Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Tourism is Not Development: Haiti, Liberate Yourself!
Ezili Danto
04 Mar 2014
🖨️ Print Article

by Ezili Dantò

As part of the rationale for stealing Haiti’s sovereignty, the U.S., Canada and France point to Jamaica and the neighboring Dominican Republic as countries that have benefited from the tourist trade. “But there's more violence and crime in these countries than in Haiti. Their people own less land than Haitians.” That’s why the enslavers have come to take Haiti’s land.

 

Tourism is Not Development: Haiti, Liberate Yourself!

by Ezili Dantò

“We must kick out the US occupational forces out of Haiti first and get our sovereignty back.”

A job as a maid, butler, busboy, cashier or sexual receptacles for Northern tourists will not create wealth for Haiti. The international hotel chains circulate little of their profits and capital in the Caribbean countries their in. The tourists mostly spend the bulk of their monies in their own countries. Paying travel fees to the international airlines, car rental chains, hotel chains, international vacation package chains. What's left to spend in Haiti is for small arts and crafts, which is also now big business as the internationals discourage the locals from littering their pristine hotel gift stores.

Haiti wants the world to come and see its riches, but that would be another, more Haitian interaction with foreigners – an interaction that preserves and protects local Haitian interests, values and dignity. This means we must kick out the US occupational forces out of Haiti first and get our sovereignty back first. First things first.

The Western tourism template doesn't work for a free Haiti. Like US sweatshops, it does nothing to help with what Haiti really needs, which is more local production, local manufacturing, local agriculture, local distribution, local industries run by local Haitians.

“The DR is fourth in the world for prostitution trafficking.”

Responding directly to a guy that spewed the colonial line on Haiti, I said:

“The Dominican Republic is the biggest tourist location in the Caribbean and every other week you’ve got Dominicans getting in dangerous boats to get to Puerto Rico so they can say they’re Americans and get out of the DR, find work, school and a better life in the United States and elsewhere.”

The Dominican Republic is the biggest tourist location in the Caribbean but this tourism is unabashedly sexual tourism. Dominican women have to sell themselves to feed their families. The DR is fourth in the world for prostitution trafficking.

Is that what you're calling development?

If tourism is “development” for the DR, how do you explain the women that are leaving the DR to go sell themselves all over the world, how do you explain Dominicans taking boats to go to Puerto Rico and past themselves off as Puerto Ricans in order to get to the US? So many of the DR people are going to work in Haiti as prostitutes. DR women and now more and more Eastern women people the upscale brothels in the Haiti. If tourism is so good in DR why are all the construction workers in Haiti Dominicans who can't find life and work in their own country?

“The Dominican Republic would not be able to oppress its masses without the 70,000, mostly US-trained military.”

Perhaps, life in Haiti is not as bad as the international gangsters with less IMF/WB grip on it than they have in the DR, Jamaica, Bahamas, et al. 

The "Life and Debt" documentary on the Jamaica situation illustrates why tourism is not development for local Haitians. It shows why tourism, an export economy, sweatshops and privatization of pubic assets are not development for Haiti, Africa, the Caribbean. The Dominican Republic would not be able to oppress its masses this way without the 70,000, mostly US-trained military, running around daily silencing protest, protecting filthy, perverted resorts and communes hiding pathology. Protecting the one percent there – the local overseers servicing the international bankers and warmongers ruling our planet.

Only this force, along with the IMF/WB economic hit men’s death policies, keeps the people in the DR, in the entire Caribbean, from taking back their coastlines and sovereignty. 

Jamaica, like the Dominican Republic, is a tourist haven. But there's more violence and crime in these countries than in Haiti. Their people own less land than Haitians. The land is what the enslavers have come to take in Haiti. That's why the UN is there and not in the Dominican Republic or Jamaica. They already own those nations. Haitians are still fighting. The people of Île à Vache are not going to give up their lands.

It's a certainty the US intelligence folks have already scoped out who on the Island they've got to silence, bribe, or co-opt to take this Haiti territory. With probable plans and counterplans to the counterplans. The old Western ruse they'll use is that displacing the fisherman, farmers and craftsman to bring in tourists is "helping Haitians." Tell that to the people of Île à Vache and the other offshore Haiti islands whose properties have been illegally taken through eminent domain by a US-selected puppet president.

Learn the truth, and spread the truth.

Ezili Dantò is an award winning playwright, a performance poet, author and human rights attorney. She was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, and raised in the USA. She holds a BA from Boston College, a JD from the University of Connecticut School of law. She is a human rights lawyer, cultural and political activist and the founder and president of the Ezili’s Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network (HLLN). She runs the Haitian Perspectives on-line journal and the Ezili Dantò Newsletter. She can be contacted at http://www.ezilidanto.com/zili/contact-us/.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • Letters from Our Readers 
    Jahan Choudhry BAR Comments Editor
    Letters from Our Readers 
    27 May 2020
    Recently, readers have been discussing democratic socialists, American exceptionalism, and identity politics.
  • BAR Book Forum: Vincent Brown’s “Tacky’s Revolt”
    Roberto Sirvent, BAR Book Forum Editor
    BAR Book Forum: Vincent Brown’s “Tacky’s Revolt”
    27 May 2020
    The Jamaican slave revolt of 1760-1761 was one war within an interlinked network of other wars.
  • BAR Book Forum: Symposium on Sarah Haley’s "No Mercy Here" 
    Rhondda Robinson Thomas
    BAR Book Forum: Symposium on Sarah Haley’s "No Mercy Here" 
    27 May 2020
    In white patriarchy-ruled South Carolina at the turn of the 20th century, manhood sometimes created temporary yet tenuous bonds between Black and white men.
  • Haiti’s Revolutions and Revisions: An Interview with Charles Forsdick and Christian Høgsbjerg
    The Public Archive
    Haiti’s Revolutions and Revisions: An Interview with Charles Forsdick and Christian Høgsbjerg
    27 May 2020
    Toussaint stressed that freedom was something that had to be fought for and taken from below by the masses themselves.  ​​​​​​​
  • The Spy Plane Over Baltimore is a Tool of Voter Suppression
    Barbara Arnwine, Curtis Cooper and Adjoa A. Aiyetoro
    The Spy Plane Over Baltimore is a Tool of Voter Suppression
    27 May 2020
    The eye-in-the-sky tells residents of the majority Black city that they are enemies of the state -- to be watched and, ultimately, crushed.
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us