US marines clean up, to Haitians' relief - and chagrin
By Howard LaFranchi | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI - As the number of US marines in Haiti's capital
approaches 1,000, small groups of them began to move into the
tense neighborhoods near the presidential palace, using armored vehicles
to push torched cars and other debris from the streets.
The physical vestiges of a month-long crisis that violently pitted armed
insurgents and a disparate political opposition against the
government - culminating in Sunday's resignation and exile of President
Jean-Bertrand Aristide and the arrival of international security
forces - are being cleared away.
The patrols may be a harbinger of the healing, or the chaos, that's ahead.
Haitians are relieved that the barricades - built by Aristide
supporters and those fearful of the rebels - are being cleaned out, returning
some semblance of normalcy. But some say the marines'
cleanup may be a sign that Haitians aren't ready to solve their own problems.
" 'Strength in union' is our motto, it's right up there on our flag," says
Alexi Bergelat, a mechanic, pointing to the national banner waving
from the presidential palace. "But since our independence 200 years ago
we've never been able to achieve that. In one way we are happy
the Americans are here, but it also reminds us of our failures as a nation."
Some Haitians flashed the marines a thumbs-up as they took up posts or
roared through town; most responded passively. But with each
day the US military presence - initially criticized by some Haitians and
Americans alike for being too slow and tentative - is having a clearer
impact.
Most evident so far is the influence the US presence has had on Haiti's
armed rebels. The militia now says it will lay down its arms and go
home.
After entering the capital with a swagger on Monday and then quickly taking
a series of brash but divisive and disruptive steps - most
notably declaring himself the head of a disbanded Haitian army and announcing
he would arrest the prime minister - rebel leader Guy
Philippe abruptly changed his tone. At a subdued press conference Wednesday,
Mr. Philippe gave little explanation other than to say that
"foreign troops have given their guarantee to protect the Haitian people."
Asked earlier by the Monitor why he had decided to stop activities he had
committed to a day earlier - such as patrolling against the armed
gangs created and supported by the departed Aristide, or providing security
for a food giveaway by the US-based Global Peace Initiative -
Philippe said, "The Americans don't want us to; the Americans don't want
us here."
The US is clearly anxious to demonstrate that Haiti's post-Aristide transition
is following an orderly process based on the country's
Constitution, a process that does not have room for an extralegal group.
Philippe says he was assured by US officials that they would begin taking
steps to disarm the pro-Aristide gangs known as chimères. But
several sources with contacts among the rebels say the US also let Philippe
know it would not tolerate disruptive acts like announcing a
move to arrest the prime minister, or plans to confront the chimères.
The US showdown with the rebels does not preclude their return. With many
Haitians predicting the country will eventually reverse
Aristide's disbanding of the Army a decade ago, Philippe says he hopes
to play the leadership role in a new army. He briefly declared
himself Haiti's "military chief" this week.
"We're going to have an army here no matter what," says Reynaldo Corvington,
a private security consultant in Port-au-Prince. He says
either the US moves to disarm the chimères, who still control the
capital's worst slums where Aristide enjoyed fervent support, or someone
else will.
Still, the return of a military that for many Haitians conjures up memories
of repression does not meet unanimous support. At a press
conference announcing the state of emergency Wednesday, Haitian Prime Minister
Yvon Neptune said the question of an army would be
taken up by the next government. But he added that the army "never protected
the country or the people." In any case, Mr. Neptune, an
Aristide appointee, is not expected to be in office much longer.
To get Haiti's political transition rolling, a tripartite commission with
one member each from the government; the Democratic Platform, an
umbrella organization of the political opposition; and the international
community will name a committee of "wise men" to form an interim
government. Haiti's Constitution calls for new elections to take place
between 45-90 days after a president resigns.
But no one expects elections for a new legislature and president to take place before a year at the earliest.
"The international community's plan looks at a year and the Democratic
Platform plan suggests two years, so it will probably be
somewhere in between," says the United Nations Develompent Programme Mr.
Guindo, the international member of the tripartite
commission.
Interim President Boniface Alexandre this week named a new chief of the
national police - one more step in the process of wiping away
Aristide's influence over security affairs.
But all during the transition, international forces will be on Haiti's
streets. The interim multinational force headed up by the US marines will
be replaced in three months by UN stabilization forces, which are expected
to number around 5,000.