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 HaitiDespite Intervention, Haiti's Infrastructure Remains in TattersThroughout the 1990s the international community
tried to establish democracy in Haiti. The country's first elected chief
executive, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, a leftist Roman Catholic priest who
seemed to promise a new era in Haiti, took office in Feb. 1991. The
military, however, took control in a coup nine months later. A UN
peacekeeping force, led by the U.S.—Operation Uphold
Democracy—arrived in 1994. Aristide was restored to office and
René Preval became his successor in 1996 elections. U.S. soldiers
and UN peacekeepers left in 2000. Haiti's government, however, remained
ineffectual and its economy was in ruins. Haiti has the highest rates of
AIDS, malnutrition, and infant mortality in the region.
In 2000, former president Aristide was reelected
president in elections boycotted by the opposition and questioned by many
foreign observers. The U.S. and other countries threatened Haiti with
sanctions unless democratic procedures were strengthened. Aristide, once a
charismatic champion of democracy, grew more authoritarian and seemed
incapable of improving the lot of his people. Violent protests rocked the
country in Jan. 2004, the month of Haiti's bicentennial, with protesters
demanding that Aristide resign. By February, a full-blown armed revolt was
under way, and Aristide's hold on power continued to slip. The protests,
groups of armed rebels, and French and American pressure led to the
ousting of Aristide on Feb. 29. Thereafter a U.S.-led international force
of 2,300 entered the chaos-engulfed country to attempt to restore order,
and an interim government took over. In September, Hurricane Jeanne
ravaged Haiti, killing more than 2,400 people. Lawlessness and gang
violence were widespread, and the interim government had no control over
parts of the country, which were run by armed former soldiers.
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