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16190: Blanchet: Fw: Farmers forced out as global brands build Haiti free-trade area (fwd)



From: Max Blanchet <MaxBlanchet@worldnet.att.net>


Farmers forced out as global brands build Haiti free-trade area (unedited
version)

by Jacqui Goddard, Ouanaminthe, Haiti.

The Sunday Times, July 6 2003

Farmer Jean Eugene gazes wistfully through the tall wire fence that has been
built across his Caribbean farmland, shaking his head as he reflects on the
bad fortune it represents for his family.

Just weeks ago, his fields were rich with corn and vegetables - treasured
assets in Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere. But then the
bulldozers arrived. Mr Eugene's crops were ripped from the soil by
government
contractors and he has been barred from his own land to make way for the
construction of an industrial Free Trade Zone (FTZ) that will house
cheap-labour
factories producing clothes for leading brands including Levi's, Gap, Tommy
Hilfiger
and Hugo Boss.

"This is a crime against humanity," says Mr Eugene, 43, whose elderly father
was chased away by armed Haitian police when he tried to access the plot to
pick ripened mangoes from a tree.

"While these big companies are getting rich, we will be struggling to even
feed ourselves. Planting crops is how we survive here - our life comes from
the
earth. We cannot eat rocks and cement, we need plantains and corn."

The Maribahoux Plain is one of the country's most fertile agricultural
regions. Located on Haiti's border with the Dominican Republic, it has a
production
capacity of more than 30,500 tons of food per year, enough to feed half a
million people.

But under a scheme jointly approved by the two countries' governments and
funded by the World Bank, 54 peasant farmers including Mr Eugene have been
evicted to free up land for the first phase of the FTZ.

Ultimately there will be around 40 factories along the 360km border,
creating
a 500,000-sq.metre trading park from which goods will be exported free of
taxes and tariffs.

The first phase involves the building of a 150,000-sq.metre worksite for
Grupo M, a Dominican Republic textile company that will lease the land from
the
Haitian government for 25 years. It supplies some of the world's top
clothing
outlets, boasting: "We dress the world, stitch by stitch."

Grupo M and the World Bank say the first phase will generate up to 4,500
jobs
for Haitians, while the entire project could provide more than ten times
that
number. The firm will provide workers with housing, a training unit, a day
care centre and a clinic.

"There has been a lot of discussion about the social and environmental
aspects and we have offered to move farmers to new land. We are very
sensitive to
the issues," said a spokeswoman at the company's headquarters in Santiago,
Dominican Republic.

But Mr Eugene claims the bulldozer teams that seized his fields in March
came
unannounced and there has been no offer of new land. Whereas he could
previously expect annual crop profits of around 70,000 Haitian Gourdes
(£1,300), he
says the government has offered around a third of that sum as total
compensation. "I don't want the money," he said defiantly. "My land is not
for sale."

A kindly-faced man, he lives with wife Anouse, 33, and their seven children
in a cramped concrete home in Ounaminthe, a town of 70,000 people located a
three-hour drive along a rocky unmade road from the second city of Cap
Haitien.
Pigs, goats and chickens wander the streets, mingling with donkeys and
horses
carrying farmers and their produce to market. Few people here have even
heard
of the multi-billion pound designer brands for whom their crops have been
sacrificed.

Gaston Etienne, coordinator of Komite Defens Pitobert, a farmers' advocacy
group, said: "you will be buying your fashion items while we are earning a
pitance making them."

Mr Eugene has now taken work as a teacher, earning 2,500 Gourdes (£62) a
month, but needs a minimum of 200 Gourdes (£5) a day to feed his family,
including
daughter Aisha, born only ten days ago. "My dreams for Aisha's future have
completely changed," he lamented. "I will not be able to even afford her
powdered milk. "

For each of the 54 farmers who lost land, up to 50 farmworkers - many of
them
elderly - have also lost their livelihoods, but only those under the age of
35 will be offered factory jobs. It is not yet known how many others will
lose
land in the next phases of development.

In addition, critics condemn the factories as "sweatshops," farmworkers who
have been offered jobs there reporting that their wages will be just 10% of
what they used to earn.

Leading Haitian economist Camille Chalmers, citing the example set by FTZ
sweatshops established in Haiti in the 1960s under former president
JeanClaude
Duvalier, predicts a swift "ghetto-isation" of the Maribahoux area as cheap
housing springs up and thousands pour in searching for work.

"The job creation rhetoric is propaganda," said Mr Chalmers, founder of
PAPDA, the Haitian Advocacy for an Alternative Development Programme. "They
talk
about jobs being created, not the jobs that are being lost. There will be a
real
human cost."

"They should work with farmers to increase agricultural productivity and
feed
Haiti's people, rather than destroying the country's bread basket to benefit
foreign investors."

There are also concerns that the region's four rivers will be polluted by
the
industrial activity.

At the World Trade Organisation summit in Cancun, Mexico, this September,
the
British government will be pushing for a new agreement that will govern
foreign investment in developing countries such as Haiti. The government,
along
with the EU, claims that the deal would create fairer trading practices and
protect the poor.

But non-governmental groups including the development agency ActionAid,
which
will tomorrow (Mon) lobby Trade and Industry Secretary Patricia Hewitt in
London, complain that the deal would actually make it easier for big
corporations
to expand their wealth at the expense of some of the world's most
poverty-stricken people. They say Haiti is a prime example of how things can
go wrong.

"While foreign investment can help combat poverty, it can only bring
benefits
if carefully managed," said ActionAid trade analyst John Hilary.

In Ounaminthe, there is fear over the insecurity the FTZ has brought. Farmer
Francis Bosse, 74, another of the towns' farmers who lost their land, said:
"Land is your inheritance, but now I have none to hand over to my son. This
was
the pearl of Haiti, but what they are building on this land is misery."

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