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Forum Haiti : Des Idées et des Débats sur l'Avenir d'Haiti
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What Bill Clinton's Mea Culpa Should Mean

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What Bill Clinton's Mea Culpa Should Mean Empty What Bill Clinton's Mea Culpa Should Mean

Message  Sasaye Mar 30 Mar 2010 - 1:04

What Bill Clinton's Mea Culpa Should Mean
by Ruth Messinger, President and Executive Director, American Jewish World
Service, March 29, 2010 | Huffington Post

As many of us have been paying close attention to the long-awaited passage
of health care reform last week, it was easy to miss something else that was
absolutely extraordinary.

Former President Bill Clinton said at a recent Senate hearing that he regrets
the impact in Haiti of the free trade policies that became a hallmark of his presidency.

"It may have been good for some of my farmers in Arkansas, but it has not
worked. It was a mistake," Clinton said this month. "I had to live everyday
with the consequences of the loss of capacity to produce a rice crop in Haiti
to feed those people because of what I did; nobody else."

Sadly, he's right. The rapid lowering of agricultural trade barriers in Haiti
combined with misguided U.S. food aid policy allowed American agribusinesses to
flood the country with cheap surplus rice and force tens of thousands of local
farmers out of business. According to the Associated Press, six pounds of
imported rice now costs at least a dollar less than a similar quantity of
locally-grown rice.

So how can a Haitian farmer compete?

The past 15 years have shown they simply can't.

Prior to the era of so-called "free trade", Haiti could feed itself, importing
only 19 percent of its food and actually exporting rice.

Today, Haiti imports more than half of its food, including 80 percent of the rice
eaten in the country. The result is that Haitians are particularly vulnerable to price
spikes arising from global weather, political instability, rising fuel costs
and natural disasters, such as earthquakes that register 7.0 on the Richter
scale. In fact, since the January earthquake, imported rice prices are up 25
percent.

It is especially fitting that President Clinton's mea culpa comes as the Jewish
community worldwide prepares to observe Passover.

The story of Passover is a stark reminder that communities cannot rely solely on others to provide for their needs.

Until people are empowered to help themselves, in-kind assistance from the outside
is useful only in the immediate aftermath of acute emergencies.

Long-term needs must be met principally through a community-led approach.
The lesson we take from Passover is that once the Israelites spoke out against
slavery their prayers for freedom were finally answered.

Today, the people of Haiti are speaking as loud as they can.

They desperately want a voice and central role in the reconstruction of their country, including the ability to meet the country's nutritional needs with food produced by
Haitians in Haiti.

In fact, President Rene Preval, himself a rice grower, has asked for international food aid to be replaced by financial support for farmers and the re-development of the agricultural sector.

Preval knows that sustained success in rebuilding depends on food sovereignty,
or the ability for Haitian farmers to grow their own crops and feed their own communities.

Is the international community getting the message? It's hard to say.

The AP also reported that the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has
provided nearly four times as much in-kind food aid since January as it invests
each year in Haitian agriculture.

There is of course a need in grave circumstances for actual shipments of food - but
for decades we've used in-kind food as a tool for destroying local agricultural markets on an ongoing basis, not as a last resort measure to be used in emergencies after all possibilities for local purchase have been exhausted.

Until our government abandons a system that dumps surplus from American agribusiness on the developing world, its efforts at ending hunger will remain counterproductive. Then again, if you are the D.C. lobbyist for Big Ag, maybe that's
the point.
Maintaining the developing world's cycle of dependence is profitable business.

The time has come for us to pay attention, to heed the wishes of the Haitian
people to be empowered.

We must demand that the purpose of our work in Haiti is not to merely rebuild an export market for our surpluses, but rather to support a Haitian-led effort to create
a country that can stand on its own, build a sustainable economy and feed its people.

Over the next couple of months, Congress will be discussing how to allocate more
than $1.6 billion in supplemental funding for Haiti. I urge you to contact your elected
representatives and let them know that this money must be used to empower
communities, not corporations.

Each year, during Passover, we say "let all who are hungry, come and eat."
Then, ironically, we proceed to enjoy a wonderful meal with our families and
friends while our front doors remain closed.

If you will be celebrating Passover this year, I ask that you open your doors --
at least metaphorically-- and hear those calls from a country just a few hundred
miles off our shore.

Recognize that the people of Haiti may not need our food.

Rather, they need us to listen as they tell us how we can really help.
Sasaye
Sasaye
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Nombre de messages : 8252
Localisation : Canada
Opinion politique : Indépendance totale
Loisirs : Arts et Musique, Pale Ayisien
Date d'inscription : 02/03/2007

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