‘Haiti Betrayed,’ an Incisive Account of an Imperial Triadâs Efforts to Throttle Haitian Democracy

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“Without the intervention of Canada, France, and the United States,â explained Serge Bouchereau, a Montreal-based Haitian democracy activist, âthe Haitian elite could never have reversed the democratic process in which the Haitian people were engaged,â referring to the 2004 coup dâĂŠtat which overthrew duly elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.
Award-winning Canadian filmmaker Elaine Brière, the writer, director, producer, and principal cinematographer of âHaiti Betrayed,â methodically and artfully proves this statement in this powerful feature documentary, which debuts online this week.
Interweaving interviews of Haitian and North American activists, scholars, lawyers, journalists, and aid workers with stunning original and archival footage, Brière makes a concise but thorough and devastating analysis of the last four decades of Haitian history and the collusion between Washington, Ottawa, and Paris in Haitiâs domination and exploitation.
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She also demonstrates clearly how the troika hoisted neo-Duvalierist politicians Michel âSweet Mickyâ Martelly and Jovenel âBanana Manâ MoĂŻse to power in 2011 and 2016, effectively setting back the Haitian peopleâs march toward democracy and sovereignty.
âWe got the freedom from slavery,â concluded the late Haitian democracy activist, icon, and intellectual Patrick Ălie at the end of the film, speaking of Haitiâs 1791-1804 independence war to attain the French revolutionary ideals of âLibertĂŠ, EgalitĂŠ, FraternitĂŠâ (Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood). âBut the rest, we didnât get, and the cry for democracy now is the new definition of the old Haitian dream.â
The film highlights Canadaâs evolution from good cop to bad cop in its relationship to Haiti over the past 30 years. âI think that the establishment of the United States has a kind of accord with the establishment of Canada,â explained former Haitian political prisoner and human rights activist Bobby Duval, âwhere Canada is going to play more of a front role of trying to⌠dominate this country [Haiti]⌠and bring it into line.â
Brière examines the emergence of the Duvalier dictatorship, Jean-Claude Duvalierâs fall in 1986, Aristideâs emergence in 1990, the United Nationsâ military occupation force known as MINUSTAH, the 2010 earthquake, the cholera epidemic, and the 1991 and 2004 military coups with gritty, moving images which cry out about the Haitian peopleâs humanity and the inhumanity to which theyâve been subjected.
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But the film is never shrill or harping. Its force lies in understatement and the eloquence of its footage, analysis, and interviewees. Excellent editing and music with searing photos by Brière (also a photojournalist), Maggie Steber, Darren Ell, and Donna Decesaire all combine to deliver a powerful emotional punch.
Some of the documentaryâs most jaw-dropping lines are uttered by its villains, Haitian bourgeoisie spokesmen like RĂŠginald Boulos and Andy Apaid, or their vassals, putschistârebelâ leaders Guy Philippe and Paul Arcelin.
âHaitians are very, very smart people,â says Charles Henri Baker, an assembly industry magnate and a 2004 coup leader. âThey know they want to be like me.â
Brière also pulls back the curtain on the nefarious role played by sacrosanct NGOs like Oxfam, AQOCI, and Development and Peace in the 2004 coup. âBecause you had Canadian organizations which had a good reputation, that silenced a lot of the critics within the human rights movement, within the pro-democracy movement, and progressive organizations around the world,â explained human rights lawyer Brian Concannon, Jr., one of the filmâs principal voices.
âHaiti Betrayedâ is the latest in and makes an important contribution to a growing sub-genre of documentaries which address the coups of the past tumultuous three decades of Haitian history, like âKilling the Dream,â âRezistans,â âWe Must Kill the Bandits,â and âAristide and the Endless Revolution.â
But with the apparent end of the Trump era and the return of neo-liberal globalists to power in Washington, the film, with its focus on second-fiddle Canada, is exceptionally instructive and timely in understanding the mechanics of inter-imperialist collaboration, usually with UN assistance, in crushing popular uprisings like that which began in Haiti in 1986. As a forerunner of many conflicts and rebellions, Haiti has been a laboratory for this new era of multilateral or âcoalitionâ interventions in many other theaters, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia, and the former Yugoslavia.
For these reasons, âHaiti Betrayedâ is an indispensable tool for those who wish to understand the challenges facing not only the Haitian people, but struggling masses the world over.
To mark the 17th anniversary of Haitiâs 2004 coup dâĂŠtat, âHaiti Betrayedâ will be screened for free online on Feb. 28, 2021 at 7:30 p.m. EST, followed by a panel discussion with the filmmaker and special guests. Register at: foreignpolicy.ca/HaitiBetrayed
Featured image: A Canadian military helicopter flying over Haitiâs National Palace before the Jan. 12, 2010 earthquake.
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