Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06PORTAUPRINCE299
2006-02-10 18:25:00
UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
Embassy Port Au Prince
Cable title:  

LATORTUE'S PLAN FOR HAITI'S FUTURE, THOUGHTS ON

Tags:  PREL PGOV ASEC HA 
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ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 101825Z FEB 06
FM AMEMBASSY PORT AU PRINCE
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 2345
INFO RUEHZH/HAITI COLLECTIVE
RUEHBR/AMEMBASSY BRASILIA 0963
RUEHSA/AMEMBASSY PRETORIA 0809
RUEHQU/AMCONSUL QUEBEC 0401
RUMIAAA/HQ USSOUTHCOM J2 MIAMI FL
RUCOWCV/CCGDSEVEN MIAMI FL//OLE/OI//
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 PORT AU PRINCE 000299 

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/CAR
S/CRS
SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD
STATE PASS AID FOR LAC/CAR
INR/IAA (BEN-YEHUDA)
WHA/EX PLEASE PASS USOAS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PGOV ASEC HA
SUBJECT: LATORTUE'S PLAN FOR HAITI'S FUTURE, THOUGHTS ON
PREVAL AND ARISTIDE

REF: PAP 284

UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 03 PORT AU PRINCE 000299

SIPDIS

SENSITIVE
SIPDIS

STATE FOR WHA/CAR
S/CRS
SOUTHCOM ALSO FOR POLAD
STATE PASS AID FOR LAC/CAR
INR/IAA (BEN-YEHUDA)
WHA/EX PLEASE PASS USOAS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PREL PGOV ASEC HA
SUBJECT: LATORTUE'S PLAN FOR HAITI'S FUTURE, THOUGHTS ON
PREVAL AND ARISTIDE

REF: PAP 284


1. SUMMARY. In a 6 February meeting with DAS Duddy, four
Congressional staff and Charge, Interim Prime Minister Gerard
Latortue laid out his views on the continuing challenges in
Haiti as well as the keys to breaking the cycle of failure.
His frank yet optimistic assessment echoed similar messages
delivered during the first months of his tenure in 2004,
before insecurity and electoral concerns pushed much of his
agenda to the side. Latortue identified four key priorities
for the new government: infrastructure, electricity,
education, and financial and banking reform. He also spoke
of several key potential pitfalls, including
narcotrafficking; the influence of partisanship in both
American and international politics; and the role of Aristide
in Haiti's future. Latortue remains convinced that
insecurity in Haiti is a byproduct of misery and intolerable
living conditions, one which can be eliminated by improving
the entire country rather than pacifying slum neighborhoods.
Latortue did not believe Preval would run back into the arms
of Aristide, noting that many of Preval's key aides are not
Aristide supporters. Reftel addressed specific comments by
Latortue on February 6 on the elections process and
transition period. END SUMMARY.


2. Interim Prime Minister Gerard Latortue met on 6 February
with Charge; Deputy Assistant Secretary Patrick Duddy; Carl
Meacham, Senior Republican Staff to the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee; Ted Brennan, Senior Republican Staff to
the House Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere; Paul
Oostburg-Sanz, Democratic Chief of Counsel to the House
Committee on International Relations; and Caroline Tess,
Foreign Policy Advisor to Senator Bill Nelson.


3. Oostburg-Sanz asked Latortue what he thought are the
next key steps for Haiti, both during the transition and
beyond, in order to definitively break the cycle of failed
governments. Tess asked what the key priorities would be for
the new government. Latortue, who often praises the economic
potential of the Haitian people, spoke at length, but began

by laying out four immediate priorities that he views as
critical to ending the systemic problems of poverty and
misery in Haiti.

Roads and Bridges
--------------

4. According to Latortue, two ongoing road projects will do
a great deal to open up the countryside for agricultural
production. The first, from Port-au-Prince to Mirebalais,
would improve access to the fertile Artibonite river valley
and central plateau. The existing road, little more than a
cart path in places, makes a voyage of maybe 30 miles take
several hours. Fruits and vegetables cannot be transported
over this road because they are spoiled from the jostling.
Latortue claimed that he also had secured international
support to extend the road from Mirebalais to the regional
capitol of Hinche and from Hinche all the way to Cap Haitien
on the northern coast. If true, such a road could reduce the
travel time from Port-au-Prince to Cap Haitien by half and
potentially allow for decentralized development of tourism
and agriculture outside Port-au-Prince.


5. The second road, extending from Cap Haitien east to
Ouanaminthe on the Dominican border would also improve
Dominican access to Haitian agricultural products, as well as
open up the possibility for increased tourism and light
industrial development in the country's northern department.
Latortue was very pleased with these projects, and he said he
was happy that they will provide an immediate boost for the
new government.


6. Latortue also highlighted additional projects, citing
the need to build a modern road extending from Gonaives to
Port-de-Paix on the northwest coast and a road linking the
regional capitals of Cayes and Jeremie on the southern claw.
He said that people had been talking about these roads since
before he was born and that it was finally time to do it.
Both Port-de-Paix and Jeremie are remote and accessible

PORT AU PR 00000299 002 OF 003


primarily by sea and air; as such, they are also the areas
with the least environmental degradation, the best quality
and variety of tree crops, and the most beautiful beaches.
Modern roads would open up these areas to tourism and
agricultural development. Lastly, Latortue stated his
appreciation for bridge projects funded by USAID along the
Gonaives - Port-de-Paix corridor, and he stated that small
scale bridge projects remained a key priority to give rural
Haitians access to both markets and education.

Electricity
--------------

7. Haiti's current electricity capacity is 150 megawatts.
Latortue does not feel that it is necessary to dramatically
increase capacity, but he believed that Haiti needed to
develop a master plan to increase efficiency, as actual
electricity production is but a fraction of capacity. A
master plan would take into account the potential for wind
power along the northwest coast, which borders the Windward
Passage, and solar power, an obvious choice in a country that
sees at least 300 days of sunlight a year. Additionally,
Latortue was optimistic about the potential for small
hydroelectric operations that might provide power only for
neighboring communes but would be less susceptible to the
damage and silt obstruction that have plagued the country's
main hydroelectric dam in Peligre. Latortue said, "Big hydro
is finished, but we could definitely use small hydro in
Haiti."

Education
--------------

8. Latortue underlined that the country needed plumbers,
electricians, carpenters and engineers. Future Haitian
governments should focus on improving basic public education
to allow for more democratic participation while also making
large improvements to trade and professional education in
order to create work

Banking Reform
--------------

9. According to Latortue, a significant middle class will
not be possible in Haiti until average citizens have access
to credit, mortgages and investment. The established banking
system is tilted disproportionately toward supporting
Port-au-Prince's elite and business clientele. Only one
major U.S. bank, Citibank, has an office in Haiti, and it
does not offer personal banking. Standard policy of Haitian
banks does not permit provincial branches to issue loans
without the approval of the central office in Port-au-Prince,
which is typically skeptical of any loan in the provinces.
(NOTE: Emboffs hear this complaint from business owners in
every regional capital as an example of the harmful
preeminence of the "Republic of Port-au-Prince." END NOTE.)
Latortue stated that the will and capacity of the Haitian
people never ceases to amaze him when they have access to
resources.

Putting the Horse before the Cart
--------------

10. Meacham asked Latortue how any of this could
realistically happen without security. Latortue replied that
security was a byproduct of misery, not the cause. He stated
that the vast majority of persons living in slums and popular
areas of Port-au-Prince are Haitians who have migrated to the
capital due to lack of opportunity in the provinces under
Duvalier and Aristide. By providing good vehicular access,
reliable electricity, and access to credit in the provinces,
Latortue believed that many of these people would choose to
return to the countryside rather than continue in squalor in
Port-au-Prince. He stated that the violent actors and gang
members are not born criminals and only worked in crime and
drugs as a means of feeding themselves. Latortue was adamant
that most of these persons would choose legitimacy if given
the option. Furthermore, Latortue stated that there is no
hope of addressing insecurity in the popular areas of
Port-au-Prince until these Haitians could be put to work,
either in agriculture, tourism or light manufacturing.
Without a concerted effort to employ and provide social

PORT AU PR 00000299 003 OF 003


services to persons in these areas, the gangs and drug
dealers would remain the best option for residents.


11. On narcotics trafficking, Latortue stated that the
Haitian government is currently and will remain effectively
powerless to combat well-heeled drug trafficking interests in
Haiti. He said that the best policy for the Haitian
government would be to expand engagement with U.S. law
enforcement officials and cooperate fully with DEA operations
and investigations.

Preval and Aristide
--------------

12. Meacham then asked whether Aristide would be welcome to
return under a Preval presidency. Latortue stated that he
could not speak for Preval, but that he did not believe this
would happen. He stated that many of Preval's closest
supporters had broken permanently with Aristide, who Latortue
called a "man of the past." However, he noted that a
preemptive or premature rejection of Preval by the United
States would be the quickest way to drive him into the arms
of Aristide. He urged the staffers to take the message back
to Washington that the United States must embrace the
electoral victor in a bipartisan way, even if the victor is
not necessarily palatable to one party or the other.
Latortue also cautioned that the United States must not give
any credence to Haitian actors who come out against Preval
from the outset. These actors, he said, would be acting
purely out of self-interest. (COMMENT: Latortue has shown no
inclination toward Preval during his tenure as Prime
Minister, and we take his concern as genuine. END COMMENT.)


13. Oostburg-Sanz asked if the message from U.S. and
international channels on Aristide being a man of the past is
being heard in Haiti, both among the poor and the elite.
Latortue believed that it was, but he noted the need to
continue hammering on this message, saying "We must repeat,
repeat, repeat this message."

Democracy Building and Bipartisanship
--------------

14. When asked about the prospect of continuing democratic
progress in Haiti, Latortue stated that he viewed the role of
NDI and IRI as essential. He stated his belief that these
groups should work together to empower a political opposition
in conjunction with the government. He also said that
Caricom and the OAS should have an important role to play in
this, especially in their capacity to foster excursions and
exchanges among Caribbean legislators and government
officials. Latortue felt that it is essential for Haitian
politicians to see democracy in action throughout the
Caribbean, particularly in Jamaica.


15. Finally, Latortue offered his opinion on the recent New
York Times article alleging the existence of two distinct
U.S. foreign policy agendas in Haiti. He stated that this is
an internal issue between the parties in the U.S. and that it
is time for the U.S. to treat Haiti with bipartisan consensus.
CARNEY