FROM IRAN TO HAITI, THE HYPOCRISY OF THE WESTERN POWERS
by Berthony Dupont
Subversion and destructive violence are rampant in Iran, aimed at destroying the peace and independence of the Iranian revolution. This trouble is fomented by Western imperialism which wants to cast doubt on Iran's recent election results. U.S. President Barack Obama has found nothing better to say to the Iranian government than "the world is watching." Venezuela's Hugo Chavez, in contrast, said: "We ask the world to respect Iran because some are trying to undermine the stronghold of the Iranian revolution."
This is not the first time that the so-called "international community" has
used electoral violence to destabilize a country. We will never forget the
attacks on the elections of May 21, 2000 and November 26, 2000 in Haiti,
where opposition parties including the OPL, the MPSN, MOCHRENA, RDNP, PADEM,
and the MDN formed the Democratic Convergence and on February 6, 2001
proclaimed G?rard Gourgue provisional president, while the next day,
February 7, Jean Bertrand Aristide was to be sworn in as the President
constitutionally elected by the people. We know all the fuss the
"international community" made to sabotage our nation, which it still
militarily occupies.
Today in Iran, Western imperialism calls to "verify the expressed will of
the people." What a great idea! Since when has the "international community"
paid attention to the people's will and respected their choice? Look what
had happened in Mexico during the 2006 presidential elections with the two
leading candidates Felipe Calder?n Hinojosa and Andr?s Manuel L?pez Obrador.
More than two million people protested for more than three months in the
streets of Mexico against Calder?n's electoral coup. At the time, the West
did not feel compelled to "verify the expressed will of the people" of
Mexico.
On April 19 and June 21, 2009, the Haitian people clearly and peacefully
expressed their will by massively boycotting Pr?val's rigged elections.
Worse yet, the masses were excluded from the outset. What was the
international community's reaction? It was pleased with the vote and
welcomed the fact that these elections were conducted peacefully in all of
Haiti's geographic departments.
There are events which by themselves forever mark an era, either because of
their importance or because of the profound changes they herald. The Iranian
crisis should be for us in the Haitian popular and progressive sector an
indicator, a guide, for the transformation of our overall strategy, because
class struggle is the only dynamic, rational and historically correct
approach to defeat the maneuvers of the imperialist powers.
Thus during the student demonstrations to force the bourgeoisie and Pr?val
to publish the minimum wage law, the UN occupation force's soldiers fired at
the students, killing one. At the funeral of the progressive Lavalas priest,
Father G?rard Jean-Juste, MINUSTAH soldiers repeated the crime by killing a
young man from Solino. What is the message, the link between these two
crimes? What is the lesson we should draw? It is that one cannot separate
the struggle of the students from the struggle of the masses. They are one.
The struggle for change and national liberation is the struggle of all
progressive forces of the people.
The aim and tactic of the imperialists is to neutralize, to paralyze us, to
break the resistance of the dominated classes. In this sense, to avoid the
mistakes of 2004, where Apaid, Baker and the other agents, instruments,
allies, partners or agents of imperialism infiltrated the students, it is
now essential and even vital, in this phase, to strengthen our solidarity
and our class cohesion to combat the common enemy.
>From all appearances, the situation is moving towards a confrontation which
which will effect all the people. A crisis is deepening in the State
University; many Lavalas supporters still languish in Pr?val's jail;
modern-day slave drivers, led by Pr?val, want to maintain slave wages; in
the February 2004 coup d'?tat, then-President Jean Bertrand Aristide was
arrested by Western imperialists just as their colonialist ancestors
kidnapped Taino Indian leader Caonabo and anti-slavery revolutionary leader
Toussaint Louverture. In order to save this country, a unity of the forces
for change is needed among Haiti's progressive and democratic forces against
the common enemy of the masses.
By the force of events, we are all called on to take responsibility. We
remain confident that the vigilance of revolutionary and progressive forces
will defeat the dark machinations and shenanigans of the people's main
enemy.