Wikileaks releases secret cables about Haiti

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M. Spector M. Spector's picture
Wikileaks releases secret cables about Haiti

Haiti Liberté to Begin Releasing This Week Secret U.S. Embassy Cables Provided by WikiLeaks

[press release]

The weekly Haïti Liberté begins publishing a series of exclusive articles which will draw from 1,918 secret diplomatic cables about Haiti from U.S. Embassies around the world in its June 1 edition. The cables were obtained by the transparency-advocacy group WikiLeaks and made available to Haïti Liberté. The articles will be published in print and on the web at: http://www.haitiliberte.com .

[b]The cables cover an almost seven-year period from Apr. 17, 2003, ten months before the Feb. 29, 2004 coup d'état which ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, to Feb. 28, 2010, just after the Jan. 12 earthquake[/b] that devastated the capital, Port-au-Prince, and surrounding cities. "Haïti Liberté is publishing these cables because they offer [b]unparalleled insight into how the United States government has tried to manipulate Haitian affairs in its own interests, not in the interests of the Haitian people[/b]," said Berthony Dupont, Haïti Liberté's director.

"We hope that the release of the cables will help bring about some transparency and accountability for the Haitian people."

The cables range from "Secret" and "Confidential" classification to "Unclassified." Cables of the latter classification are not public, and many remain marked "For Official Use Only" or "Sensitive." The cables cover official U.S. strategies and maneuvering in Haiti during the coup years (2004-2006) and the period after President René Préval's election (2006-2010). [b]We see Washington's obsession with keeping Aristide out of Haiti and the hemisphere, the microscope it trained on the democratic Lavalas movement, the relentless focus on rebellious shanty towns like Cité Soleil and Bel Air, and Washington's tight supervision of Haiti's police leadership and of the United Nation's 9,000-man military occupation known as the UN Mission to Stabilize Haiti (MINUSTAH).[/b]

This coming week's article will examine how Washington tried to torpedo implementation of the PetroCaribe oil agreement between Venezuela and Haiti, a struggle which frayed the U.S. relationship with President Préval. Future articles will deal with Washington's backing of assembly industry owners in their fight against raising the minimum wage and how it militarized aid to Haiti after the 2010 earthquake. [b]The cables offer many clues as to how Washington brought Haiti from the paramilitary and Special Forces coup of 2004 to the electoral coup that installed the neo-Duvalierist Michel Martelly in 2011[/b].

NDPP

Thanks MS. These will be most interesting.

contrarianna

Quote:
WikiLeaks Haiti: The Nation Partners With Haïti Liberté on Release of Secret Haiti Cables
The Editors
June 1, 2011   

Drawing from a trove of 1,918 Haiti-related diplomatic cables obtained by the transparency-advocacy group WikiLeaks, The Nation is collaborating with the Haitian weekly newspaper Haïti Liberté on a series of groundbreaking articles about US and UN policy toward the Caribbean nation....

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WikiLeaks Haiti: Let Them Live on $3/Day (Foreign Policy, Sweatshops, World)

The US Embassy aided Levi’s, Hanes contractors in their fight against an increase in Haiti’s minimum wage.
The Nation
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WikiLeaks Haiti: The PetroCaribe Files (Foreign Policy, World)

How the US tried—and failed—to scuttle a Venezuelan oil deal even though it would bring huge benefits to Haiti's impoverished people.
Dan Coughlin and Kim Ives
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On Background: From WikiLeaks to WikiHaiti (Media, World)

Now that WikiLeaks is collaborating with media organizations across the globe, a huge trove of previously-unpublished State Department cables are coming to light.
Greg Mitchell

http://www.thenation.com/article/161009/wikihaiti-nation-partners-haiti-...