 1932, is not the RC USA.

The US RC did raise a lot of money and did not have the visible impact people had expected in the recovery. As a result, for most Haitians, 11 years later (2021), Haitians legitimate anger against the RC is still burning red hot. On the other hand, what they miss is that for most Americans the Red Cross is a five star organization they can count on if their homes are under water. 
 

And what if we lit a similar fire to demand accountability for the Petro Caribe funds? Those funds were not donations but a debt being repaid by the Haitian people. "Haiti's High Court of Auditors released a report Monday slamming the fraudulent and often illegal management by various ministers and administrations of nearly $2 billion in aid from Venezuela between 2008 and 2016. https://www.france24.com/en/20200817-petrocaribe-scandal-haiti-court-accuses-officials-of-mismanaging-2-bln-in-aid

My point is two-fold: first, seek the details to make sure you are not just confirming your own bias. Second, prioritize what should be the priority. We should be upset that donations were mismanaged but livid that Haiti's own money, billions of dollars borrowed from Venezuela, was mismanaged and outright stolen by fellow Haitians. In its report, the court of auditors urged parliament to put in place mechanisms to recover sums of money misused, in order to allow the Republic of Haiti to possibly reduce its debt to Venezuela.

As we look at the devastation of the last earthquake, Haiti's lack of preparation and lack of healthcare facilities -- even the General Hospital, Haiti's hospital of reference, has not been rebuilt. As we look at another "recovery" effort, Haitians have every right to question the work of NGOs but more importantly the officials who are paid to serve and protect the public.

We should be angry and we should demand accountability for the billions borrowed from Venezuela that could have served to prepare for this and the next disaster.


Friday, July 16, 2021

May the earth rest lightly on you!

As human beings, we all live with constant paradoxes. And within the Haitian community, both in Haiti and the diaspora, those paradoxes often seem even more pronounced. The president's assassination is yet one more issue for us to bicker about. Whether it is about the president or who is behind his assassination, the fact that the country's head of state was murdered in his home has not brought us together -- not even to recognize the nightmare in which the population lives. If the most protected person in the country can be executed, what hope is there for the regular citizen?
For those of us who have been singularly focused on our demand for justice, our disappointment and sadness had long ago turned to anger. When the president would sooner acknowledge and tweet about the migraine pains of the Prince of Bel Air (sarcasm) then the massacre of his own people, it raised the ire of a great number of us. When a president who rightly identified corruption as the fundamental problem of the system and yet went about the systematic weakening and elimination of the very institutions that are there to fight against corruption, then he raised the ire of a great number of us. I could go on and on with the "when the president" illustrations but that is not the point of this post.

We wanted a president who could empathize with his people and a government that responds to their cries and sufferings. On that very basic measure the president failed. Nonetheless, I have been dismayed by the responses to the president's assassination, which run the gamut from credulous to the highly hypocritical. Indeed, the idea that folks who either don't know anything about Haiti, never cared to engage and who certainly never seem to give a hoot about the massacres of the masses, are now showing love for the president and to go as far as to compare him to Dessalines, that is disheartening and triggering.

That said, the president is no more. In a moment in which the head of the Haitian state was killed in his bedroom, I believe we need to extend grace to each other. Despite our deep disagreements with the president and our firm belief that he played an outsized role in creating or at least allowing the state to completely disintegrate --- he is gone. Now, we must not only get past this moment but we must find a way to reimagine a different nation and state.

For those of us who were constantly and loudly demanding justice for the voiceless and nameless, we have no choice but to demand justice for President Moise as well. As MLK said "The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy."

Given my strong opposition to the president's policies, I have been silent on his death because I was afraid of appearing hypocritical but fear should never be our guidepost.

I have felt anger about such an odious act and sadness that President Moise was assassinated. So in this moment, as Haiti reels from this event, I want to extend my condolences to the president's friends and family, who are living with the pain of losing their loved one.

President Moise, as you meet your maker, may the earth rest lightly on you!
I encourage all of us to pay our respect in ways that we feel are appropriate. Jovenel Moise is no more and how we respond will not reflect on him but on our own humanity and commitment to justice, especially for those with whom we disagree.
President Moise, as you meet your maker, may the earth rest lightly on you!

Monday, May 31, 2021

What good will it do for Haitians in the diaspora to win the right to vote from abroad and lose democracy in Haiti?

The writer and philosopher George Santayana wisely said that “,History shows that those who do not learn history are doomed to repeat it.” This aphorism could not be truer than the way in which Haitian society and more specifically the way in which its intellectual class operates.
 

This week, the Haitian Congress to Fortify Haiti, a respected organization in Evanston, Illinois, and the Members of the Committee of Collaborators published an open letter to affirm their support for the Moise constitution. The Committee of Collaborators include:  Attorney Marie Lynn Toussaint, Alix Claude, Aline Lauture, Lionel Jean-Baptiste, Frantz Bourget, Jean Junior Morisset, Albert Decady, Esq. Joseph Champagne, Esq.

The group calls itself the Committee of Collaborators.  A lapsus linguae that could not be more fitting for the incoherent seven-page tchaka that followed.  The most striking observation is that a number of the members in the Committee of Collaborators are lawyers including my good friend, Judge Lionel. 

After a strident five-page defense for defacto President Moise to stay in office, the committee members opened the second part of their argument with the following statement:


The Committee asserts that “only amendments are prohibited” by Article 284.3 of the constitution.  If the constitution prohibits amendments by referendum, then one would logically conclude that it doesn't allow a president to create a new one out of whole cloth.  If this logic had prevailed then the debate would have ended there.  However, the committee seems to be making a narrower argument, which is that the president can operate outside of the constitutional limits.  But there is a problem with this narrow argument as well because it leads to the conclusion that the constitution is suspended.  If it is suspended then the president has no legitimacy to the presidency.  


The Committee's letter suggests that the defacto president can maintain his legitimacy based on the constitution and at the same time he can disregard/suspend the constitution to hold a referendum.  They want the rule of law and its opposite.  In other words, the subordination of the law to the king-president.

The historical records

As I read the rest of the document, it became clear that the committee members were totally detached from Haiti’s current reality but also its historical context.  Here are the historical facts.

In 1961, President Francois Duvalier was reelected through a fraudulent election in which voters were asked whether he “should remain in office for a further six years.” President Duvalier received 1,320,748 votes – or 100% of the votes. 

 

 

In 1964, President Duvalier held a constitutional referendum alongside general elections.  The new constitution made Duvalier president for life, with absolute power and the right to name his successor.

In 1971, three months before Francois Duvalier died, he had the powerless National Assembly change the constitution to reduce the required age for the office of president from 40 to 20 years.  At the same time, it was reported that the Ministry of the Interior declared by decree that Jean-Claude Duvalier to be 21 although he was not even 19 years old.  A few weeks after changing the required age, another constitutional referendum was held in which residents were asked to confirm their consent to the succession from Francois to Jean Claude Duvalier.  It was reported that 2,391,916 citizens voted yes and none voted no.  Another 100% of the votes.

In 1985, President Jean Claude Duvalier’s regime held a new referendum in which the new constitutional amendments would restore multi-party politics.  However, there was one catch, it was on the condition that all parties swore allegiance to President Jean Claude Duvalier,  reconfirm his presidency for life, and allow him to single-handedly appoint the Prime Minister and his successor. The changes were approved by 99.98% of voters.

In 1986, after a 30 year-long struggle the Haitian people overthrew Jean-Claude Duvalier’s despotic regime, which was quickly replaced by a provisional military government – the National Governing Council (C.N.G.).  In essence, Duvalierism in military uniform.   The people’s resistance continued and as a result the CNG put in place the Constituent Assembly, which was charged with the task of drafting a new Constitution.  The Assembly consisted of 61 members.  Elections were held for for 41 of the 61 Seats on the Assembly while the remaining 20 members were appointed by the C.N.G.

The Constituent Assembly worked methodically on an article-by-article basis which were presented to the population.  As the articles were approved, they were published on a daily basis in the press.  The “public was invited to debate the articles and to submit suggestions to the Constituent Assembly." 

Historical records from that period showed that while the “61-member Constituent Assembly originally had been viewed with skepticism but as it demonstrated its seriousness and responsiveness to its mandate, it won popular support.”

Contemporary debate

Against all common-sense, the Committee's argument is that we need to support the illegitimate Moise regime shredding of the constitution to gain more rights for Haitians abroad.   Instead of working in solidarity with the people, the committee is willing to disregard the broad agreement within Haitian civil society, which despite the risks of getting abducted or killed for their position have stood firm against this coup.  I am proud to stand with this long list of patriots that includes Haiti’s most respected constitutional law scholars (from the political right and left), human rights organizations, the protestant and catholic churches, the Vvdouizans, the universities, all major unions (from teachers to transportation), the Haitian Bar Federation, broad swath of civil society groups and even, dare I say it, even PHTK – the president’s own political party. 

Let us be clear.  The current debate is the rule of law, which needs to be reinforced.  In a constitutional system, the president’s legitimacy rests on the constituent institutions and the bedrock of the constitution and the law.  When the law is unclear or there are disagreements about its meaning, the court is the last resort.  Defacto President Moise has claimed a lack of clarity in the law to stay in office another year despite the Superior Council of the Judicial Power (CSPJ) resolution refuting that claim.  The court stated in its resolution that the “statute enacted in Art 134.2 of the Constitution of March 29, 1987, amended on May 9, 2011, does not suffer from any ambiguity relating to the meaning attributed by the legislator. It is a general principle of law that "interpretation ceases when a text is clear."

The court added further that “President Jovenel Moise has already appropriated the spirit and the letter of Art 134.2 by applying, during the year 2020, to Deputies and Senators respectively Arts 92.1 and 95 of the same treatment of the expiry of the terms of office of said elected representatives and declares, therefore, that “Where the law does not distinguish, there is no need to distinguish”

As Article 7 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) states: "All are equal before the law…”  In other what is good for the goose is good for the gander.

More fundamentally this President has claimed that his legitimacy is grounded in the constitution.  Therefore, it is worth noting for the committee members that before taking office, the President of the Republic shall take the following oath before the National Assembly: “I swear before God and the Nation faithfully to observe and enforce the Constitution and the laws of the Republic..." (**Haitian Constitution Article 135).

Furthermore, the “President of the Republic, who is the Head of State, shall see to the respect for and enforcement of the Constitution and the stability of the institutions” (Article 136).

Indeed, the “President of the republic shall have no powers other than those accorded to him by the Constitution” (Article 150).

Given the above, the president has no special power whether or not there is a parliament and more importantly there is a clear prohibition to use “General elections to amend the Constitution by referendum are strictly forbidden (Article 284-3), which the committee seems to acknowledge but disregard.

In sum, President Moise's disregard for the constitution to impose his own dictatorial regime is nothing less than a “crime of high treason” which is explained as “ any violation of the Constitution by those responsible for enforcing it” (Article 21).

Moreover, President Moise has shown not only his incapacity to govern but also his intent on restoring the glory days of the Duvalier era.  This has been demonstrated time and time again through his systematic dismantling of Haiti’s republican institutions – including the legislative and judicial branches.  On this point, even the Committee of Collaborators found it necessary to admit as much but despite their harrowing assessment, they concluded that defacto President Moise was the right leader to unilaterally write a new constitution.

 


The Committee of Collaborators advanced the cynical argument that “the opportunity to amend the Constitution is extremely rare.”  Again, there seems to have been a total absence of introspection.  Indeed, amending a constitution is rare and it is so for extremely good reasons -- a basic principle one would expect the lawyers on this committee to know.  For example, despite the flaws in the U.S. constitution, we would never even think of haphazardly engaging in an amendment process and even less in a complete rewrite of our foundational document.  The U.S. amendment threshold of needing three-fourth of the states to ratify it is particularly hard and it is so because the stakes are high.  

Another example that is closer to us is the constitutional reform process under way in Chile.  The reform process was initiated only after 78% of Chileans voted "yes" to approve it.  Additionally, the Chileans created a 155-member constitutional convention to write the new constitution. 

As noted above in the historical section, Haiti also used a constitutional convention that  61 members who worked on the 1987 constitution – a fact the committee seems to have forgotten.  One can understand the omission because the committee surely understood that President Moise's selection of five friends to draft a tailor-made constitution to protect him and his cronies would simply not stand the test of logic, and certainly not the law.  Surely, the committee could not openly argue for the reinstatement of the Duvalier regime with an all-powerful president-king who is beyond the reach of the law.

The diaspora is being led by the nose

While it is generally not worth debating an illegal act, I believe it is important to tackle the core rationale advanced by the Committee of Collaborators for supporting the referendum.  They claim that Haitians who have double nationality will now be able to participate in Haiti’s elections and therefore have a say, or as my friend Lionel likes to say, the diaspora will be fully integrated in Haitian life.  For some obvious and practical reasons, I believe that the concept of full integration is materially impossible but that is for another debate at another time. 

So, what does the new Jovenel constitution say on the issue of nationality?  Let’s do a side-by-side comparison.

Article 111987

Article 11proposed version

Possède la Nationalité Haïtienne d’origine, tout individu né d’un père haïtien ou d’une mère haïtienne qui eux-mêmes sont nés Haïtiens et n’avaient jamais renoncé à leur nationalité au moment de la naissance.

 

 

  • Possède la nationalité haïtienne de naissance tout individu né en Haïti ou à l’étranger d'un père haïtien ou d’une mère haïtienne.
  • *Tout individu ayant une ascendance haïtienne peut faire valoir ses droits à la nationalité haïtienne, dans les conditions prévues par la loi.
  • Possède également la nationalité haïtienne de naissance tout individu né sur le sol de la République d’Haïti.
  • Aucun Haïtien ne peut faire prévaloir sa nationalité étrangère sur le territoire de la République d’Haïti.
  • Il est possible de renoncer à la nationalité haïtienne, si l’intéressé jouit d’une autre nationalité. Cette renonciation résulte d’une demande solennelle et expresse de l’intéressé auprès du tribunal de première instance haïtien territorialement compétent.

*A literal translation: Any individual with Haitian ancestry may assert their rights to Haitian nationality, under the conditions provided by law.  In other words, it is not guaranteed!

Said plainly, the rights afforded in the 2011 amendments would be replaced by rights that one “may assert” but that are not guaranteed. 

Additionally, far too many in the diaspora do not know that the 2011 amendments removed all limitations on dual nationalities and even multiple nationalities. The following articles were amended out of the 1987 constitution:

 

 

In other words the argument that this constitution will provide new rights for Haitians abroad to vote is false – that right already exists. What does not exist and still will not exist in the proposed Moise’s constitution is the “how.” 
 

As the German philosopher Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche said: the devil is in the details.   Since 2011, if the subsequent administrations had the political will, they could have put in place the systems to allow Haitians who live abroad to vote through the consulates and embassies. I witness this exercise in NYC where I live whenever there are elections in the Dominican Republic.  The Dominicans in my neighborhood have sites in the local schools where they are able to vote.  The conclusion is simple: Presidents Martelly, Privert and Moise simply did not want to do it.

With a well-oiled and well-financed propaganda machine, defacto President Moise has engaged in a process that is dangerous for our democracy because it aims to reinstate the Duvalier regime.  It is more deceitful and disingenuous.  The regime has no support at home so it is insideouly and with the help of collaborators, trying to convince the diaspora that it will have more righs under this so-called reform.  This puts Haitians abroad in opposition with Haitians in Haiti.  They have been successful at advancing another deceptive argument which is that defacto President Moise failures is the result of blockages by the opposition.  

The fact is that President Moise had an overwhelming majority in both chambers and the opposition could not and did not block any of his legislations.  As was published in a "Le Nouvelliste" article, the president’s party and its allies accounted for ninety (90) deputies out of one hundred and nineteen (119) and twenty-five (25) senators out of thirty (30). At the start of his administration, the president had to negotiate with his own party and allies but in the end was able to have Prime Minister Jack Guy Lafontant, ratified with an overwhelming majority.  Similarly, he negotiated with his own party and allies to remove Prime Minister Jean Henry Ceant.  Unfortunately for the Committee history is writing in ink. 

As Haitian-Americans but more importantly as lawyers and officers of the court, the members of the committee know and follow United States laws.  They obey these laws despite the ethical constraints.  None of them would ever argue that we should amend the U.S. constitution because of the legislative branch’s control over the executive, or because of the constraints resulting from one party’s control of congress.  They would surely agree that the notion that a president can unilaterally rewrite our constitution is an unserious and not worth debating. 

Sadly, in their zealous defense for the Moise constitution is a justification for the unjustifiable – a soft coup by equating the post-dictatorial context of 1986 with our current time.  The committee wants to compare a process in which 2/3 of the Constituent Assembly members were elected with defacto President Moise’s selection of the “Independent Advisory Committee” members.   A committee that has five people.  Yes, count it, five people which includes: a retired soldier, two sociologists and two jurists, to work in complete opacity to do the president's bidding for a tailor-made constitution.  All five were selected by President Moise without the participation of civil society. 
 

Through their defense of President Moise, the committee members have shown their willingness to trade the rights for which Haitians fought so long and hard to get.  They want to grant defacto President Moise absolute powers that harken back to the Duvalier days.  All this in the hope that the diaspora can reintegrate Haitian society, which essentially translates into their ability to hold high office in Haiti. 

We know the result will be a strong-man who is protected by the constitution.  He will also have the ability to launch new referendums as was the case during the dictatorships of Borno, Vincent and Duvaliers –1964 referendums to confirm President Francois Duvalier for life, 1971 referendums for the succession of François to Jean-Claude Duvalier, and the 1985 referendums to confirm President Jean-Claude Duvalier for life.

As I have written before, as of 7 February, 2021 Haiti has unambiguously left the democratic system of governance – no parliament, no supreme court, and a defacto president who controls all levers of power. We have quietly entered into a soft dictatorship.  

Dura lex, sed lex:  "The law [is] harsh, but [it is] the law." It follows from the principle of the rule of law that even draconian laws must be followed and enforced; if one disagrees with the result, one must seek to change the law.

I know a few of the members in the Committee of Collaborators and call some of them my friends.  But on this, I say shame on their blind support for the coup in progress and their willingness trade the rights of the Haitian people.  Shame on them for their willingness to give a president, but even worst, this defacto president carte blanche to kill Haiti's embryonic democracy. 

My friends in this Committee have co-signed an open letter of support that will enable the defacto President to consolidate his constitutional coup into law, and in the end, that will be their legacy.  I can only remind them that the diaspora's rights to vote is not worth plunging the country back into a dictatorship that feeds off corruption and impunity.  Because in the end, what good will it do for Haitians in the diaspora to win the right to vote from abroad and lose democracy in Haiti?

Click here to view the Haitian Congress Open Letter to President Moise 

For another perspective, click on this video from Ayibopost: Poukisa Jovenel Moise vle chanje konstitisyon an, epi fè eleksyon?

As of this writing, the Ayibopost site was hacked and is currently down.  The video was also reported and taken down by Youtube.   The Ayibopost video can be found here:  
 
Poukisa Jovenel Moise vle chanje konstitisyon an, epi fè eleksyon?