Tentative calm brings optimism to a ‘failed’ Haiti
While the country remains desperately poor, it is more peaceful than it has been in years – no small feat in a place with a volatile political history. Some of the credit goes to the United Nations and President Rene Preval.
A few years ago, the authority of the state did not extend much beyond Port-au-Prince, where armed gangs controlled neighborhoods. Since the inauguration of Mr. Preval in May 2006, however, a fragile calm has prevailed.
The capital’s boisterous population again feels safe enough to patronize downtown bars and kerosine-lit roadside stands late into the evening. Billboards that once extolled the infallibility of a succession of “maximum leaders” now carry messages about the importance of respect between the population and the police as well as decry discrimination against the disabled.
Ruled by priest-turned-president Jean-Bertrand Aristide twice in the 1990s and from 2001 until his ouster in February 2004, Haiti saw violent urban warfare between heavily armed Aristide partisans and security forces, who inflicted collective punishment under an interim government in power from 2004 until Mr. Preval’s inauguration.
Working with a 9,000-member U.N. peacekeeping mission, known by the acronym MINUSTAH, Haiti’s government has made great strides in recent months in professionalizing security forces that were historically brutal and corrupt.
“The capacity of the police has improved quite significantly … and the image of the police has begun to change within the society,” says Hedi Annabi, a Tunisian diplomat who heads MINUSTAH.
“The level of respect for basic freedoms, such as freedom of the press, is at a historically remarkable level,” he said.
[More]
Popularity: 11% [?]







Male, retired and the rest is of little interest to anyone. The site keeps me busy and if it helps others to stay abreast of daily events then my time is well spent.