PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Republic of Haiti
Geography
Area: 27,750 sq. km. (10,714 sq. mi.); about the
size of Maryland. Ile de la Gonave and Ile de la
Tortue comprise Haiti's principal offshore
territories.
Cities: Capital--Port-au-Prince (pop. 2
million). Other cities--Cap Haitien (pop.
600,000).
Terrain: Rugged mountains with small coastal
plains and river valleys, and a large
east-central elevated plateau.
Climate: Warm, semiarid, high humidity in many
coastal areas.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Haitian(s).
Population (2006 census): 8.5 million.
Annual population growth rate: 1975-2001, 1.9%;
2.5% per year.
Ethnic groups: African descent 95%, African and
European descent 5%.
Religions: Roman Catholic 80%, Protestant 16%,
voudou (voodoo) practices pervasive.
Languages: French (official), Creole (official).
Education: Years compulsory--6. Adult
literacy (2006 census)--56%.
Health: Child mortality--1 out of 8
children die before they reach the age of five.
Life expectancy--56 years (women), 52
years (men).
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: January 1, 1804.
Constitution: March 1987.
Branches: Executive--President.
Legislative--Senate (30 seats), Chamber of
Deputies (99 seats). Judicial--Court of
Cassation.
Administrative subdivisions: Ten departments.
Political parties and coalitions: Lespwa, Fanmi
Lavalas (FL), Struggling People's Organization (OPL),
Open the Gate Party (PLB), Christian Movement
for a New Haiti (MOCHRENHA), Tet Ansam, Fusion
of Socialist Democrats (FUSION), Grand Center
Right Front Coalition, Assembly of Progressive
National Democrats (RNDP), Union to Save Haiti,
Mobilisation for Haiti’s progress, Haitian
Democratic and Reform Movement, several others.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (FY 2005): $3.7 billion.
Real GDP growth rate (FY 2005): 1.5%.
Per capita GNP (FY 2005): $440.
GDP by sector (2002): Agriculture--27%;
industry--14%; services--52%;
indirect and import taxes--7%.
Inflation (2005 est.): 15%.
Natural resources: Bauxite, copper, calcium
carbonate, gold, marble.
Agriculture (27% of GDP): Products--coffee,
mangoes, sugarcane, rice, corn, cacao, sorghum,
pulses, other fruits and vegetables.
Industry (15.5% of GDP): Types--apparel,
handicrafts, electronics assembly, food
processing, beverages, tobacco products,
furniture, printing, chemicals, steel.
Services (52% of GDP): Commerce, government,
tourism.
Trade (2005 est.): Total exports f.o.b.--$416
million: apparel, mangoes, leather and raw
hides, seafood, electrical. Major market--U.S.
Imports--$547 million c.i.f.: grains,
soybean oil, motor vehicles, machinery, meat,
vegetables, plastics, petroleum.
Note: There are serious problems with national
accounts in Haiti, including incomplete coverage
and the questionable accuracy of raw data.
PEOPLE
Although Haiti averages about 302 people per
square kilometer. Its population is concentrated
most heavily in urban areas, coastal plains, and
valleys. About 95% of Haitians are of African
descent. The rest of the population is mostly of
mixed Caucasian-African ancestry. A few are of
European or Levantine heritage. Sixty percent of
the population lives in rural areas.
French is one of two official languages, but
it is spoken by only about 10% of the people.
All Haitians speak Creole, the country's other
official language. English is increasingly used
as a second language among the young and in the
business sector.
The dominant religion is Roman Catholicism.
Increasing numbers of Haitians have converted to
Protestantism through the work of missionaries
active throughout the country. Much of the
population also practices voudou (voodoo),
recognized by the government as a religion in
April 2003. Haitians tend to see no conflict in
these African-rooted beliefs coexisting with
Christian faith.
Although public education is free, the cost
is still quite high for Haitian families who
must pay for uniforms, textbooks, supplies, and
other inputs. Due to weak state provision of
education services, private and parochial
schools account for approximately 90% of primary
schools, and only 65% of primary school-aged
children are actually enrolled. At the secondary
level, the figure drops to around 20%. Less than
35% of those who enter will complete primary
school. Though Haitians place a high value on
education, few can afford to send their children
to secondary school and primary school
enrollment is dropping due to economic factors.
Remittances sent by Haitians living abroad are
important in paying educational costs.
Large-scale emigration, principally to the
U.S.--but also to Canada, the Dominican
Republic, The Bahamas and other Caribbean
neighbors, and France--has created what Haitians
refer to as the Tenth Department or the
Diaspora. About one of every eight Haitians
lives abroad.
HISTORY
The Spaniards used the island of Hispaniola
(of which Haiti is the western part and the
Dominican Republic the eastern) as a launching
point from which to explore the rest of the
Western Hemisphere. French buccaneers later used
the western third of the island as a point from
which to harass English and Spanish ships. In
1697, Spain ceded the western third of
Hispaniola to France. As piracy was gradually
suppressed, some French adventurers became
planters, making Saint Domingue, as the French
portion of the island was known, the "pearl of
the Antilles"--one of the richest colonies in
the 18th century French empire.
During this period, African slaves were
brought to work on sugarcane and coffee
plantations. In 1791, the slave population
revolted--led by Toussaint L'Ouverture, Jean
Jacques Dessalines, and Henri Christophe--and
gained control of the northern part of the
French colony, waging a war of attrition against
the French.
By January 1804, local forces defeated an
army sent by Napoleon Bonaparte, established
independence from France, and renamed the area
Haiti. The impending defeat of the French in
Haiti is widely credited with contributing to
Napoleon's decision to sell the Louisiana
territory to the United States in 1803. Haiti is
the world's oldest black republic and the
second-oldest republic in the Western
Hemisphere, after the United States. Although
Haiti actively assisted the independence
movements of many Latin American countries, the
independent nation of former slaves was excluded
from the hemisphere's first regional meeting of
independent nations, in Panama in 1826, and did
not receive U.S. diplomatic recognition until
1862.
Two separate regimes--north and
south--emerged after independence but were
unified in 1820. Two years later, Haiti occupied
Santo Domingo, the eastern, Spanish-speaking
part of Hispaniola. In 1844, however, Santo
Domingo broke away from Haiti and became the
Dominican Republic. With 22 changes of
government from 1843 to 1915, Haiti experienced
numerous periods of intense political and
economic disorder, prompting the United States
military intervention of 1915. Following a
19-year occupation, U.S. military forces were
withdrawn in 1934, and Haiti regained sovereign
rule.
From February 7, 1986--when the 29-year
dictatorship of the Duvalier family ended--until
1991, Haiti was ruled by a series of provisional
governments. In March 1987, a constitution was
ratified that provides for an elected, bicameral
parliament; an elected president that serves as
head of state; and a prime minister, cabinet,
ministers, and supreme court appointed by the
president with parliament's consent. The Haitian
Constitution also provides for political
decentralization through the election of mayors
and administrative bodies responsible for local
government.
1991-1994 - An Interrupted Transition
In December 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a
charismatic Roman Catholic priest, won 67% of
the vote in a presidential election that
international observers deemed largely free and
fair. Aristide took office on February 7, 1991,
but was overthrown that September in a violent
coup led by dissatisfied elements of the army
and supported by many of the country's economic
elite. Following the coup, Aristide began a
3-year exile in the U.S. Several thousand
Haitians may have been killed during the de
facto military rule. The coup contributed to a
large-scale exodus of Haitians by boat. The U.S.
Coast Guard rescued a total of 41,342 Haitians
at sea during 1991 and 1992, more than the
number of rescued boat people from the previous
10 years combined.
From October 1991 to September 1994 an
unconstitutional military de facto regime
governed Haiti. Various OAS and UN initiatives
to end the political crisis through the peaceful
restoration of the constitutionally elected
government, including the Governor’s Island
Agreement of July 1993, failed. When the
military refused to uphold its end of the
agreements, the de facto authorities refused to
allow a return to constitutional government,
even though the economy was collapsing and the
country's infrastructure deteriorated from
neglect.
1994 - International Intervention
On July 31, 1994, as repression mounted in Haiti
and a UN-OAS civilian human rights monitoring
mission (MICIVIH) was expelled from the country,
the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 940.
UNSC Resolution 940 authorized member states to
use all necessary means to facilitate the
departure of Haiti's military leadership and to
restore Haiti's constitutionally elected
government to power.
In the weeks that followed, the United States
took the lead in forming a multinational force (MNF)
to carry out the UN's mandate by means of a
military intervention. In mid-September, with
U.S. troops prepared to enter Haiti by force,
President Clinton dispatched a negotiating team
led by former President Jimmy Carter to persuade
the de facto authorities to step aside and allow
for the return of constitutional rule. With
intervening troops already airborne, Gen. Raoul
Cedras and other top leaders agreed to accept
the intervention of the MNF. On September 19,
1994, the first contingents of what became a
21,000-member international force touched down
in Haiti to oversee the end of military rule and
the restoration of the constitutional
government. By early October, the three de facto
leaders--Cedras, Gen. Philippe Biamby, and
Police Chief Lt. Col. Michel Francois--and their
families had departed Haiti. President Aristide
and other elected officials in exile returned on
October 15.
Under the watchful eyes of international
peacekeepers, restored Haitian authorities
organized nationwide local and parliamentary
elections in June 1995. A pro-Aristide,
multi-party coalition called the Lavalas
Political Organization (OPL) swept into power at
all levels. With his term ending in February
1996 and barred by the constitution from
succeeding himself, President Aristide agreed to
step aside and support a presidential election
in December 1995. Rene Preval, a prominent
Aristide political ally, who had been Aristide's
Prime Minister in 1991, took 88% of the vote,
and was sworn in to a 5-year term on February 7,
1996, during what was Haiti's first-ever
transition between two democratically elected
presidents.
Political Gridlock
In late 1996, former President Aristide broke
from the OPL and created a new political party,
the Lavalas Family (FL). The OPL, holding the
majority of the Parliament, renamed itself the
Struggling People's Organization, maintaining
the OPL acronym. Elections in April 1997 for the
renewal of one-third of the Senate and creation
of commune-level assemblies and town delegations
provided the first opportunity for the former
political allies to compete for elected office.
Although preliminary results indicated victories
for FL candidates in most races, the elections,
which drew only about 5% of registered voters,
were plagued with allegations of fraud and not
certified by most international observers as
free and fair. Partisan rancor from the election
dispute led to deep divisions within Parliament
and between the legislative and executive
branches, resulting in almost total governmental
gridlock. In June 1997, Prime Minister Rosny
Smarth resigned. Two successors proposed by
President Preval were rejected by the
legislature. Eventually, in December 1998,
Jacques Edouard Alexis was confirmed as Prime
Minister.
During this gridlock period, the government
was unable to organize the local and
parliamentary elections due in late 1998. In
early January 1999, President Preval dismissed
legislators whose terms had expired--the entire
Chamber of Deputies and all but nine members of
the Senate--and converted local elected
officials into state employees. The President
and Prime Minister then ruled by decree,
establishing a cabinet composed almost entirely
of FL partisans. Under pressure from a new
political coalition called the Democratic
Consultation Group (ESPACE), the government
allocated three seats of the nine-member
Provisional Electoral Council (CEP) to
opposition groups and mandated the CEP to
organize the overdue elections for the end of
1999. Following several delays, the first round
of elections for local councils--ASEC and CASEC,
municipal governments, town delegates, the
Chamber of Deputies, and two-thirds of the
Senate took place on May 21, 2000. The election
drew the participation of a multitude of
candidates from a wide array of political
parties and a voter turnout of more than 60%.
The Electoral Crisis
Controversy mired the good start, however, when
the CEP used a flawed methodology to determine
the winners of the Senate races, thus avoiding
run-off elections for eight seats and giving the
FL a virtual sweep in the first round. The
flawed vote count, combined with the CEP’s
failure to investigate alleged irregularities
and fraud, undercut the credibility of that
body. The CEP President fled Haiti and two
members eventually resigned rather than accede
to government pressure to release the erroneous
results. Nonetheless, on August 28, 2000,
Haiti's new Parliament, including the contested
Senators accorded victory under the flawed vote
count, was convened.
Through a number of diplomatic missions by
the OAS, the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), and
the United States, the international community
had sought to delay Parliament's seating until
the electoral problems could be rectified. When
these efforts were rebuffed, Haiti's main
bilateral donors announced the end of "business
as usual." They moved to re-channel their
assistance away from the government and
announced they would not support or send
observers to the November elections.
Concurrently, most opposition parties regrouped
in an alliance that became the Democratic
Convergence. The Convergence asserted that the
May elections were so fraudulent that they
should be annulled and held again under a new
CEP. Elections for President and nine Senators
took place on November 26, 2000. All major
opposition parties boycotted these elections in
which voter participation was estimated at 5%.
Jean-Bertrand Aristide emerged as the easy
victor of these controversial elections, and the
candidates of his FL party swept all contested
Senate seats. On February 6, 2001, the
Democratic Convergence named respected lawyer
and human rights activist Gerard Gourgue as
provisional president of their "alternative
government." Gourgue called the act "symbolic,"
designed to protest flawed elections. On
February 7, 2001, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was
inaugurated as President. Notwithstanding the
previous year's electoral controversy, the
inauguration marked the first time in the
country's history that a full-term president
peacefully transferred power to an incoming
president.
It did not, however, put an end to the
political stalemate. OAS-mediated negotiations
began in April 2001 to find a resolution,
focusing on the on possible makeup of a new
electoral council, a timetable for new
elections, security for political parties, and
other confidence-building measures. These
negotiations made some progress, but were
suspended in mid-July without a final agreement.
On July 28, 2001, unknown gunmen attacked police
facilities in Port-au-Prince and the provinces.
A subsequent government crackdown on opposition
party members and former soldiers further
increased tensions between Lavalas and
Convergence. On December 17, 2001, unidentified
gunmen attacked the National Palace in
Port-au-Prince. Following the assault,
pro-government groups attacked the offices and
homes of several opposition leaders. One
opposition member was killed. Negotiations
between FL and Democratic Convergence, already
on hold following the July violence, were
suspended indefinitely.
In January 2002, the OAS Permanent Council
adopted Resolution 806 on Haiti that called for
government action to address the political
stalemate, growing violence, and deterioration
in respect for human rights. It also authorized
OAS establishment of a Special Mission in Haiti
to support implementation of steps called for in
Resolution 806.
The OAS Special Mission began operations in
March 2002, working with the government on plans
to strengthen Haiti’s democratic institutions in
security, justice, human rights, and governance.
Nevertheless, the climate of security
deteriorated and a rapidly weakening economy
created risks of a humanitarian disaster.
The OAS Permanent Council adopted Resolution
822, September 4, 2002, which set a new course
for resolving the crisis by: committing the
Haitian government to a series of steps leading
to an improved climate of security for free and
fair elections in 2003; supporting Haiti’s
resumption of normal relations with the
International Financial Institutions; and
strengthening the mandate of the OAS to monitor
as well as support Haitian government efforts to
comply with OAS resolutions. It also conferred
new mandates related to conduct of elections and
disarmament.
Protest strikes and attacks on opposition
demonstrations by government-supported gangs
between November 2002 and February 2003 hardened
attitudes on both sides. The opposition issued a
public call for Aristide’s removal and announced
plans for a transitional government. In March
2003, a high-level joint delegation of the OAS
and Caribbean Community (CARICOM) presented
specific demands to President Aristide to
restore public security and create confidence
necessary to move toward elections: select new
leadership for the Haitian National Police in
consultation with the OAS; arrest Amiot Metayer,
a notorious gang leader; and disarm the security
forces used by government politicians to
intimidate opponents.
Since then, a new police chief, appointed
June 9 in consultation with the OAS, resigned
and fled the country June 23 after being ordered
to give up his authority over budget and
personnel; government-paid thugs violently
disrupted a civil society public ceremony July
12 in Cité Soleil; police attacked civil society
marches in Cap Haitien August 30 and September
14 and prevented an opposition march scheduled
for October 5. Amiot Metayer was murdered
September 21 (it is widely believed the
government ordered the murder to prevent release
of compromising information). The government
announced August 13 that it was re-activating a
defunct CEP in what many have interpreted as a
move toward holding elections outside the
framework of OAS Resolution 822 .
The OAS and other foreign observers,
including the U.S., have denounced these steps.
To re-invigorate the process envisioned in
Resolution 822, the OAS designated a Special
Envoy for Dialogue in Haiti, Terence Todman, a
retired U.S. Career Ambassador. Todman, a native
of the U.S. Virgin Islands, undertook three
negotiating missions to Haiti in
September-October 2003.
Political instability grew throughout fall
2003. In Gonaives, Metayer’s followers, hitherto
pro-Aristide, led a violent rebellion against
government authorities in the city.
Government-sponsored repression of opposition
protests reached a nadir when on December 5
pro-government gangs entered Haiti’s state
university campus and broke the legs of the
Rector.
Following a meeting with Aristide at the
Summit of the Americas in January 2004,
Caribbean Community leaders proposed a plan to
resolve the political crisis. President Aristide
stated he accepted the plan at a meeting January
31. However, as the plan remained unimplemented,
a high-level international delegation came to
Haiti February 21 to obtain agreement on
specific implementation timetable. President
Aristide agreed, but the opposition "Democratic
Platform" group of political parties and civil
society expressed reservations.
Meanwhile, the violence in Gonaives
culminated February 5 in the former Cannibal
Army, now called the Artibonite Resistance
Front, seizing control of the city. Other armed
groups opposed to the Aristide government
quickly emerged and succeeded in seizing control
of many towns, mostly with little resistance
from government authorities. By February 28,
2004, a rebel group led by a former police
chief, Guy Philippe, had advanced to within 25
miles of the capital.
A New Government Following the Departure
of Aristide
On February 29, 2004 Aristide submitted his
resignation as President of Haiti and flew on a
chartered plane to South Africa. Following the
constitutional line of succession, Supreme Court
Chief Justice Boniface Alexandre assumed the
presidency and Gerard Latortue was appointed
prime minister of the Interim Government of
Haiti (IGOH) with the mandate of organizing
elections to choose a new government.
The first round for the election of the
President and the Parliament took place
peacefully on February 7, 2006. An impressive
turnout estimated at over 60% of registered
voters caused some logistical difficulties
rapidly overcome. Overall, those elections have
been considered free, honest, and democratic by
the national and international observers.
René Préval, former President (1996-2001) and
former ally to Aristide, won the presidential
election with 51.15%. Partial results had shown
he fell short of the majority and triggered
demonstrations against alleged fraud. The later
decision of the Electoral Council not to count
blank ballots gave the victory to Preval.
The Parliament, composed of a 30-seat Senate and
a 99-member Chamber of Deputies, was elected in
two rounds held on February 7 and April 21,
2006. Lespwa is the main political force in both
chambers but fell short of the majority. Fusion,
UNION, Alyans, OPL, and Famni Lavals have many
representatives in both chambers.
International Presence 1995-2004
After the transition of the 21,000-strong
MNF into a peacekeeping force on March 31, 1995,
the presence of international military forces
that helped restore constitutional government to
power was gradually ended. Initially, the
U.S.-led UN peacekeeping force numbered 6,000
troops, but that number was scaled back
progressively over the next 4 years as a series
of UN technical missions succeeded the
peacekeeping force. By January 2000, all U.S.
troops stationed in Haiti had departed. In March
2000, the UN peacekeeping mission transitioned
into a peace-building mission, the International
Civilian Support Mission in Haiti (MICAH). MICAH
consisted of some 80 non-uniformed UN technical
advisers providing advice and material
assistance in policing, justice, and human
rights to the Haitian Government. MICAH's
mandate ended on February 7, 2001, coinciding
with the end of the Preval administration. The
OAS Special Mission has some 25 international
police advisors who arrived in summer 2003; is
in addition to observing and reporting Haitian
police performance, they provide limited
technical assistance.
International Presence 2004-Present
At the request of the interim government and
the UN, the U.S.-led Multilateral Interim Force,
made up of troops from the U.S., Canada, France,
and Chile, arrived in Port-au-Prince to ensure
stability until the arrival of a UN peacekeeping
force.
In April 2004, the United Nations Security
Council adopted Resolution 1542, which created
the UN Stability Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH).
The Stability Mission is authorized at 6,700
troops and 1,622 civilian police.
Principle MINUSTAH Officials
Special Representative of the Secretary
General--Edmond Mulet (Guatemala)
Force Commander--Jose Elito Carvalho Siqueira
(Brazil)
Police Commissioner--Graham Muir (Canada)
Principal Government Officials
President--Rene Preval (since May 14, 2006)
Prime Minister--Jacques-Edouard Alexis
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Jean Reynald
Clerisme
Minister of Justice--Rene Magloire
Minister of Economy and Finances--Daniel
Dorsainville
Ambassador to the U.S.--Raymond Joseph
Ambassador to the OAS--Duly Brutus, Chargé
d’Affaires
Ambassador to the UN--Leo Mérores, Chargé
d’Affaires
The Embassy of Haiti is located at 2311
Massachusetts Ave., NW, Washington, DC 20008
(tel. 202-332-4090).
ECONOMY
Haiti remains the least-developed country in the
Western Hemisphere and one of the poorest in the
world. Comparative social and economic
indicators show Haiti falling behind other
low-income developing countries (particularly in
the hemisphere) since the 1980s. Haiti now ranks
150th of 175 countries in the UN’s Human
Development Index. Haiti's economic stagnation
is the result of earlier inappropriate economic
policies, political instability, a shortage of
good arable land, environmental deterioration,
continued reliance on traditional technologies,
under-capitalization and lack of public
investment in human resources, migration of
large portions of the skilled population, a weak
national savings rate, and the lack of a
functioning judicial system.
The 1991 coup and the irresponsible economic
and financial policies of the de facto regime
resulted in a sharp economic decline from
1991-94. Following the coup, the United States
adopted mandatory sanctions, and the OAS
instituted voluntary sanctions aimed at
restoring constitutional government.
International sanctions culminated in the May
1994 UN embargo of all goods entering Haiti
except humanitarian supplies, such as food and
medicine. The assembly sector, heavily dependent
on U.S. markets, employed nearly 80,000 workers
in the mid-1980s. During the embargo, employment
fell below 17,000. Private domestic and foreign
investment has returned to Haiti slowly. Since
the embargo’s end, assembly sector employment
has gradually recovered to about 30,000, but
further growth has been stalled by investor
concerns over safety and political instability.
Under President Préval (1996-2001), the
country's economic agenda included trade/tariff
liberalization, measures to control government
expenditure and increase tax revenues, civil
service downsizing, financial sector reform, and
the modernization of two out of nine state-owned
enterprises through their sale to private
investors, the provision of private sector
management contracts, or joint public-private
investment. Structural adjustment agreements
with international financial institutions (IFIs)
intended to create conditions for private sector
growth proved only partly successful, however.
Haiti's real GDP growth turned negative in FY
2001 after six years of growth. Following almost
4 years of recession ending in 2004, the economy
grew by 1.5% in 2005. GDP growth is projected to
reach 2.5% in 2006. But significant improvement
in living standards would require an estimated
doubling of the growth rate.
Since the departure of President Aristide,
the financial situation has stabilized.
Inflation has fallen from 42.7% at end-2003, to
15% by end-April 2006.
The IGOH has conducted a largely sound fiscal
policy. But the traditional low revenue
collection rate (roughly 9% of the GDP)
constrains its ability to provide social
services and invest in physical and human
capital. External assistance (approximately $965
million from July 2004 through March 2006) as
well as diaspora remittances (estimated at over
$1 billion) will remain critical to keep the
economy afloat.
Workers in Haiti are guaranteed the right of
association. Unionization is protected by the
labor code. A legal minimum wage of 70 gourdes a
day (about U.S. $1.70) applies to most workers
in the formal sector.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Haiti is one of the original members of the
United Nations and several of its specialized
and related agencies, as well as a member of the
Organization of American States (OAS). It
maintains diplomatic relations with several
dozen countries.
The international community rallied to
Haiti's defense during the 1991-94 period of de
facto military rule. Thirty-one countries
participated in the U.S.-led multinational force
(MNF) which, acting under UN auspices,
intervened in September 1994 to help restore the
legitimate government and create a secure and
stable environment in Haiti. At its peak, the
MNF included roughly 21,000 troops, mostly
Americans, and more than 1,000 international
police monitors. Within 6 months, the troop
level was gradually reduced as the MNF
transitioned to a 6,000-strong peacekeeping
force, the UN Mission in Haiti (UNMIH). UNMIH
was charged with maintaining the secure
environment which the MNF had helped establish
as well as nurturing Haiti's new police force
through the presence of 900 police advisers. A
total of 38 countries participated in UNMIH.
To spur Haiti's social and economic recovery
from decades of misrule before that,
international donors pledged in 1994 to provide
more than $2 billion over five years in total
assistance. Most bilateral assistance is now
channeled through non-governmental
organizations. Major bilateral donors are led by
the United States, with the largest program, and
include Canada, the EU, France, Germany, Japan,
and Taiwan. Cuba provides highly visible,
low-cost medical and technical experts.
Multilateral aid is provided by the
Inter-American Development Bank (IDB),
International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and the
UN and its agencies. All aid is coordinated
informally by the World Bank.
In July 2004, $1.085 billion was pledged
through 2006 at the World Bank Donors’
Conference. Donors include the U.S., Canada, the
EU, France, Sweden, Spain, Germany, Japan,
Switzerland, Greece, Norway, Mexico, and
Ireland. The IDB and the World Bank pledged
multilateral aid. As of March 2006, $965 million
had been disbursed, mainly to address
humanitarian needs.
U.S.-HAITI RELATIONS
U.S. policy toward Haiti is designed to foster
and strengthen democracy; help alleviate
poverty, illiteracy, and malnutrition; promote
respect for human rights; and counter illegal
migration and drug trafficking. The U.S. also
supports and facilitates bilateral trade and
investment along with legal migration and
travel. U.S. policy goals are met through direct
bilateral action and by working with the
international community. The United States has
taken a leading role in organizing international
involvement with Haiti. The United States works
closely with the Organization of American States
(OAS; see "Key
OAS Issues"), particularly through the
Secretary General's "Friends of Haiti" group
(originally a UN group that included the U.S.,
Canada, France, Venezuela, Chile, Argentina
which was enlarged in 2001 to add Germany,
Spain, Norway, Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, and
The Bahamas), the Caribbean Community (CARICOM),
and individual countries to achieve policy
goals.
Maintaining good relations with and fostering
democracy in Haiti are important for many
reasons, not least of which is the country's
geographical proximity to the continental United
States. In addition to the many Haitians who
receive visas to immigrate into the U.S.
(averaging over 13,000 annually in FY
1999-2003), there is a flow of illegal migrants.
Over 100,000 undocumented Haitian migrants were
intercepted at sea by the U.S. Coast Guard in
the past two decades, particularly during the
1991-94 period of illegal military rule when
more than 67,000 migrants were interdicted.
Since the return of the legitimate government in
1994, the interdiction of illegal migrants by
U.S. Coast Guard vessels has decreased
dramatically, averaging fewer than 1,500
annually. Neighboring Caribbean countries,
particularly The Bahamas, continue to interdict
Haitian migrants as well. The prospect remains,
however, for the renewal of higher flows of
illegal migrants, particularly under conditions
of political unrest or further economic
downturn.
U.S. Economic and Development Assistance
Political insecurity and the failure of
Haiti's governments to invest in developing the
country's natural and human resources has
contributed significantly to the country's
current state of underdevelopment. U.S. efforts
to strengthen democracy and help build the
foundation for economic growth aim to rectify
this condition. The U.S. has been Haiti's
largest donor since 1973. Between FY 1995 and FY
2003, the U.S. contributed more than $850
million in assistance to Haiti. These funds have
been used to support programs that have
addressed a variety of problems. Among the
programs are:
- Food assistance (P.L. 480 Title II) for
nutritional well-being and food security,
especially children under five and nursing
mothers.
- Health: A US-supported network of over
30 local organizations serves 2.5 million
Haitians. In US-assisted areas, child
immunization rates are nearly double the
national average. Child malnutrition rates
fell from 32% to 22% in 1995-2000. The
national percentage of women seeking
prenatal consultation increased from 68% to
79%. The national contraceptive use rate
increased as part of our expanded AIDS
prevention program.
- Democracy: Programs increase political
party professionalism, strengthen
independent media and civil society
organizations, promote judicial reform and
human rights, and support independent
election observation groups. Public
diplomacy programs bring Haitian government
officials, journalists, and academics to the
U.S. to learn about U.S. public policies and
programs.
- Education: Programs increase pass rates
for second, third, and fourth grade students
through training for teachers, school
directors and parent-teacher associations,
improved instruction in math and Creole
reading, provision of books, teaching aids,
and curriculum guides.
- Economic Growth: Programs increase
income for the poor through small business
loans to urban micro-entrepreneurs;
assistance to small farmers in marketing
valuable export crops such as coffee, cacao,
and mangos; and help to Haitian artisans to
find niche export markets. Beneficiaries
include small entrepreneurs (80% women),
25,000 hillside farmers, and 2,000 artisans.
Since 2004, the U.S. has disbursed $352
million in assistance. These funds have been
provided in a variety of areas:
- Job Creation and Economic Growth
- Budget Support and Technical Assistance
to Haitian Government Ministries
- Security Improvement
- Health, Nutrition and Education
- Elections
In addition to financial support, the U.S.
provides human resources. U.S.
Peace Corps volunteers are largely focused
on health- and income-generation programs in
Haiti's rural areas. Many private U.S. citizens
travel regularly to Haiti or reside there for
extended periods to work on humanitarian
projects.
Haiti has been plagued for decades by
extremely high unemployment and underemployment.
The precipitous decline in urban assembly sector
jobs, from a high of 80,000 in 1986 to fewer
than 17,000 in 2006, exacerbated the scarcity of
jobs. To revitalize the economy, U.S. assistance
attempts to create opportunities for stable
sustainable employment for the growing
population, particularly in rural areas. More
recently, programs that help to increase
commercial bank lending to micro-enterprises,
especially in the agricultural sector, have
helped to create a significant number of jobs.
U.S. assistance is channeled primarily through
private voluntary agencies and contractors to
ensure efficient implementation of U.S.
assistance programs.
Combating Drug Trafficking
Haiti is a major transshipment point for South
American narcotics, primarily cocaine, being
sent to the United States. To counter this
threat, the U.S. has taken a number of steps,
including signing a counternarcotics letter of
agreement with the Government of Haiti in May
2002, vetting and training the counternarcotics
division of the Haitian National Police,
providing material assistance and training to
the Haitian Coast Guard for drug and migrant
interdiction, and obtaining the expulsion of
several traffickers under indictment in the
United States. Although Haiti did not meet
counternarcotics certification criteria the past
three years, the country was provided a waiver
of any sanctions on grounds of vital national
security interest.
U.S. Business Opportunities
The U.S. remains Haiti's largest trading
partner. Port-au-Prince is less than 2 hours by
air from Miami, with several daily direct
flights. A daily flight also connects
Port-au-Prince with New York, and a new
Port-au-Prince-Fort Lauderdale flight started in
2003. Both Port-au-Prince and Cap Haitien on the
north coast have deepwater port facilities. Many
Haitian entrepreneurs conduct business in
English, and U.S. currency circulates freely in
Haiti. A number of U.S. firms, including
commercial banks, telecommunications, airlines,
oil and agribusiness companies, and U.S.-owned
assembly plants are present in Haiti.
Further opportunities for U.S. businesses
include the development and trade of raw and
processed agricultural products; medical
supplies and equipment; rebuilding and
modernizing Haiti's depleted infrastructure ;
developing tourism and allied sectors--including
arts and crafts; and improving capacity in waste
disposal, transportation, energy,
telecommunications, and export assembly
operations. Haiti's primary assembly sector
inputs include textiles, electronics components,
and packaging materials. Other U.S. export
prospects include electronic machinery,
including power-generation, sound and television
equipment, plastics and paper, construction
materials, plumbing fixtures, hardware, and
lumber. Benefits for both Haitian and American
importers and exporters are available under the
Caribbean Basin Trade Partnership Act
(CBTPA)--which provides for duty-free export of
many Haitian products assembled from U.S.
components or materials--the successor program
to the Caribbean Basin Initiative.
U.S. export opportunities also exist for
four-wheel-drive vehicles, consumer electronics,
rice, wheat, flour, animal and vegetable fats,
meat, chicken, vegetables, and processed
foodstuffs. The Government of Haiti seeks to
reactivate and develop agricultural industries
where Haiti enjoys comparative advantages, among
which are essential oils, spices, fruits and
vegetables, and sisal. The government encourages
the inflow of new capital and technological
innovations. Additional information on business
opportunities in Haiti can be found at the
Country Commercial Guide for Haiti.
Establishing a Business
Individuals wishing to practice a trade in Haiti
must obtain an immigrant visa from a Haitian
Consulate and, in most cases, a government work
permit. Transient and resident traders must also
have a professional ID card.
Property restrictions still exist for foreign
individuals. Property rights of foreigners are
limited to 1.29 hectares in urban areas and 6.45
hectares in rural areas. No foreigner may own
more than one residence in the same district, or
own property or buildings near the border. To
own real estate, authorization from the Ministry
of Justice is necessary.
Hurdles for businesses in Haiti include poor
infrastructure, a high-cost port, an irregular
supply of electricity, and Customs delays. There
is little direct investment.
Foreign investment protection is provided by
the Haitian Constitution of 1987, which permits
expropriation of private property for public use
or land reform with payment in advance. American
firms enjoy free transfer of interest,
dividends, profits, and other revenues stemming
from their investments, and are guaranteed just
compensation paid in advance of expropriation,
as well as compensation in case of damages or
losses caused by war, revolution, or
insurrection. The U.S. and Haiti have a
bilateral agreement on investment guarantees
that permits the U.S. Overseas Private
Investment Corporation to offer programs in
Haiti. The two governments also signed a
bilateral investment treaty in December 1983,
but it was not ratified.
Additional information on establishing a
business in Haiti can be found at
www.export.gov, then to market research,
then Country Commercial Guides.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Janet
Sanderson
Deputy Chief of Mission--vacant
Consul General--Jay T. Smith
Public Affairs Officer--Ferial Saeed
USAID Director--vacant
The
U.S. Embassy in Haiti is located on 5, Harry
Truman Blvd., Port-au-Prince.