by Kim Ives (Haiti Liberte)
Chile’s
President Michelle Bachelet visited Haiti this week ostensibly to discuss with
Haitian President Jovenel Moïse the future of United Nations troops in Haiti.
Since the deployment of the UN Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH) in June
2004, over 12,000 Chilean troops have been deployed in Haiti, Bachelet said.
Today, Chile has 392 soldiers and 41 police in Haiti, the second largest
contingent after Brazil’s 981 soldiers.
On Apr. 15, the UN Security Council
is likely to renew MINUSTAH’s mandate for a final six-month period, as
recommended by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres in a Mar. 16 report. Guterres proposed to the Council
“a staggered but complete withdrawal” of the 2,370 UN soldiers remaining in
Haiti to be replaced by a new mission of 295 UN police officers which would
“support political stability, [and] good governance, including electoral
oversight and reform.” There are now about 844 UN police officers in Haiti,
bringing the current MINUSTAH armed force to over 3,200.
In short, after MINUSTAH’s Oct. 15
end, a reduced, renamed mission would remain, on behalf of the U.S., Canada,
and France primarily, to “monitor and exercise an early warning function”
against any anti-imperialist political developments in Haiti (of course,
Guterres used the euphemism “for conflict prevention, human rights and rule of
law issues”).
However, the day after Bachelet met
with Moïse on Mar. 27, the Organization of American States (OAS) convened an
extraordinary session at its Washington, DC headquarters on whether to sanction
Venezuela for what OAS Secretary General Luis Almagro says is Venezuela’s
“violation of every article in the Inter-American Democratic Charter.” In a Mar. 14 report, Almagro stepped up his years-long
campaign to invoke the OAS’s sovereignty-smashing “Democratic Charter” to expel Venezuela from the
body, as happened to Cuba after its 1959 revolution.