[Congressional Record Volume 170, Number 50 (Thursday, March 21, 2024)]
[House]
[Pages H1303-H1304]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC INSTABILITY IN AFRICA AND THE CARIBBEAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Virgin Islands (Ms. Plaskett) for 5 minutes.
Ms. PLASKETT. Mr. Speaker, the time for dawdling, procrastinating,
and pointless disputes has long expired.
This body has become consumed with self-serving ambition and such a
manufactured divide that we have forgotten
[[Page H1304]]
that this Nation has and must continue to be a global defender of
freedom and democracy.
Our failure to fulfill this vital role and turn a blind eye to
systemic injustices around the world, particularly in the African
Continent and the Caribbean region, is not only unethical, but it is
un-American. It also has legal ramifications, not just for the people,
economy, and stability of those nations, but lethal ramifications for
our own safety and national security.
The African Continent and the Caribbean region have long suffered
from a legacy of slavery and colonialism, symptoms of which have led
many of these countries to be volatile and prone to political and
economic instability.
For example, Haiti had to pay France for its freedom. After winning a
revolution, they had imposed on them a debt to the French Government
for that freedom, for the lost revenues of slavery, if you can believe
that.
{time} 1045
They have had to pay literally $28 billion to France. Literally, as
my 14 year old would say, literally.
Mr. Speaker, 40 percent of the Nation's economy went to debt
services. The precarious state of these nations has positioned them to
be prime targets for foreign influence. Now U.S. adversaries, such as
China and Russia have been proliferating throughout the African
Continent and China, particularly in the Caribbean Basin, exploiting
those vulnerabilities for profit and to expand strategic interests.
The Chinese multinational Huawei has constructed roughly 70 percent
of Africa's information technology infrastructure and continues to make
similar investments in the Caribbean Basin in its Belt and Road
Initiative. Over 10 nations have signed agreements to open their
borders up to Chinese influence.
Russia has bolstered its ties and influence as well, primarily
through mercenary groups such as the Wagner Group. Between 2015 and
2019, Moscow signed 19 military collaboration agreements with African
Governments.
By exploiting the instability of those nations, Russia has
established African reliance on military to secure access to resources,
extracting minerals, such as cobalt, gold, and uranium from the
continent.
Furthermore, Russia and China's involvement undermines the
continent's democratic aspirations, driving conflict, worsening human
rights abuses, and spurring growing militarization in governance: Niger
in 2023, Mali in 2022, Sudan in 2021, Guinea in 2023, Burkina Faso in
2024. These were all coups in the last few years, displacing
democratically elected governments with military juntas.
For years, the world has witnessed the Republic of Haiti face a
profound political, security, and humanitarian crisis. The severity of
the situation has far surpassed the usefulness of words.
We are operating on borrowed time. Our hands-off and apathetic
approach to Haiti is an affront to our values. Following President
Jovenel Moise's assassination, gangs seized complete control, creating
a humanitarian catastrophe.
Since February, 15,000 people have been displaced adding to the
362,000 already internally displaced in the country. The hunger crisis
worsens as armed groups block food supply routes.
The approval of the State Department's funding request to support a
Kenya-led multinational security support mission to Haiti is critical,
as it will train and bolster the Haitian National Police, align with
U.S. national security interests, and showcase decisive leadership.
Blocking $40 million in aid by GOP leadership, despite the risk of a
worsening humanitarian crisis and potential migration surge is
unacceptable. Without the release of those funds, our borders will be
overrun, and people will die. We must do better.
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