"I
Was Kidnapped"
By Amy Goodman
March 08, 2004
Democracy Now!
AMY GOODMAN: I am
Amy Goodman from the radio/TV program Democracy Now! around the United
States. We would like to know why you left Haiti.
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Thank you. First of all, I didn't leave Haiti because I wanted to leave
Haiti. They forced me to leave Haiti. It was a kidnapping, which they
call coup d'etat or [inaudible] ...forced resignation for me. It wasn't
a resignation. It was a kidnapping and under the cover of coup d'etat.
AMY GOODMAN: It
was a kidnapping under the cover of coup d'etat?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Yes.
AMY GOODMAN: Who
forced you out of the country?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:I
saw U.S. officials with Ambassador Foley.
Mr. Moreno, [inaudible...]
at the U.S. Embassy in Haiti I saw American soldiers. I saw former soldiers
who are linked to drug dealers like Guy Philippe and to killers already
convicted, Chamblain. They all did the kidnapping using Haitian puppets
like Guy Philippe, [inaudible], and Chamblain, already convicted, and
basically, this night, I didn't see Haitians, I saw Americans.
AMY GOODMAN: So,
you say that they kidnapped you from the country. Secretary of State
Powell said that that is ridiculous. Donald Rumsfeld said that is nonsense.
Your response?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Well, I understand they try to justify what they cannot justify. Their
own ambassador, ambassador Foley said we were going to talk to the media,
to the press, and I can talk to the Haitian people calling for peace
like I did one night before. And unfortunately, once they put me in
their car, from my residence, a couple of days later, they put me in
their planes full with military, because they already had all of the
control of the Haitian airport in Port-au-Prince. And during the night,
they surrounded my house, and the National Palace, and we had some of
them in the streets. I don't know how many are -- were there. So it's
clearly something they planned and they did. Now, if someone wants to
justify what I think they cannot justify and that's -- my goal is to
tell the truth. This is what now I'm telling you -- the truth.
AMY GOODMAN: President
Aristide, did you resign the Presidency?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
No, I did not resign. I exchanged words through conversations, we exchanged
notes. I gave a written note before I went to the press at the time.
And instead of taking me where they said they were taking me in front
of the Haitian press, the foreign press, to talk to the people, to explain
what is going on, to call for peace. They used that note as a letter
of resignation, and I say, they are lying.
AMY GOODMAN: When
you went into the car from your house, did you understand you were going
to the airport and being flown out?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Not at all. Because this is not what they told me. This was our best
way to avoid bloodshed. We talked with them somehow in a nice, diplomatic
way to avoid bloodshed, we played the best we could in a respectful
way, in a legal and diplomatic way. Because they that told me that they
were going to have bloodshed. Thousands of people were going to be killed,
including myself. As I said, it was not for me, because I never cared
about me, my life, my security. First of all, I care about the security
and lives of other people. I was elected to protect the life of every
single citizen. So, that night I did my best to avoid bloodshed and
when they took me, putting me in their plane, that was their plan. My
strategy was then all I could [do] to avoid bloodshed.
AMY GOODMAN: Are
you being held in the Central African Republic against your will?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Actually, against my will, exactly. Let me tell you, this past twenty
hours on the American plane with American soldiers, including nineteen
American agents who had an agreement with the Haitian government to
provide security to us. They were also in that plane, maybe, to keep
the truth in the plane, instead of having one of them telling the truth
out of the plane. Because one of them had a baby, one year and-a-half
in the plane - he was an American guy - and they wouldn't give him a
chance to get out of the plane with the baby. My wife, the first lady,
who was born in the United States, her father and mother were Haitians,
with me. She didn't have the right to even move the shade and look out
through the windows. Which means, they violated their own law. Until
twenty minutes before I arrived here, I knew where they request going
to land, which means clearly, clear violation of international law.
Unfortunately, they did that, but fortunately, I pay tribute to the
government of Central Africa for the way they welcomed us. It was gracious,
human, good, and until now, this is the time kind of relationship which
we are developing together. I thank them for that once again.
AMY GOODMAN: What
do you want to happen now?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
I always call for peace. Those who realize their kidnapping cannot bring
peace to the violence in my country. CARICOM, which means all of the
heads of the Caribbean countries, call for peace and restoration of
Constitutional order. In some way we heard the voice of Americans -
American Senators, American members, U.S. members, members of the U.S.
parliament. They're all -- they're all U.S. citizens and the Haitians
are actually calling for peace for the restoration of Constitutional
order. This is what I also call for. Allow me to give you a very simple
example. Peace means for us, in this time, education and investment
in health care. In my country, after 200 years of independence -- we
are the first black independent country in the world - but we still
have only one-point-five Haitian doctors for its 11,000 Haitians. We
created a university, we founded a university with the faculty of medicine
that has 247 students. Once U.S. soldiers arrived in Haiti after the
kidnapping, what did they do? They closed the faculty of medicine and
they are now in the classrooms. This is what they call peace. This is
the opposite of peace. Peace means investing in human beings, investing
in health care, respect for human rights, not violations for human rights,
no violations for the rights of those who voted for an elected President,
and this is what it means. It means that, for humans in the world, today
this is their day, [inaudible] men in the world, all together, we can
all work hard to restore peace and constitutional order to Haiti.
AMY GOODMAN: This
is president Jean-Bertrand Aristide speaking from the Central African
Republic. Did you want to return as President to Haiti now?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
If it's possible now, yes, now. Whenever it's possible, I am ready because
this is what my people voted for.
AMY GOODMAN: Are
you being held -- do you see yourself as being held as a prisoner in
the Central African Republic?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Here I say it again, the people and government and the President, President
Bozize, they are gracious, the way they treat us. I just paid public
tribute to them, and if you have citizens of Central Africa listening
to me, allow me to tell them [inaudible], which means thank you very
much, because their country is a country called zo-quo-zu, in the language
which means every human being is a human being. All that is to say,
we I am grateful to them. But when you living in a house or in a palace
that is their palace, which is a good sign of respect for us, and we
are living in their conditions, although it's still good because of
the way they welcome us, we also feel that we should be in Haiti with
the Haitian people doing our best to keep investing in education, health
care, building a state of law. Slowly, but surely, building up that
state of law.
AMY GOODMAN: President
Aristide, at least five people were killed in Haiti on Sunday. Opposition
leaders say it was pro-Aristide forces that opened fire. Also including
journalists - a Spanish journalist based in New York was shot dead.
Another was also shot. Your response?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
First of all, I wasn't there, and I don't have many pieces of this information
to comment, but the respect that I have for the truth, I will make some
comments but I say it again, I wasn't there. I don't have yet any information
so, I cannot go too far in my way to analyze the situation. I do believe
because for the past years, each time drug dealers like Guy Philippe,
people already convicted like Chamblain kill people, we heard exactly
what I just heard. They blame the non-violent people and they blame
the poor. When are poor, they are violated in their eyes, like the way
they did. When you are already convicted, you are not violating human
rights. So, I think or I suspect they are lying when they talk like
that, accusing my followers.
AMY GOODMAN: What
message do you think the United States is sending the people of Haiti
and the rest of the world in their actions with you?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
I think the citizens of the United States supporting democracy in Haiti,
the Haitian People, and Haitians in Washington, Brooklyn and Milano,
in Boston and elsewhere, calling for my return to Haiti and the constitutional
order, I think all the citizens of the United States [inaudible] are
a sending a very strong, critical signal to all of the countries in
the world willing to work in a peaceful way for democracy. But those
who [inaudible] me are sending a very wrong signal because if we don't
reach the result of democratic elections and then we cannot be elected
and then you do that here and elsewhere, the signal you are sending
is "No to democracy," while you are talking about democracy.
So, that's why I wish they would connect - they did realize that they
are wrong and they have a new approach, which will be protecting the
rights of humans in the world. Because in the world, what do we mean,
meaning peace. What do we mean, meaning democracy. What do we mean,
we need to invest in human beings. Therefore, to go back, we should
not send wrong signals as they did. They went to Iraq. We see how is
the situation in Iraq. They went to Haiti. We see how is the situation
in Haiti. Pretending they are imposing democracy with people killing
people. Why don't they change their approach to let democracy and the
constitutional order flourish slowly, but surely. After imposing a criminal
embargo on us being, from the cultural point of view, very rich from
a historic point of view very rich but from an economic point of view,
very poor because we are the poorest country in the western hemisphere,
after imposing their economic embargo upon us, because the people wanted
one man, one vote, so equality among us. Then they use drug dealers,
they use people who are already convicted, pretending to lead the rebellion,
while they went to Haiti killing people in Gonaives, killing people
in Cap Hatian and killing people in Port-au-Prince and elsewhere. And
now they continue in the face of the entire world, blessing impunity
supporting those killers. My god, I have said it's really ugly that
image they project in the face of the world. Now it's time for them
to change, to respect them but we will also respect the truth. That's
why respectfully, we are telling them the truth. I said, when someone
is wrong, the wrong way to behave is to continue to be wrong. The right
way to behave is a move from wrong to being right. Now, it's time to
move from being wrong on their side to become right by supporting the
constitutional order.
AMY GOODMAN: President
Aristide, Vice President Dick Cheney said you wore out your welcome
in Haiti. It's time for you to go. He also said -- can I get your response
to that?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
How can someone, after the kind of elections they had, now talk like
that regarding Haiti where you had fair, democratic elections regarding
the elected president. I think someone can have power, but that does
not mean, we cannot see the truth and say the truth. I respect the rights
of every single citizen in the world to talk, and we have to be tolerant
because this is also about democracy. That's why I have respect for
him, I respect the way his way to talk, but at the same time I have
respect for my people and for the truth. I say it, and I say it again,
the Haitian people are a non-violent people. They voted for democracy.
They will continue to fight in a peaceful way for democracy, and I will
continue to be faithful to them doing the same. The peaceful approach,
fighting peacefully for the restoration of the constitutional order.
AMY GOODMAN: Do
you still consider yourself President of Haiti?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Yes, because the people voted for me. They are still fighting in a peaceful
way for their elected President. I cannot betray them. That's why I
do my best to respect their will.
AMY GOODMAN: Well,
how would you describe the situation in Haiti today? U.S. and French
forces and Canadian troops are in Haiti. It is something you called
for before you left, to support you, and to protect the -- and to protect
you there, then?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Yes. I called for them before they forced me to leave the country. Now,
unfortunately, they are in Haiti. They don't have the elected President
with them to move with the constitutional order. But despite of that,
I wish the United Nations in Haiti through peacekeepers can help keeping
peace in the country, protecting all the Haitians, every single Haitian,
because the life of every single man or woman is sacred. You have to
respect that. So, I wish they will protect the lives and the rights
of every single citizen by the time we continue to work hard, peacefully
to restore democracy in Haiti.
AMY GOODMAN: Vice
President Cheney said, 'I have dealt with Aristide before when I was
Secretary of Defense. We had a crisis involving Haiti. He left of his
own free will. He signed a resignation letter on his way out. He left
with his security detail on an aircraft we provided, not a military
aircraft, but civilian charter. Now, I suppose he's trying to revise
history. But the fact of matter was, he'd worn out his welcome with
the Haitian people. He was democratically elected, but he never governed
as a democrat. He was corrupt, and he was in charge of many of the thugs
that were committing crimes in Port-au-Prince. The suggestion that somehow
the United States arrested him or forcibly put him on an aircraft to
get him to leave, that's simply not true. I'm happy he's gone. I think
the Haitian people are better off for it. I think now they'll have an
opportunity to elect a new government, and that's as it should be. '
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Well, as I said before, he has the right to talk, and I respect his
right, as I have the right to say the truth, and I will be saying the
truth. I disagree with him, and I will continue to believe that the
Haitian people will continue to fight in a peaceful way to restore democracy,
and when the day will come to have elections, of course, they will have
the ability to vote. Unfortunately, they didn't want a coup d'etat,
and they never wanted the Haitian people to keep moving from election
to election. They preferred the Haitian people to move from coup d'etat,
to coup d'etat. We celebrated 200 years of independence. We had a [inaudible]
coup d'etat. We know, usually, who can choose to be behind the coup
d'etat. So, now that we just had a kidnapping which they call a resignation,
which others call coup d'etat, it's clear that some people will be do
their best to justify, but they may not be able to justify, and I will
continue to be on the side of the truth, on the side of the human rights,
on the side of all of those who knew about what happened, and stand
firm with the Haitian people. The heads of the Caribbean countries stand
firm for the restoration of the constitutional order, for peace. We
have senators in the United States, members of the U.S. House, citizens
in the States standing firm for peace, for democracy, for constitutional
order, and I join them.
AMY GOODMAN: Why
do you think that the United States government does not want you to
be the president of Haiti?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Maybe, if you could just one single example, it can tell the world a
lot. I know I have already told you that, but I will go through it again.
In 200 years of independence, making Haiti the first black independent
country of the world, we still have 1.5 Haitian doctors for each 11,000
Haitians. Then we have a university who the faculty of medicine had
237 students. [inaudible], they are now in that faculty of medicine,
they closed it. And the students are out, and this is not what they
decided to do. If, have a government or a President willing to invest
in health care, apparently they don't want that. If you have a president
or government willing to invest in education, maybe they don't want
that. I will continue to believe that we must invest in human beings.
We must invest in education and health care. This is what will bring
peace. Because peace is not an empty word. It has to be full. Investing
in education and health care, bring the real peace to the country, and
what they call peace is not the real peace. It is violence. It is kidnapping.
What we call peace through education is telling the world that we are
right.
AMY GOODMAN: President
Aristide in your news conference, did you say that your country is now
in the midst of an unacceptable occupation?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
It's an occupation, and the last example I just gave says it is an occupation.
How you can imagine that you come to me, you want to be in peace, and
you close my university and you send out 247 students of medicine in
the country where you don't have hospitals and you don't have enough
doctors. God, this is an occupation. When you protect killers, when
you protect drug dealers like Guy Philippe, like Chamblain, when you
protect the citizens of the United States in violating the law of the
United States, Mr. Andy Apaid is a citizen of the United States, violating
the Neutral Act, the way with this act will destroying our Democracy,
and once we do that, then this is an occupation.
AMY GOODMAN: Is
true that -- did you say that your security force around -- that protected
you in Haiti, from the Steele Foundation--that they were told by the
U.S. government they could not send in reinforcements?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Yes. As a matter of fact they blocked them, to stop providing security,
and twenty-five [inaudible] did come the day after, they were prevented
to come. So it was a clear strategy did to move their way according
to their plan. Now, time is gone. Unfortunately I need to stop because
they just asked me to leave.
AMY GOODMAN: Do
you think that you will ever see Haiti again as President?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
I will. I will once the Haitian people and the international community
continue to work hard. It's not impossible.
AMY GOODMAN: What
do you think people can do in the United States?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
I think they can continue to mobilize human resources to help bring
peace for Haiti--democracy for Haiti. This is what the Haitian people
want: Peace and democracy.
AMY GOODMAN: Will
you be leaving the Central African Republic? Do you want to leave?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
No, no, no, no. They are not asking me to leave the country, they are
asking me to end the...
AMY GOODMAN: I understand.
I understand. I understand, but do you want to leave the country? Do
you want to return immediately to Haiti?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
If I can go today, I would go today. If it's tomorrow, tomorrow. Whenever
time comes, I will say yes, because my people, they elected me.
AMY GOODMAN: What
is stopping you from returning today?
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Because it means to clear the way, and that's what we are doing now.
AMY GOODMAN: Thank
you very much for joining us, President Aristide.
PRESIDENT ARISTIDE:
Thank you so much for you and wishing that we can meet again in Haiti.