Black
Alliance for Peace Statement on Haiti
For Biden Administration, Black Lives Don’t Matter
in Haiti!
The people of
Haiti has been demanding freedom from the succession of U.S.-imposed dictators
for decades. One such dictator, Jovenel Moïse, refused to leave office on February
7, which marked the end of his term four years after an illegal election. This
move catapulted yet another intense episode in the historic struggle of the
Haitian masses against colonial intervention. Tens of thousands of Haitians
went to the streets demanding democracy and an end to dictatorship. And what
was the response from the U.S. puppet regime? Bullets, paramilitary terror,
curfews, house raids, beatings, and the imprisonment of opposition leaders.
With the election of U.S. President Joe Biden, folks believed this so-called
“champion” of fair elections and the rule of law—who had expressed a commitment
that “Black Lives Matter”—would rally to the side of Haitians and end the U.S.
support for the dictatorship.
But that did not happen.
When Moïse announced he would stay in office past February 7, and continue to
rule by decree, the Biden administration signaled it supported that decision.
Moïse’s rule by decree was made possible because elections were postponed in
2019, which allowed the mandates of most of the representatives to the National
Assembly—Haiti’s parliament—to expire.
It did not matter that Moïse ruled by decree, that he violated the rights of
his people, and that the majority of the people wanted him gone. What mattered
to the Biden administration was the purpose Moïse served in U.S. plans for The Caribbean and Latin American region.
In other words, the people must be sacrificed for the larger interests of the
U.S. imperial project. These interests could not be bothered with the
trifle concerns about democracy, legitimacy, or the rights of the people. Those
rhetorical terms are only evoked as expressions of the United States’ so-called
“values” when directed at an adversary like Russia, Venezuela, China, or any
other country the United States is actively attempting to destabilize. But
those values cannot be allowed to complicate U.S. interests in Haiti or even in
the occupied Black and Brown communities within the United States.
We ask Joe Biden and his supporters, who claim Biden cares about African/Black
people: Why does it seem like the lives of African/Black people in Haiti do not
matter? Is it that Black lives only matter when they are supporting U.S. and
European colonial white power?
In the Black Alliance for Peace (BAP), we know the answer to that rhetorical
question. Both parties and the U.S. state have demonstrated the lives of
non-Europeans mean extraordinarily little. And the values that the United
States and Western Europeans pretend to uphold—like democracy and human
rights—are dead letters when it comes to the fundamental human rights of the
peoples of the global South.
The United States and the United Nations armed and trained Haitian police.
Moïse has the full support of these armed paramilitary forces, who are
committed to upholding the rule of the Haitian ruling class that serves
international capital. That is why the Biden administration supports Moïse.
Therefore, Moïse has no legitimacy.
Haiti emerged as a free society in the greatest revolution in human history in
1804, when the people of Haiti established the first Black Republic after
fighting and defeating first the Spanish and then the French, at the time the
greatest military power on the planet. Since then, the West has tried to
destroy Haiti.
Invasions, occupations, death squads, economic plunder, attacks on their
culture, political isolation, and U.S.-backed dictatorships have exacted a
severe price on the people of Haiti. Yet, they have never surrendered. That
spirit of resistance is on display today in the streets of Haiti.
We, in the Black Alliance for Peace, will continue to support those efforts by
organizing actions throughout the United States in solidarity with the Haitian
people.
We are not confused. There is nothing exceptional about the United States,
except perhaps its hypocrisy. Declarations made by white-supremacist politicians
and heads of imperialist corporations that “Black Lives Matter” have rung
hollow, opportunistic, and completely in contradiction to the lived experiences
of African/Black people in the United States from 1619 to the present.
Stripped of the veneer of liberal-rights discourse, the true core values of the
U.S. settler-colonial project is obvious: Glorification of violence, white
supremacy, patriarchy, social Darwinism, materialism, and extreme individualism.
These core values facilitated the land theft that allowed for the creation of
the United States, enslavement and the most rapacious forms of capitalist
accumulation on the planet.
The abandonment of the people of Haiti affirms once again the United States is
committed to white power. Subversion, war, and brutal sanctions are just some of
the instruments employed to maintain the structures of white
colonial-capitalist power.
So, our appeal is not to the conscience of Biden and the neoliberal imperialist
Democrats—they only have objective interests. Instead, we call on the people of
the United States to demand an alteration both in U.S. policies regarding Haiti
and in its relationship with Haiti as well as with all nations that currently
find themselves in the crosshairs of U.S. imperialist reaction.
However, we understand our commitment to peace and People(s)-Centered Human
Rights, social justice, democracy, and self-determination cannot be realized
without organized people who are struggling for power.
The people of Haiti are fighting for power, for the ability to determine their
own destiny. Stand with them. Stand with us. Fight for freedom and for a new
reality in Haiti and the world.
No Compromise, No Retreat!
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