February
3, 2004, MIAMI –
Almost daily, pro- and antigovernment
demonstrators flood the streets of Haiti's
capital, Port-au-Prince, disrupting business and
forcing schools to close. Those calling for the
departure of President Jean-Bertrand Aristide
show no sign of backing down: Since September,
more than 50 people have died and scores more
have been wounded.
In decades past, political
conflict like this has sent waves of Haitian
boat people onto the high seas seeking refuge.
In the 1980s, bodies of Haitians escaping the
Duvalier dictatorship in rickety boats washed up
on south Florida's shores. In 1991, a military
coup forced President Aristide into exile, and
the US Coast Guard plucked nearly 70,000
refugees from small vessels in the ensuing three
years. The majority then were taken to the US
military base on Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and
eventually returned to Haiti.
Guantánamo may soon be seeing more action. Under
what it characterizes as part of an ongoing
contingency plan, the State Department has, in
the past month, contacted a dozen
nongovernmental agencies (NGOs) about running a
refugee camp with as many as 50,000 beds. That's
a startling estimate given that in all of 2003
fewer than 1,500 Haitians were interdicted.
While Bush officials say
this is just routine preparation for mass
migration and natural disasters in the
Caribbean, it looks suspiciously like a new
twist on an old US tactic: Making sure that
Haiti's problems stay in Haiti and
asylum-seekers never make it to US shores.
As Caribbean diplomats
labor to broker a peace between Aristide and his
opponents, the US is cynically battening the
hatches against a possible refugee crisis
landing on Florida's coast. America is the world
leader in defending human rights, and it's
shameful that US policy is geared more to
keeping Haitians out than offering them the
haven provided for refugees from most other
countries.
NGO directors confirm that
in late December, the State Department began
polling them about their resources,
capabilities, and staff in the Caribbean to run
a large camp as early as this month. And these
directors are nervous about their agencies'
participation in a plan so obviously geared to
barring Haitians from US shores, effectively
denying them full legal rights as refugees.
The US has long had a
double standard when it comes to Haitian
refugees. And with the war on terror as an
excuse, the Bush administration has raised the
bar for Haitians looking for refuge in the US.
When two large boatloads of Haitians arrived in
south Florida in December 2001 and October 2002,
the US implemented new measures aimed at
deterring Haitians from ever attempting to flee
their homeland. These measures drastically
reduced the time refugees had to make their case
and limited the ways they could exercise their
rights to plead asylum. These changes, coupled
with the "shout test" - which requires a migrant
picked up at sea to literally cry out for help
once aboard a US vessel even to have a shot at
political asylum - have proved an effective
deterrent.
Of the 1,490 Haitians
interdicted last year, just one received refugee
status. But that Haitian remains - along with
four other compatriots who received refugee
status in 2002 - at Guantánamo awaiting
resettlement in a third country.
Last April, Attorney
General John Ashcroft declared that Haitians
posed a security risk to the US because Haiti
was believed to be a jumping-off point for
terrorists from places like Pakistan and
Palestine. A Freedom of Information request by
legal aid agencies turned up no supporting
documentation for this claim. The US upped the
ante again when, on Dec. 29, just days after the
State Department contacted the NGOs about its
contingency plan, it released a fact sheet that
said Haitian migrants were a threat to US
national security. Again, no explanation has
been offered as the basis for this declaration.
It's morally wrong - if
not xenophobic - to deny Haitian refugees their
rights through tenuous association with
terrorists who might use the Caribbean nation as
a backdoor to the US. And it may be even harder
now to defend the label of economic refugee
because much of the violence in Haiti seems to
be politically motivated, linked to demands for
Aristide's ouster. While the majority of
Haitians are desperately poor, the entire
population is vulnerable to the chaos created by
unruly mobs, a politicized police force, and a
resounding lack of leadership.
There is also a legal
component. Interdicting refugees fleeing
political violence and refusing them entry to
the US breaks international law.
"With the Haitians there
has been some tendency by the US to use
detention or deportation as a deterrent," says
Joung-ah Ghedini of the UN High Commission for
Refugees. "That, as a policy, is not acceptable
according to the [UN] Convention of Refugees."
While the international
community works to find a diplomatic solution to
further bloodshed and a mass migration, it's
understandable that the US is discussing a
contingency plan.
A plan of action is
welcome, says Wendy Young of the Women's
Commission for Refugee Women and Children. But
she'd be more supportive "if the plan was
designed not to keep Haitians out, but rather
offer them protection."
The US should continue to
pursue a diplomatic solution that respects
international law. But until then, Haitians
should receive the same treatment granted asylum
seekers from other countries, including
admittance to the US to pursue asylum claims.
The final plan should provide full and
meaningful protection for Haitians seeking
relief, rather than one that sequesters them and
denies them due process.
Kathie Klarreich is a
freelance writer who lived in Haiti for 10
years.