If you are having trouble viewing this message, go here: [link removed]
 
The Intolerable Role of the United States in Haiti
By Kim Lamberty
Haiti's capital has shut down. With gangs in control, the airport is closed, roads are blocked and the de facto prime minster is stuck in Puerto Rico.
It did not have to end this way. For two years Haitians, Haitian-Americans and the Haiti solidarity community, including Quixote Center, have been working tirelessly to convince the U.S. government to end its support for Haiti's illegitimate de facto prime minister, Ariel Henry. To step aside and allow Haitians to determine their own path back to democracy. Their response: there are no other options and his resignation would lead to even more chaos.
Now we see that Henry's refusal to step down is what has led to chaos, and apparently our government is most concerned it will lead to even greater numbers of Haitians fleeing the country.([link removed]) Our government is worried about a migration crisis that it has caused.
Haitian civil society groups have been working with CARICOM mediators to negotiate an end to Henry's illegitimate regime and a process of transition to elections. The stalemate happened because Henry refused to step down and the United States supported the decision. The U.S. bet on the wrong guy. They should have placed their confidence in the Haitian people.
Violent criminal gangs are in charge because the U.S. has looked the other way while transnational cartels, taking advantage of our weak gun laws, traffic small arms and ammunition out of Miami and New York and into Haiti.
While all of this has been happening, citing security reasons, the U.S. ended its mango export contract with Haiti, putting 300,000 small farmers out of business. During this same period our government has made it increasingly difficult to export coffee out of Haiti.
Of course people are trying to leave. The conditions are unlivable. And when they do, many are forced to travel across the Caribbean and through Panama's treacherous Darien Gap, also controlled by criminal gangs, where they may or may not survive the ordeal. If they are lucky, they may make it all the way up to the U.S. border with Mexico, where they are threatened with detention and deportation back to Haiti.
Our government's policy toward Haiti is criminal.
 
Ways to Take Action:
 
Take Action for Peace in Haiti
([link removed])Join us ([link removed]) in fighting to stop the gun running to Haiti by asking your Representative to co-sponsor the U.S.-Caribbean Strategic Engagement Act of 2023. Armed gangs have taken control of most of Haiti, and the violence is devastating: 600 people died in Port-au-Prince in April of 2023 alone. The gangs can expand and maintain power because they are highly armed, and the U.S. is a major source of these weapons.
Click the link below to send a message to your Representative urging them to support the bill!
If your member of Congress is one of the co-sponsors listed HERE ([link removed]), we ask that you instead send a thank-you message.
Send Message ([link removed])
 
Forward to a Friend:
[link removed]
Unsubscribe:
[link removed]
Email Privacy Policy:
[link removed]
Update Profile:
[link removed]
PO Box 1950 Greenbelt, MD 20770