Chronicle of a Coup

Dudley, Steven

Chronicle of a Coup By Steven Dudley Illustration by David Hollenbach In Haiti, as President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's government was falling, you got the feeling that everyone thought he could be...

...I'm the president of the province...
...In the middle of it all was another would-be Haitian president...
...They wanted to reconstitute the military that Aristide had disbanded when he returned to power with U.S...
...Along the way, he fought the Duvalier family dictatorship and several military juntas, he convinced the most powerful nation in the world to send 23,000 troops to restore him to power after being ousted in a military coup, and he seduced the foreign media to write his fairy tale, and he persuaded the international community of donors to give money in large bundles...
...Aristide, meanwhile, is seeking asylum...
...Take Eddy Joseph, a small-town schoolteacher with thick cheeks and a wide smile...
...A crowd of about forty supporters cheered and started singing anti-Aristide songs: "Aristide: If we knew you were such a bad guy, we'd never have voted for you, you stabbed us in our backs...
...Metayer didn't quite have the style of the sash-laden Eddy Joseph, but he had the firepower...
...Unfortunately, what we had is an economic embargo since 2000 that didn't help, making life more difficult for the poor...
...Butteur Metayer, a pugnacious thirty-three-year-old, had spent most of the second half of his life at a Ford auto factory in Lansing, Michigan...
...In their month-long march toward Port-au-Prince, they did not fight a single battle...
...Ketant is Beaudoin "Jacques" Ketant, who, working from Haiti, sent hundreds of tons of Colombian cocaine to the United States before Aristide handed him over to U.S...
...Militia members struck two Mexican television journalists with machetes...
...Given his past, Philippe's appearance as rebel commander caused a stir in Haiti, while Chamblain's created a shiver...
...Amazingly, that was the last time the police would ever fight for Aristide as their president...
...Raw sewage floated in street-side gutters, a reminder that poverty is never far away in this, the poorest country in the hemisphere...
...But what was also true was that Aristide wasn't a very good democrat...
...When a band of former Aristide loyalists known as the Cannibal Army overran the Gonaives police station on February 5, it was the beginning of the end for Aristide...
...And the president reacted badly...
...Each of these rebels wore a souvenir from the battle with the police: a kneepad, a gas mask, a bulletproof vest...
...But in the revolt that swept through the country a few days earlier and eventually forced Aristide from power, Joseph saw an opportunity...
...Former Aristide militia members who'd taken over had checkpoints where they drank beer and clumsily carried automatic weapons they'd confiscated from the police station...
...he'd constructed a system of patronage that included his wife (she became the owner of the second largest cellular phone company in the country...
...Several armed men jogged in front of their leader and the throngs that followed him...
...I have 210 men, ready to fight, ready to die for what they believe," Philippe told me in English with a nearly flawless accent he'd picked up during the two years he'd spent living in the United States...
...he'd armed his supporters with automatic weapons and used them to intimidate and assassinate his opponents...
...This may have been true...
...Are you an international journalist...
...Philippe's best friend and second in command of the rebels, Gilbert Dragon, lived there for a time, as did the rebels' strongman, Louis-Jodel Chamblain...
...The two met in Ecuador while she was in a study-abroad program and he was training for the Haitian army...
...In the days before he resigned, Aristide's militias became increasingly aggressive-torching gas stations, looting stores, stealing cars, and assaulting journalists...
...Townspeople there told me that the police had regularly abused suspected criminals and Aristide's political opponents, and they greeted the torching of the police station with glee...
...corruption is endemic...
...Since the revolt began, Metayer and his boys from the Cannibal Army had changed their name to the Gonaives Revolutionary Front, but they were almost too drunk to explain what they were fighting for...
...For a few days after Aristide left, he paraded around town with his rebel cohorts, then declared himself the head of the newly reconstituted military...
...When it didn't fire, one of his handlers, a graying man with a fuzzy beard dressed in full camouflage, loaded it for him...
...he poked me in the chest as I walked the debris-ridden streets of the port city of Gonaives, the place where Haiti's rebellion got its spark...
...Several other rebels also found safe harbor in Santo Domingo...
...By many accounts, Aristide had rigged legislative elections in 2000...
...Several people died during that attack on Haiti's National Palace...
...The only light came from the afternoon sun peeking into a doorway...
...After being forced - out by the United States, the former Haitian president made several dramatic calls to the press saying he'd been abducted by U.S...
...Just four days before Aristide was ushered to the Central African Republic, Ketant told a Miami courtroom during his sentencing that Aristide was a "drug lord...
...But human rights groups say that the CIA created FRAPH to be the military's death squad between 1991 and 1994, during which time FRAPH members systematically raped and killed their way through thousands of Aristide loyalists...
...Stores were shut...
...After I answered in the affirmative, Joseph straightened his sharp red tie, brushed the dust from his dark blue suit and tricolored sash, and centered his black sailor's cap...
...There is a sinking feeling that the new government is much like those of the pre-Aristide era, an era in which the country was plundered into oblivion by the wealthy elite and corrupt military under the watchful eye of Washington...
...He had received some training from the U.S...
...They, along with several Caribbean nations, tried to broker a deal between opposition political forces in Port-au-Prince and Aristide...
...Aristide was a ray of hope for a country that had ceased to function: 90 percent of the land is deforested...
...The army was demobilized...
...Chamblain was part of FRAPH, which, during its brief existence, stood for the Front for the Advancement of Haitian People...
...health conditions are some of the worst in the world...
...Eddy Joseph is a patriot, clean and competent, and he says that before uprooting the rotten post, we have to prepare the new post...
...The embargo, meanwhile, sunk the government and the economy, and many Haitians started to lose patience...
...authorities in an attempt to lower his prison sentence...
...But the opposition simply refused to sign on, instead calling for Aristide to resign...
...The Marines took over Haiti twice in the last century, once for about twenty years...
...But behind the bravado and the booze in Gonaives, there was a more serious revolution, or perhaps counterrevolution, brewing...
...connections that led many Haitians to immediately assume that Philippe's whole operation was a CIA-led coup that used the Dominican Republic as its launching point...
...Those who entered Metayer's office gave him an awkward salute, while their boss took occasional swigs between questions...
...Aristide regularly bashed the United States, its foreign policy, its economic model, and its President...
...On the surface, the United States and former Aristide allies Canada and France were playing a diplomatic game...
...Josephs only political experience was his run for mayor in the small town of St...
...To his supporters, Aristide is a victim, not a victimizer...
...Their flak jackets deflected the blows...
...Well, as you can see here, in this poster, my name is Eddy Joseph," he continued, before slipping into third person...
...I just came to Haiti to protect my brother...
...Today, Haiti has a new prime minister, Gerard Latortue, handpicked by the Bush Administration...
...He may be somewhere in between...
...Long before the United States dragged him to the airplane on February 29 and packed him to the Central African Republic, Aristide had lost his luster...
...You have to look at the declarations of Ketant to understand a lot of things," one high-level European diplomat said of the rapidly changing diplomatic position with Haiti...
...He lost...
...When Aristide sent a special unit to retake the town the next day, locals helped execute the ambush that left several more policemen dead, including one who was buried under a huge boulder...
...Like so many others, Chamblain's fight with Aristide was also personal...
...Aristide has two choices: prison or execution by firing squad...
...It's a pleasure for me to be here, in front of the international world to talk about myself and to say what do I think about the problem of Haiti," he began, speaking forcefully into the microphone...
...Like Metayer, their fight was personal...
...With the midday sun shining on his forehead, Metayer took hold of a World War II-era M-1 carbine and pointed it in the sky...
...Philippe had lived in Santo Domingo since fleeing Haiti...
...authorities last year...
...Marines...
...The rebels had but 300 soldiers, most of them former Haitian military personnel who looked as old as their M-1 carbines they carted for the news cameras...
...They might add that he built many schools and public health facilities, and that he was doing his best to rein in dark forces beyond his control: corrupt officials, drug traffickers, an intransigent business elite...
...Indeed, Ketant is cooperating with U.S...
...Despite Haitian pleas to send him to Port-au-Prince to face trial, the Dominicans released Philippe after just a week citing lack of evidence...
...It was the first of several curious U.S...
...He'd returned to Haiti because Aristide's men had allegedly shot his brother in the eyes and left his body on the side of the road...
...Now the guns backfired on him...
...When we'd finished talking, the accidental guerrilla leader put on a cowboy hat, grabbed the bottle of rum and his machete, and hit the streets...
...A young rebel with a long shotgun stared menacingly at me...
...The retreats were as much a measure of the rebels' reputations as they were a barometer of just how little support Aristide had left...
...Just two weeks before his ouster, I interviewed the beleaguered president in the National Palace...
...Steven Dudley is a Miami-based freelance reporter and a contributor to The Progressive...
...He wore shorts and a blue shirt with a small Nike symbol emblazoned on his chest...
...The second try sent a shot into the distance, which was followed by more cheers and song: "Whether you want to or not, you have to go," the crowd screamed to a distant Aristide...
...Aristide hasn't commented on the drug allegation, but his lawyer has repeatedly said that Ketant is just trying to save himself...
...According to the deal, which Aristide agreed to, the two sides would work together to reconstitute the government...
...Philippe is a former police captain who fled Haiti in 2000, when he was tied to a coup plot...
...A few soldiers lounged on some mattresses laid across the tile floor...
...When Aristide dissolved the army in 1994, Philippe joined the newly formed police force...
...He has reported from Latin America and the Caribbean fror years and has recently published a book on Colombia entitled "Walking Ghosts...
...government imposed the embargo, and Bush advisers, who loathed Aristide, used the flawed legislative elections as an excuse to freeze international aid...
...He hid his eyes behind a pair of dark sunglasses with gold-plated rims...
...Chronicle of a Coup By Steven Dudley Illustration by David Hollenbach In Haiti, as President Jean-Bertrand Aristide's government was falling, you got the feeling that everyone thought he could be president...
...The police simply changed out of their uniforms, grabbed bottles of rum, and headed for the hills...
...After a couple minutes, a stout figure in camouflage slowly entered the door and introduced himself as Guy Philippe...
...And when he didn't, the United States played hardball, according to several diplomatic sources who were close to the talks...
...It wasn't in weeks or months they created their democratic system...
...help in 1994...
...Aristide is gone from Haiti now, if not done...
...In the violence that followed the military coup in 1991, Chamblain said that a pro-Aristide militia clubbed his seven-months pregnant wife to death in their home...
...At various junctures in the march, the group stopped, argued with one another over which street to take, or gathered around a fire to smash a soda bottle into the ground in a pseudo-voodoo ritual designed to cleanse the earth of Aristide...
...The streets were littered with barricades of rocks, rusty old appliances, burned out cars, even a speedboat...
...I'm looking for justice for my brother," Metayer repeated to me...
...Meanwhile, he'd bought shares of several media companies for himself and sent his thugs to attack the media outlets that were against him...
...Looters were tearing apart the concrete prison walls using a stolen backhoe...
...His wife is from Wisconsin...
...And the Marines are back in Haiti...
...Teenagers, many of them carrying guns taller than they were, sped up and down the debrisridden streets in stolen police cars...
...He also called the international press "terrorists...
...For Europe, it took years and years before having solid democratic institutions," he told me...
...Shortly after assuming power, Latortue lauded the thugs who worked with Philippe and Chamblain...
...During one radio address, he called for his militias to take to the streets, which they did, setting up burning barricades of tires and broken bottles...
...Metayer then led a march around town...
...Aristide] gives me the guns...
...Philippe still thinks of himself as nothing less than president...
...Secret Service, and he showed me a Secret Service badge...
...Now I'm a revolutionary man," Metayer said, warily scanning his men...
...Inside the villa, a few stern men in sharp fatigues led me into a dark room...
...But hope quickly gave way to despair...
...And each one seemed caught up in his own drunken revolution...
...In Haiti, well, it's relatively new, a very short period of time," he said...
...Last year, Dominican authorities arrested him for his alleged involvement in a 2001 coup attempt...
...Marc just a few years ago...
...Aside from saying that Washington could not safeguard him, Bush officials allegedly used a drug dealer's testimony as leverage to get Aristide to resign...
...There are, of course, defenders of Aristide, who note he was elected president of Haiti by an overwhelming majority...
...Throughout, Metayer's men cajoled neighborhood kids to join them...
...He began his career as a popular priest and was Haiti's first democratically elected president in 1990...
...His bio is impressive: An orphan who became a priest prodigy (in addition to Creole, he speaks French, German, English, and Spanish), he developed into a stirring liberation theologian who rose to the presidency of this small Caribbean country...
...My sources told me that the United States used this information to help squeeze Aristide from office...
...During our conversation, he sat in a wilted metal chair and had a machete and a bottle of Barbancourt rum within reach at all times...
...It was a way to help the negotiation...
...When I visited Gonaives, just a week after the popular takeover, it was chaos...
...Now the army has been remobilized and is a constitutional army," Chamblain told me at an airfield in the northern city of Cap-Haitien where the rebels had set up camp for a while...
...Chamblain said that FRAPH was a political organization...
...In a small one-story concrete villa along a Gonaives side street, I found several men who claimed to be ex-military personnel talking strategy...
...The U.S...
...the journalists pulled out the next day...
...Several handlers slouched on some old, worn couches, with M-1 carbines and Uzi submachine guns lying across their laps...
...As the rebels closed in on Port-au-Prince, the pressure mounted for Aristide to leave...
...And in a man with a microphone, Joseph saw a forum...
...Meanwhile, the situation in Port-au-Prince worsened, the rebels got closer, and Colin Powell and the White House issued strong hints that Aristide should step down...

Vol. 68 • May 2004 • No. 5


 
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