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The
victory of African slaves over French rule in Haiti in the
1800s should be used by Africans to inspire them to successfully
address the challenges facing them across the world, South African
president Thabo Mbeki said yesterday.
He told delegates attending the 6th African Renaissance Conference
in Durban: "Today I am absolutely sure that the people of the
Bahamas are inspired as we should be here to make sure that(this)
great African victory be used as an inspiration... to address the
challenges of the African Renaissance".
Mbeki, a proponent of the African Renaissance concept, gave his
audience a history lesson on Haiti, saying that many Africans were
not taught about the struggle of the impoverished Caribbean
country. Due to this many Africans did not know an important part
of their history.
He said when a person read about the history of that country, he
became angry because it was kept away from Africans because the
powers that be knew it would inspire pride amongst all Africans and
make them realise what they could accomplish.
Mbeki said he did not want to offend the people who had fought for
South Africa's liberation, but it would be very difficult to find a
struggle as inspiring as the one by the slaves in Haiti.
Haiti became an independent country and abolished slavery on
January 1, 1804.
This was after the slaves defeated French emperor Napoleon
Bonaparte's army.
Mbeki said the French government of that time told Haiti it would
not recognise its independence if it did not pay reparations for
the loss French slave owners would suffer.
This would have led to the French government blocking the exports
of Haiti.
"They had no choice but to pay," he said.
The French set up a central bank through which the payments would
be made, and because the Haitians could not make the first
instalment, money was borrowed from a French bank, and that debt
was serviced with interest.
In later years the US took over the debt and only in 1945 did Haiti
pay its last reparation.
This was a main reason why Haiti, the world's first black republic,
was so impoverished.
Mbeki said there were no centenary celebrations for Haiti's
independence because the French government was opposed to this
because they would celebrate the defeat of Napoleon.
The French government decided that this matter would be reviewed in
a 100 years.
The same decision was taken for this year's bicentenary
celebrations.
Mbeki, who attended this year's celebrations in January, said he
had been questioned by Haitian opposition parties and civil society
groups about his attendance because it could have been interpreted
as showing support for then president Jean-Bertrand Aristide, who
was ousted after a military coup earlier this year.
Mbeki said he explained to them that the independence of Haiti was
an important part of the history of Africans, and he was there to
participate in the celebrations.
He said it was agreed by all parties that Haiti's problems should
be discussed under the auspices of the Caribbean Community
(Caricom).
During discussions the armed uprising, by gangsters and spread by
former Haitian soldiers, started.
Mbeki said Caricom and the Haitian government requested South
Africa's help in the matter because its police service did not have
any equipment, such as teargas, ammunition and weapons.
Mbeki agreed to help, and after a list was sent to South Africa,
the equipment was sent to Jamaica.
However, before the material arrived in Haiti, Aristide was ousted
and sent to the Central African Republic.
"He did not ask to leave... but others said he should leave," Mbeki
said.
He told the audience that in the midst of all this turmoil, a
marvellous thing had happened because the injustice concerning
Haiti and Aristide's forced departure, had brought greater unity
amongst Africans across the globe.
"I think we have never seen as much unity amongst Africans on a
matter," Mbeki said. "All of us are saying a great injustice has
happened and all of us are saying we must... help the
Haitians".
Mbeki said Africans would have a bright future if they addressed
common problems together.
"Our African people in the US are still African and are less equal
than other Americans," he said to applause. The small Caribbean
countries could only succeed if they were part of the greater
African home.
Mbeki said whether Africans were living in Johannesburg or New
York, they faced the same difficulties.
He called on those attending the conference to find ways of taking
the African Renaissance forward, saying its success would have a
positive affect on all Africans.
"What do we need to do to build a global, united movement of
Africans?" Mbeki asked.
"Don't lose this opportunity to reinforce the cohesion... so that
together we can fight the common problems of Africans".
Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon said this week he had written
another letter to Mbeki regarding a consignment of arms sent to
Haiti in the dying hours of Aristide's rule.
Leon said he had to date received no answer to his previous query
regarding the dispatch in late February of an SA Air Force Boeing
707 to the Caribbean island state loaded with 150 R1 assault
rifles, ammunition and assorted equipment.
"This is a most extraordinary thing in a constitutional democracy.
If it wasn't for a journalist and a newspaper in Jamaica, we would
never have known about this deployment," Leon told a press
conference in Johannesburg.
The DA leader said he had taken legal advice on the matter from an
advocate in Cape Town who advised him that the flight to Haiti
amounted to the employment of the Defence Force as contemplated in
the constitution as well as in the new Defence Act and that
government, by not reporting this deployment to parliament within
the stipulated 14 days, was in breach of the law. – Sapa.