Official: Haiti to restore army despite resistance

Civilian volunteers trained by members of Haiti's dissolved army attend a press conference by former army soldiers in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Wednesday Nov. 9, 2011. Former and would-be soldiers criticized the administration of Haiti's President Michel Martelly after Martelly said his plans to revive the national army would instead be a "public security force." Photo: Ramon Espinosa / AP

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti

TRENTON DANIEL, Associated Press

(AP) — President Michel Martelly is going forward with a plan to restore his country’s disbanded army even though diplomats have told him their countries will not fund the project, a senior government official told The Associated Press.

Martelly recently met with diplomats, including representatives of the U.S., European Union and Brazil, who suggested shoring up the national police rather than devoting resources to an army, given its long history of human rights abuses. Martelly was not persuaded, the official said.

The president was somewhat dismissive when told by the diplomats that the international community would not pay for the new army. “He said, ‘Who asked you to pay for my army?,'” according to the official, who agreed to discuss the matter Thursday night only if not quoted by name because he was not authorized to talk publicly about the meeting.

The president plans to issue a decree Nov. 18 that will reinstate the army under the command of a former colonel and will ask hundreds of former soldiers to reapply, the official said.

The force will initially total about 500 soldiers intended to guard the borders, help fight drug trafficking, protect the country’s few remaining forests from illegal timber harvesting and help in natural disasters, the official said. It will take shape in June.

“We are going to act surely and slowly,” the official told AP. “We aren’t going to do anything in a hurry.”

Martelly, whose government relies on international aid to finance most of its activities, said at the meeting that he would find a way to raise the money for the military.

Both Martelly and his opponent in this year’s runoff election pledged to restore Haiti’s military, an idea that resonates with many Haitians who see such a force as a source of national pride, potential jobs and a way to keep order in a chaotic country. Some also see it as a replacement for the nearly 13,000 U.N. peacekeepers who came to Haiti after President Jean-Bertrand Aristide was ousted in 2004.

But it is also an idea that frightens many people inside and outside Haiti, where the army frequently inserted itself into politics and became a tool of repression.

Aristide disbanded the army in 1995, after he was ousted by a military coup in 1991 and then restored to power three years later with the help of the U.S. Former members of the military and political opponents assert that his decree was not valid because it violated the constitution.

Martelly’s administration said in a report sent to various embassies that it would need $95 million to launch its new military force.

The new plan, presented last month at the National Palace, carries a more modest, $25 million price tag. Martelly issued a statement Saturday calling it a “new public security force.”

The government plans to pay for the project by taking money from other government ministries. The army will be run by the Interior Ministry, the official said.

Each department will be required to pay between 1 percent to 5 percent of its budget, the official said. Inevitably, the bulk of that money will come from outside sources, which provide 60 percent to 70 percent of the government’s $2 billion budget.

Jon Piechowski, a spokesman for the U.S. Embassy, said in a statement that the United States, the Haitian government and other countries with embassies in Haiti agreed that the Haitian National Police, known by its acronym HNP, should be the center of foreign support instead of the army.

“The important thing here is that the U.S. and Haitian government and the rest of the international community are all in agreement that the HNP should remain the focal point of efforts to improve security and rule of law,” Piechowski wrote in an email.

Referring to the army as a “civil defense corps,” he said it would not detract from efforts to strengthen the police.

The police force, which has only 8,500 officers in a country of 10 million people, has been the focus of international efforts at reform.

One Martelly opponent said building a new army will come at the expense of the police.

“The president needs to stop pushing for the army and reinforce the national police,” said Sen. Moise Jean-Charles, a vocal critic of the president. “The police could provide security throughout the whole country.”

The date set for Martelly to announce the decree, Nov. 18, is a national holiday marking the last major fight between Haitian and French forces before Haiti secured its independence in 1804. He is expected to tell hundreds of former soldiers and their followers to stay calm.

In recent months, bands of ex-soldiers have been training camouflage-clad would-be recruits in the capital and countryside with the hopes of re-enlisting or securing a job, raising concerns among international officials and Martelly opponents like Jean-Charles that they could be used as private militias.

On Tuesday, Samson Chery, a former sergeant who has led several dozen soldiers in the hills above Port-au-Prince in weekly training exercises, met with government officials along with his colleagues.

He said Friday by telephone that he looked forward to the army’s official return.

“The minute the decree comes out we will wait for orders,” Chery said. “And we will march.”

Their eagerness to enlist, however, is of concern to Martelly, said the government official.

“This horrifies Martelly and he doesn’t condone this,” said the government official.

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4 thoughts on “Official: Haiti to restore army despite resistance

  1. If I recall correctly the first Haitian army was not built by international aid, actually t Europe and North America hated it! The Haitian millitary is a symbol of freedom fighthers for Hispaniola, south America, some contries of the carribbean, and America itself. The first “true” freedom figthers of the Americas. Oh yeah it was not base on money….. No. it was built by patriotic men who wanted freedom and a secure country. Lets do it! That is the only way to secure our “soveriegnty”, security, and pride also be disease free. PASS on the news my brothers and sisters!!!!!!!!!!!!

    1. Pardon me, but the “First Freedom Fighters of the Americas” would more accurately be the American Indians- Chinese travelers visited the area now known as USA 3,000 years ago, and were met by an organized resistance of natives that slaughtered a few hundred alongside a riverbank in Louisiana, USA. Long before Hispaniola was occupied by any visitors.

  2. What resistance – among the diplomatic community…that will not talk for attribution?

    More of Trenton Daniel/AP’s smoke and mirrors, relying on “unnamed sources” to promote their own warped propaganda…..that, when repeated often enough, becomes fact.

    He has repeated a lie – to the effect that Francois Nicola Duvalier is in Martelly’s cabinet….when this has absolutely no truth to it. Why does Trenton Daniel/AP wish to endanger this young man?

    Now Trenton Daniel/AP are peddling the garbage that the diplomatic community does not want the FAdH.

    The American and French embassies have both issued positive
    support for the FAdH revival, after the publishing of the AP nonsense.

    Someone should apply the existing Code Penal to Trenton Daniel/AP which makes a crime out of what these media people are doing.

  3. what came first the chicken or the egg? The point is not to spend time debating on transition words such as first or second we need to focus on an army that represent freedom fighters against slavery , abolitionist freedom fighters. that were acctually successful both their home and nations near by, and implementing political policies while leading a successful army containing both native indians and african slaves. The FIRST to be successful in a state/country form. Either way its repressent a beautiful symbol of freedom that can help us today with other issues.. Lets leave constructive comment alone, and the arguments for philosophy class. Leave transition words alone and how words are used alone, for one can ask what type of freedom we speak of? According to christians Jesus freed mankind long ago. So….. Who was first? What type of freedom are we talking about? God bless you all and much love.

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