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 HaitiUnrest Stifles DevelopmentThe revolution wrecked Haiti's economy. Years of
strife between the light-skinned mulattos who dominated the economy and
the majority black population, plus disputes with neighboring Santo
Domingo, continued to hurt the nation's development. After a succession of
dictatorships, a bankrupt Haiti accepted a U.S. customs receivership from
1905 to 1941. Occupation by U.S. Marines from 1915 to 1934 brought
stability. Haiti's high population growth made it the most densely
populated nation in the Western Hemisphere.
In 1949, after four years of democratic rule by
President Dumarsais Estimé, dictatorship returned under Gen. Paul
Magloire, who was succeeded by François Duvalier, nicknamed
“Papa Doc,” in 1957. Duvalier's secret police, the
“Tontons Macoutes,” ensured political stability with brutal
efficiency. Upon Duvalier's death in 1971, his son, Jean-Claude, or
“Baby Doc,” succeeded as ruler of the poorest nation in the
hemisphere. In the early 1980s, Haiti became one of the first countries to
face an AIDS epidemic. Fear of the disease caused tourists to stay away,
and the tourist industry collapsed, causing rising unemployment. Unrest
generated by the economic crisis forced Baby Doc to flee the country in
1986.
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