On the night of 28 February, the Haitian president, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was forced from power. He claimed he'd been kidnapped and didn't know where he was being taken until, at the end of a 20-hour flight, he was told that he and his wife would be landing 'in a French military base in the middle of Africa'. He found himself in the Central African Republic.
An understanding of the current crisis requires a sense of Haiti's history. In the 18th century it became France's most valuable colonial possession, and one of the most brutally efficient slave colonies there has ever been. Santo Domingo, as it was then called, was the leading port of call for slave ships: on the eve of the French Revolution, it was supplying two-thirds of all of Europe's tropical produce. A third of new arrivals died within a few years.
LRB 15 April 2004 | PDF Download
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