Colette Lespinasse discusses pre-existing governance and human rights issues in disaster-stricken Haiti. She addresses the recent earthquake and cholera outbreak, as well as her work with migrants on the Haitian-Dominican border.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: Welcome to Global Ethics Forum. I'm Julia Taylor Kennedy,
here with Colette Lespinasse, to talk about her work on human rights in Haiti.
Lespinasse has been an advocate of social issues since the 1980s, when she hosted
a radio show critical of the dictator Duvalier.
Today her organization, Group
of Support to Returnees and Refugees [Groupe d'Appui aux Repartiés
et Réfugiés], works to bring services to the Haitian
diaspora, particularly to Haitians in the Dominican Republic. In the aftermath
of the Haitian earthquake, Lespinasse has spoken out for the human right of
a home for victims.
Colette Lespinasse, welcome to Global Ethics Forum.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Thank you, Julia, for having me here.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: It's a pleasure.
Let's start with the latest news from Haiti, which is very sad—the earthquake
and the recent cholera
outbreak. What's your assessment of Haiti's recovery from these disasters?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: You didn't mention hurricane
Tomas. It's another one.
We have gone from disaster to disaster since the beginning of 2010. It's
very hard for people to recover, because it goes from problems to other problems.
At the same time, we don't have strong leadership from the Haitian government, which should take the needs of the population and bring solutions to them. Until now, we have the support of some international organizations
and some national organizations, but there is a big gap in coordination. That's
why it's very difficult for the people to recover from these problems.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: Soon after the earthquake, a lot of the nongovernmental
community here in the States was saying, "There's a silver lining, because
this is a chance to make Haiti an example of a place where we can build a recovery
and show how coordination can happen."
What do you think got in the way of accomplishing that?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: First of all, it's the leadership. Even though you
have the support of many international organizations, you need first to have
Haitian leadership and involve the Haitian population, government, and organizations.
One of the problems is that many international organizations come and work by
themselves. They don't try to better understand the culture, the practice, and
the organizations of the country. At the same time, the Haitian state had many
difficulties that became worse after the
earthquake. They didn't really take this opportunity to make all the organizations
work together.
An international organization can bring support, but it cannot replace the state.
You need the state to organize the society and the country. This is the problem
in Haiti now.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: There is a movement within development to look for
more bottom-up approaches rather than the top-down approaches. You have just
been describing international organizations coming in to Haiti and dictating how the
money will be spent. It seems that in Haiti it's very difficult to have those
bottom-up approaches because there isn't a state overseeing a grassroots movement.
Do you think it's really at the state level that this needs to happen, or can
NGOs within Haiti become more empowered to be serving the population well? Where
does it have to come from?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: It has to come from different levels, but
the organizations and the states have to change strategies. We have a situation
in Haiti, that since the country's beginning, it has been built on exclusion.
We always had people that have been excluded from all spaces of decisions—for
example, women, peasants, and those working in agriculture.
When organizations come to the country, they have to try to understand this
structure and the story that is behind it. It's not that civil society is not organized.
You have very well-organized people in different areas—for example, those
who are working in agriculture and women. You have young people. You have people
with disabilities. But the big problem is how to have their voices go to the
spaces where decisions are made.
Most of the time when the international organizations come, they just work on
the same basis that was in place in the country, so they never get really in
touch with the real population. We saw that after the earthquake they came becuase
it was an emergency. That we can understand, because after the earthquake
we needed to bring care to people. We had to bring them water and food. But
you can't do that forever.
The organizations come with everything. They come with their personnel and don't
even talk with the Haitian organizations. That's why it was very difficult for
many of them to reach the people. If they took just a little moment to talk
with us, we could have helped—instead of doing it like that, don't do
it like that—because we know the people. We know the culture. We know
where they are. We know what they think.
The participation of the Haitian population has to be part of the strategy of
rebuilding. When they prepared this international
conference in New York, they didn't even talk to the Haitian population. We were trying to have a meeting with the government so that it could
present us with the plan that they were going to discuss. At the end, we got that,
but the government didn't show up. They just sent some people that didn't have
any possibility of making any decision. It was very clear that they had already
made their document and they wouldn't go back on that.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: So it wasn't a dialogue.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Exactly. It wasn't a dialogue.
If people want to really help Haiti, Haitian organizations in different areas
should be part of the discussions; the women should be part of discussions
that are taking place.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: Let's talk a little bit about your particular organization
and your work on the border between the Dominican Republic and Haiti. First,
let's have a little bit of background, just in case people don't know about
the relationship between the two nations.
What has been the historical relationship between the Dominican Republic and
Haiti?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: It's a history that is a bit difficult because the
Dominican Republic is the only country in the region that took its independence,
not from a European colony, but from Haiti. It is a country that is close to
it; we share a small island. What we call patriotism in the Dominican Republic
was based against Haitianism.
I don't know if you understand that. It's something that happens in other countries.
For example, I know, as we took our independence from France, that Americans had some
kind of feeling about it.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: Resentment, almost.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Exactly. This is the start.
The second one is that after independence—it wasn't the Dominican Republic
at that time; it was the Spanish part of the island—the Haitians had
a strategy to occupy the whole island in order to prevent the French
from going back, because most of them went to the Spanish part.
When the Dominicans
took their independence from Haiti, they felt that they were closer to Spain
than to Haiti. Haiti had declared that it was a black country, and all people
who are living in Haiti are black. In the meantime, when the Domincans took
their independence, they decided that they were closest to Spain, and they don't
have anything to do with the African—
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: This is the Dominicans.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Exactly. So we have this cultural struggle. It's a very
mixed Dominican population. They feel they don't have African roots, which is
black Haitian.
The third problem is when the Haitians started to go to the Dominican Republic
to work at the beginning of the 20th century.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: The 1900s.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Exactly. We started to have a Haitian population,
with their descendants, on the other side of the island. The Dominicans considered
that another movement by Haitians to occupy them. So they discriminate against the Haitians who are living in the Dominican Republic
and their descendants. That's why they never let those people have Dominican
nationality. They cannot hold some positions in the country, in this political
situation. And you have a conflict. They consider the migrants as invaders,
not as economic agents that are looking for a better life.
These are the problems, and that's why we have these kinds of difficulty.
During those 20, 30 years, many organizations in Haiti and the Dominican Republic
tried to work in order to have people come together to better understand the
history, because politicians are using this history to keep people apart. We
are trying to bring them together. But we have to do this in a just manner.
My organization works so that Dominicans can understand why
the Haitian migrants go there. It's the same as why they come to the United States.
There are many Dominicans that are migrants.
We try to work with Dominican migrant organizations. We try to work with
Dominicans who are working on human rights and migrant rights, and to have the society better understand what has happened and to build a better relationship between
both countries.
It's not easy, because you have some areas where politicians use migration issues
to have people be apart.
After the earthquake, some people started thinking differently about these relationships.
The Dominicans say, "We are living on the same island and we are exposed
to the same risks. We have many things together. It's time to look for another
way."
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: That's interesting. So you have seen more openness to
collaboration since the earthquake?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Yes.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: What are some of the challenges that Haitian migrants
face when they go to the Dominican Republic to work?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: One of the big challenges is racial discrimination,
not only against Haitian migrants, but against Dominicans that are black. That
means a migrant won't have access to some services and to justice because he's
black and Haitian.
Another challenge is that most Haitian migrants don't have their legal documents,
because they went to the Dominican Republic based on some agreements that
the countries had together at the time, or afterwards through smuggling networks.
If you don't have documents, you will have many problems. For example,
you don't have freedom of movement, because there are checks in different places.
That means some people cannot go to another place to look for another job if
they are not lucky with the job they have. It's a big problem.
Some people—for example, women that are pregnant or that have children—it's
very difficult for them to go to a health center, because they cannot move.
Even if you go to the center, if you don't have your papers, they won't take
care of you.
There are many human rights problems.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: When Haitian migrants in the Dominican Republic confront
these problems, do they try to return to Haiti—for medical services, for
example—or is too hard to cross the border and they remain in the Dominican
Republic?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Because of the political and economic situation in Haiti,
most of them stay in the Dominican Republic. But in a very bad situation, they
will try to work in places where they cannot get a good wage. Sometimes
they will face repatriation.
I work with a group and what happens many times is that when they come back to Haiti, it is because of what are called redadas [raids]. That means the army or the police
will come and pick Haitians up and bring them to the border. Sometimes they go to places where Haitians are working, because there are some companies that use
those workers because the economic system needs them. They can go to a plantation.
They can go to a construction site. They can arrest many people and just bring
them to the border. Sometimes they do that on payday, after they share
the money, and the workers lose the money.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: They share the money with the employer?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: Exactly. The military and some companies are very corrupt,
so there are threats against the workers. We also have smuggling networks,
because some people have to go back to see their families. All the networks
across the border rely on people who don't have documents, but who want to move
anyway, and so they get paid to let them pass.
Last week we had an accident where one person died and there were many injured.
They were people that were trying to go to the Dominican Republic without documents.
We have many cases of accidents and people that get fired.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: So your role is when this redada happens and they
are sent back to Haiti, you help provide services for these migrants that are
returning. What kinds of services do you try to provide?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: We have some that we call humanitarian assistance.
Most of the time migrants arrive at the border in the evening, and they are
people who are going very far. If you get to the border and you are going to the south of the country, that means one to two days of traveling.
People get lost because they don't know where they are as they don't know the border area.
Even though there is a repatriation agreement, the Dominicans don't respect
it. They can bring people whenever they want. They don't inform the Haitian
government.
Our work is to welcome those people and help them have a place to spend the
night. Sometimes they are very hungry, because they didn't eat. They don't have
money. Most of the time they [the army or police] take all they have. These are bad conditions.
We find food and clothes to give them, and a place to spend the night. After
that, sometimes we have to document some very grave cases in order to bring
these for advocacy and denunciation. If they are sick, sometimes we can bring
them to a health center and give them support to continue and transportation
to go home.
Our main work is advocacy. We take cases and try to discuss them with the government
so that they can look for solutions for problems. We have some proposals
that we have prepared that we share with the government. We work together with
Dominican organizations. For example, both countries have signed what they call
an agreement to have a mixed commission that can deal with all of these problems.
We try to bring our advocacy to the inside of this commission so that they can look for
solutions for people who have been living in the Dominican Republic for a long time. It is a recruitment issue, because the Dominican Republic still needs these workers and
Haiti needs employment for people. So why don't they make an agreement?
We are trying on all of those issues at the same time.
We have another program. It's for reinsertion, so that we can help people who
come back and want to stay here, so that they can be reintegrated into their
communities.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: How did you come to this work? How did you decide to
work on these issues of repatriation?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: In the 1980s, I was part of a group that focused on
the relationship between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Some Haitians and
Dominicans said, "We share the same island. We don't have good relationships.
Let's do something to get to know each other better and to change this."
We started to have a program that we called Exchange and Solidarity between
Haiti and the Dominican Republic. Every year we have a Haitian group that goes
to the Dominican Republic. They have some organizations and friends that welcome
them. They spend a month with families and learn Spanish. They learn about the
country and the culture. We will do the same with a Dominican group. We started
this in 1982. I was one of the first groups that went there.
In 1981, for the first time, the Dominican government made a big deportation.
More than 80,000 persons were deported. At that moment, we decided to create
GARR in order to work on the migration issue, because it is a big problem.
If we don't deal with it, even though you have a lot of efforts to bring
people together to have a better relationship, the migration issue is something
that always stays between us. We have to work on that, bring more justice, and
denounce unjust situations. That's why I started working—
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: Almost 30 years now.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: I was part of the board. After that, I came to coordinate
the executive office, and the same time I worked to bring people together.
We said, if we don't work for justice, we will never have peace. You cannot
be my neighbor and have good relations if I know that there is a lot of discrimination and injustice against certain people. There are some Dominicans
that share this view too.
At the border, we support different grassroots organizations to make a
network of Haitian and Dominican human rights organizations that deals with issues at the border. For example,
they make money working together at the marketplace so that they can produce
information and reports about what is happening at the border. Whenever we have
those kinds of repatriations, they will be the first persons who are living there in
the communities that will welcome the people who are being repatriated.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: What kind of perspective have you gained in the time that
you've been here in New York?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: I'm taking a class on oral history. I would like
to use those tools to record some stories from repatriated people and migrants, but also
from people who survived the earthquake. We can lose many things if we don't
keep the memory of the city and country before and after the earthquake, because
many many things have changed. We have lost many places and buildings that have a
big story behind them. I'm afraid we will lose all of this.
At the same time, there is a big part of the country that doesn't realize what
really happened in the capital, because they didn't have the opportunity to
travel and they don't have access to TV. They heard about an earthquake. Some
people described a little about what happened on the radio or when they go to their
communities, but if you didn't see it with your own eyes, then you don't realize.
I would like to record some stories and have them kept in one place, and go
around the country and tell people about the earthquake and make
people understand what happened and the need to build up the country differently
and to manage the risk. We are living on an island that will face not only earthquakes
but also other types of disasters in the future.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: How have you maintained your passion for this type
of work? I can imagine it's quite frustrating at times to be working on these
issues and not see change the way you would like to. How do you keep with it
and keep positive?
COLETTE LESPINASSE: It's very difficult to understand. I cannot really
work without passion. Even though we don't have big changes at the macro level,
you can see some little changes at the micro level. It gives you faith and strength
to continue.
JULIA TAYLOR KENNEDY: Colette Lespinasse, thank you so much for joining me
on Global Ethics Forum.
COLETTE LESPINASSE: It was a pleasure for me to be here.
Update, January 20, 2011: Ms. Lespinasse is now back in Haiti and commented from there by email on former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier's unexpected return to Haiti on January 16:
"This return complicated [Haiti's] political situation, which was already very bad. At the same time, it offers us the possibility to address some challenges like impunity, corruption and the need for the country to adopt democratic values based on the respect of human rights."