[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 150 (2004), Part 6]
[House]
[Pages 7462-7467]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




                                 HAITI

  The SPEAKER pro tempore (Mr. Burns). Under the Speaker's announced 
policy of January 7, 2003, the gentleman from Florida (Mr. Meek) is 
recognized for 60 minutes.
  Mr. MEEK of Florida. Mr. Speaker, once again, it is a great honor to 
address the House of Representatives and the American people on a 
recent armed services trip that I took to Haiti and also talk about 
Haiti and the U.S. relations as we move forth from this point on.
  Many Americans understand the changes that Haiti has gone through and 
the Haitian people, but tonight I wanted to share a few things because 
many times we hear on the news and read in the newspaper about what is 
going on in Port-au-Prince, Haiti; what happened today in Port-au-
Prince, Haiti; what happened as it relates to government, a lack of a 
parliament and the legislature in Haiti; an interim government in 
Haiti; what is happening as relates to AIDS and HIV in

[[Page 7463]]

Haiti; also, as it pertains to hunger in Haiti and transportation. I 
think it is so very, very important, since Haiti had so much to do and 
does have so much to do with our very own independence.
  Haiti took part in helping us fight for our own independence. ``Us'' 
is the United States of America. There are many Haitian Americans that 
are playing vital roles not only in our government but also in our 
democracy here in the United States, and I must say that this is a very 
pivotal time for Haiti. So I would ask the American people and Members 
of the Congress to just take a moment and pay attention to some of the 
things that I would like to share with my colleagues this evening to 
talk about this country, and I am going to have a map put up here 
beside me talking about why it is important that the United States of 
America plays a very strong role in not the rebuilding of Haiti but the 
building of Haiti, a country that is comprised of people that work 
every day, a country that wants to continue to move forth as a 
democracy, and I am going to address that. I am going to continue to 
address the issue of democracy because democracy is very, very 
important.
  As my colleagues know, many thousands of miles away from the United 
States of America we are working hard to create and to also maintain 
democracies throughout the world; but I will tell my colleagues, as it 
relates to Haiti being in our own hemisphere, being the poorest country 
in our hemisphere, in the Caribbean, the very same Caribbean, I myself 
being from Miami, cruise ship capital of the world, many Americans and 
people throughout the world cruise the Caribbean for celebration, 
relaxation and sun; but Haiti that sits in the middle of our Caribbean, 
northern Caribbean, is a country that is in desperate need of 
assistance.
  With the United States being the largest, most vibrant free society 
on the face of the Earth, the richest country on the face of the Earth, 
we are doing, in my opinion, more to Haiti than for Haiti; and that is 
the reason why we have to go through a paradigm shift.
  First of all, I just would like to point out here, Haiti is actually 
only 600 miles away from the United States; and as we start talking 
about Haiti, we have to look at the Bahamas. That is up here. That is 
our friend and ally that has been really working with the United States 
as it relates to making sure that we not only stop the flow of illegal 
narcotics but also the flow of illegal immigrants to the United States 
of America. We have Jamaica down here that has also been very helpful 
to the United States in making sure that we fight the war against drugs 
and also illegal immigration.
  I think it is very important for us to understand, 600 miles away, 
Cuba is actually 90 miles away, and we have many Haitians that are 
looking for safe harbor in the United States due to political 
persecution. I just want to talk for a moment, since we know exactly 
where Haiti is now and we know exactly where it sits as it relates to 
our own homeland security and where it sits as it relates to our 
responsibility of being able to assist Haiti as much as possible with 
the United Nations, I want to just share a few things with my 
colleagues.
  Last Tuesday, I took the opportunity to travel to Haiti along with 
Senator Bill Nelson of Florida and also General Hill of SouthCom, who I 
think the commander of Southern Command is doing an outstanding job. He 
has a number of Marines that are there as a part of the international 
force to bring about peace in Haiti, and they are doing the best job 
that they can do under the circumstances. There are also French troops 
that are there in the north.
  General Hill and I, we flew to northern Haiti. We actually flew to 
three cities in northern Haiti, and these cities are small cities but 
large as it relates to the population in Haiti.
  The first place we traveled to was Fort Liberte, which is a city of 
over 5,000 people. French troops are up here securing this area of 
Haiti. It is close to the Dominican border, and there are a number of 
poor individuals there that are mainly fishermen and peasants. We 
walked through the streets of this city, dirt roads, and spoke to 
everyday Haitians; and I was stopped by a father that had two daughters 
that were dressed the same. They had matching umbrellas, in the heat of 
the day. This is Haitian time, maybe around 10:30, eleven o'clock. It 
was lunchtime. He was walking his daughters home, and I asked him how 
is life, through an interpreter, and he said, well, it is quite 
difficult because we have not had power in our city since December of 
last year.
  Being from Miami and understanding hurricanes and disasters and power 
being knocked out, it is very difficult to survive. It is very 
difficult to be able to maintain some level of normalcy without having 
power and utilities; and that is so very, very important. It is an area 
that we have to make sure that we get more humanitarian assistance in 
the area of food, also in the area of clean drinking water; and 
definitely electricity should be provided up in this area.
  We then moved from Fort Liberte that we see here over to Cap Haitian, 
which is also a border area. It is not a border area, but they have a 
port that is there, a deep water port that could be open for commerce, 
but right now the main business that they have now is humanitarian aid 
that actually comes in from that particular area. They have the World 
Food Programme that is there in that area that is providing meals every 
day. The population there is approximately 100,000 Haitians.
  I met with representatives from the Catholic Relief Services and also 
the archdiocese of Cap Haitian and from the World Food Programme. I 
also met with local school educators, which it was a very good meeting 
that we had, also a representative from a local orphanage.

                              {time}  1900

  We met there at the airport, and I must say that when we met there, 
it was more like an airport hangar. And in that region of Haiti, it is 
still a very dangerous region. Rebel forces still control half of 
Haiti. Now, I am not saying that rebel forces are violent or not 
violent, but what I am saying is that danger is still present there in 
Cap Haitien and throughout certain parts of Haiti. Even though we have 
French troops in the area, there is still a level of danger that is 
there.
  We met with the school representatives that were there, the principal 
of a primary elementary school and also a principal of a number of the 
high schools that we would call our ninth grade through twelfth grade 
experience. They both said that they have the issues of power. This is 
a major, major issue in this country, and Haiti has to have some level 
of commerce, some level of economic development to be able to help 
itself. And I think for very little investment from the United Nations 
and from the United States of America we can achieve that.
  So we had the opportunity to meet for about an hour and 15 minutes 
while General Hill moved on, meeting with the French troops, making 
sure our coalition is strong there in order to provide the right 
atmosphere for another larger United Nations force to take over.
  I also spoke with one of the representatives from the archdiocese of 
the Catholic Church, and Catholic Relief Services, and he spoke to me 
in Creole, and through an interpreter he said, Congressman, that is 
fine. It is fine that you are here. We are glad that you are here. But 
we have had other visitors from the United States of America, though 
this was the first time he said he had personally met with a Member of 
Congress. But people come and people go, and Haitians are used to 
hearing, using his words, oh, this is wonderful; and, yes, we will take 
our notes, and we appreciated the meeting, and we will be back. And he 
said many people board planes and boats, and they leave, and they never 
see them ever again.
  But this issue of hunger, the issue of the lack of having the 
opportunity to build jobs, the issue of children needing to be educated 
are very important. This is a very fertile area for economic 
development. We can put local peasants to work. And I am going to come 
back to that a little later on.

[[Page 7464]]

  We moved from Cap Haitien by helicopter, a very mountainous area 
along this area between Cap Haitien and the city of Gonaives. Gonaives 
is an interesting city because this is where the rebellion started, 
right here in Gonaives, which many of the rebels are still there in 
that city. It is a very dangerous place.
  The security responsibility of Gonaives is in the hands of the French 
troops that are there, and I commend those men and women that are there 
serving on behalf of the United Nations' international presence. I met 
with representatives of the CARE organization, which is one of the 
three to four providers that provide food through USAID, and he shared 
with me that, once again, energy, power, being able to keep the lights 
on in Haiti, in Gonaives, why power is so important; because, guess 
what, it generates clean drinking water.
  They have four pumps in that city. Three of them work, but one of 
them needs repairs. These are very small things. These are issues that 
usually a city government or a county government may have an issue, and 
they appropriate a very small number of dollars towards repairing that, 
and the problem is solved. But fuel and petroleum is an issue in Haiti 
right now because of the lack of power. In Haiti they have to use gas 
generators, which is very expensive, so this means some days the pumps 
work, and other days they do not work.
  They also provide meals for 60,000 people in this city of 200,000 
people, which he said they can do a lot more. It is 70 miles northwest 
of Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Now, one would say, why would you have to 
travel by helicopter? Well, Haiti is a very mountainous area, and the 
roads in Haiti, if Americans have experienced a dirt road experience, 
magnify that by 10 times. The best built road in Haiti was built by the 
United States Army Corps of Engineers in 1994. So it is very, very 
difficult to travel from Port-au-Prince to Gonaives.
  We returned back on that Tuesday, back to Port-au-Prince, and flew 
back to Miami, Florida. Senator Nelson flew back to South America on 
another mission. The reason why we could not stay overnight in Haiti, 
my colleagues, was due to the fact that they still have a departure 
order in Haiti. It is that dangerous. It is so dangerous that even 
myself, a Member of Congress, not only had U.S. Marine security but 
State Department security on top of that and Haitian national police 
security.
  Imagine. I can walk down the streets of the United States of America, 
even here in Washington, D.C., without security. I might be a little 
security-conscious, but without physical security, and without M-5 
semiautomatic machine guns, but I cannot stay overnight in Haiti. The 
State Department will not allow me to stay overnight in Haiti. So 
imagine some who may feel any credible claim of fear or persecution, 
imagine what they may feel without security, without having armored 
vehicles to ride around the streets of Port-au-Prince in.
  So we flew back to Miami Wednesday, stayed there, Thursday returned 
back to Haiti and spent that day, all day, in Port-au-Prince, and met 
with the USAID mission that is there, Director David Adams, who I 
believe is doing an outstanding job. And I want to say not only to his 
staff but to the administrators here with USAID, you could not have a 
better, more committed staff in Haiti than what you have under the 
leadership of Director Adams. He is emotionally attached to the work. 
But they need more resources to be able to do the things they need to 
do to develop jobs in Haiti, and I will address that in a few seconds.
  I think it is important for us to remember that we have a lot of 
people doing great things in Haiti, but more needs to be done. We met 
with nongovernmental organizations from Haiti's southern claw.
  Now, let me just point out the southern claw of Haiti. This looks 
pretty much like a lobster claw or a crab claw, but this is the 
southern claw. This is Port-au-Prince, Haiti, the capital, where the 
Presidential palace is located. You hear a lot about events taking 
place here. Port-au-Prince, Haiti, is the most populated city in Haiti, 
and it is its nation's capital. There is the southern claw, along this 
area here, south of Port-au-Prince.
  This southern claw is not secured yet. This southern claw is still 
controlled by rebel forces. This southern claw is where many Haitians 
are hungry. This southern claw is where there is no power at all to be 
able to stimulate any level of sensible adult education, any level of 
humanitarian assistance. Everything is run by generator in the southern 
claw.
  We have to remember that because I am going to talk a little about 
migration and the reason why Haitians leave Haiti. And I think it is 
important that we remember and we set the stage for the environment 
that they have to live in and the environment that we allow them to 
live in, because they are the poorest country in our hemisphere. We 
seem to have more interest in areas thousands and thousands of miles 
away, while we have this democracy, as shaky as it may be, with hungry, 
starving people, and very little assistance from the U.S. or from the 
U.N.
  This is an area that can be very vibrant and prosperous, much more 
prosperous than what it is right now. Prosperity is only in pride in 
Haiti. There are very few numbers of individuals that have wealth in 
Haiti. The average per capita income of the everyday Haitian is a 
little bit over $400. That is a year; $400 in U.S. money is the per 
capita income for the average Haitian. And we will talk about that a 
little later.
  But there is only one road down into the southern claw, my 
colleagues, and that road is not a secured road. The CMOC that is 
located there, which is operated by Southern Command, provides the very 
gateway or security for humanitarian efforts to make it to the southern 
claw and some parts of northern Haiti. The U.S. has security 
responsibility for Port-au-Prince only at this particular time. There 
are plans to move into the southern claw to be able to provide the kind 
of humanitarian assistance and health assistance that is needed there.
  CMOC is an acronym which stands for the Civil Military Operations 
Center. This center was once located in 1994 when the Army was there, 
the 82nd Airborne. CMOCs are set up in many areas in Iraq, which has 
the largest CMOC. The CMOC in Haiti is a very small operation, and it 
brings together nongovernmental organizations where they work hand in 
hand with USAID.
  Once again, the staff that is down there at that CMOC, which is 
mainly run by a gentleman that is a reservist, a colonel, is doing an 
outstanding job there. I met with Major Ray, who gave us an overview of 
the activities of the CMOC there, and my hat is off to those 
individuals, those patriots that are trying to provide just common 
things for the Haitian people and the plans they have there of being 
able to try to assist Haitians restore some level of health care in 
Port-au-Prince, and also making sure that nongovernmental organizations 
have a way to be able to carry food and the necessary cooking oil, 
things of that nature, to the southern claw of Haiti. I commend them.
  The United Nations Development Program office tells me that the 
residents there are really looking forward, and they are continuing to 
engage the citizens of Haiti as it pertains to learning more about how 
the United Nations can play a role in humanitarian and economic 
development there. I would use the philosophy of not giving fish, but 
teaching how to fish. But I must say to the American people and to 
Members of Congress, the Haitian people are very creative people, so we 
do not necessarily need to teach them how to fish, we just have to 
provide the very essentials for them to go ahead and move forward with 
their entrepreneurial spirit to provide jobs in Haiti.
  I want to share with my colleagues a few more facts about Haiti, and 
then I must talk about immigration, because that is the main thrust of 
the interest of our country. It seems to be the main thrust of the 
administration, any administration, because of illegal immigration and 
those individuals who take to the sea, and who our Coast Guard rescue 
many times.

[[Page 7465]]

  I showed this map that had Florida in it. It is 600 miles to Florida 
from Haiti, and 90 miles from Cuba. When I was flying over in either a 
plane or helicopter, 20 feet out of shore, and many of the Members of 
Congress who are sports enthusiasts or are into water sports or fishing 
can understand what I mean when I say the deep blue water, it was deep 
blue water. That means that once you fall in it, you cannot touch the 
bottom. We have lost thousands, not hundreds but thousands, of Haitians 
trying to escape political persecution in Haiti.
  I commend the Coast Guard for the work that they have tried to do to 
prevent the loss of life, but they also have a job to do, and they have 
been ordered to do it and they are doing it. I will also talk about 
that.
  First, however, I want to share a little about the U.S. involvement. 
The reason why I am here today is to make sure that we have a paradigm 
shift in our policy as relates to Haiti. The U.S. involvement goes back 
to 1915 and 1934, when we occupied Haiti. The U.S. helped set up the 
Haitian Coast Guard. We built the embassy there during that period. We 
built the ambassador's residence during that period, and Ambassador 
Foley, James Foley, I believe, is trying to do the best that he can do 
under the circumstances.

                              {time}  1915

  He is going to need the help of this Congress to be able to carry out 
the effort in Haiti.
  In 1994, the U.N. multinational force, led by the United States of 
America, military intervention eventually worked towards the return of 
President Aristide. We were there for a very short time. I must say a 
lot was done during that period, but not one U.S. soldier lost his or 
her life during that period because, contrary to what one may hear on 
television or read in the paper, the Haitian people are very peaceful. 
There are a few that create thuggery in Haiti and give Haiti a black 
eye that it does not deserve.
  On February 23 of this year, the U.S. sent U.S. Marines to secure 
U.S. facilities, which was a fast response team. In March 2004, as a 
part of a U.N.-backed force, the United States, Canadians, French and 
Chileans restored and maintained order of Haiti. My hat is off to those 
individuals who served. We had a Marine injured in an ambush. Marines 
returned fire, and three or four individuals have been killed that have 
tried to attack our men and women in uniform.
  Secondly, as it relates to power in Port-au-Prince alone, the capital 
city, the largest city, the Marines and SouthCom, and once again I 
cannot say enough about them and what they are trying to do there, did 
an assessment of the needs of electricity in Haiti because it means so 
much. It goes towards the security of Haiti. Just imagine if you did 
not have lights in your neighborhood, what kind of safety, what kind of 
level of safety would you have in your neighborhood, let alone a sense 
of community or a community that would like to thrive. This was done by 
SouthCom, this report here that was given to the Prime Minister, saying 
his number one goal should be to ask for international assistance to 
get their energy facilities up to date. This can be done for $1.8 
million.
  When we look at the size of Port-au-Prince, and for Members who are 
engineers, you know for $1.8 million that is a very small price tag to 
repair the power resources in Port-Au-Prince alone. Port-au-Prince, 
Haiti, is not just the capital city; it is the heartbeat of the economy 
of Haiti. It is also the area we have to secure.
  There is a city called Cite Soleil, which is more like what one would 
call squatters. They are tin roofs. In the country and heartland of 
America, you may have a barn with a tin roof. That makes the four walls 
and the top of the houses in Cite Soleil. Some of the most violent 
gangs are in the Cite Soleil. It is important that we understand that 
we have to provide power or have to make sure they have power in this 
city because usually when the violence starts, it starts in Port-au-
Prince, Haiti. That is why we hear so much about Port-au-Prince, Haiti. 
We should be hearing about the hard-working people in Haiti, but we 
will not hear that unless we target to restore and repair power there.
  There are U.S. corporations in Port-au-Prince in the industrial part, 
which the HERO bill here in this Congress, represented by Members in 
this body and the other body, to provide not only trade opportunities 
with Haiti, but to also generate jobs within Haiti. One of the main 
cities that would benefit from that would be Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
  I think what is also very, very important for us to discuss here is 
the issue of immigration. This is the very center I believe of the 
reason why we have to do the right thing now. There are a number of 
issues that are going on here on this island. We also have the drug 
trade, not Haitians growing poppy plants. Haitians are not growing 
marijuana plants or any other thing that may create some sort of 
illegal substance or illegal drug, but because of the lack of an 
economy in Haiti, drug lords have found not safe haven, but an 
opportunity to thrive as a point where they can take their drugs to 
move to the next area.
  I want to bring my other chart back up because I think it is 
important that we understand what we are dealing with here.
  We have Haiti here and within 600 miles to Miami, Florida. It is 
maybe even a shorter distance to Key West and what we call here the 
Gold Coast. As we see the Bahama islands, and there are over 700 Bahama 
islands, we have Cuba here. Drug dealers try to find some way to work 
in Haiti due to the lack of an economy. If we want to head off what we 
are dealing with in Colombia and some other parts of the southern 
hemisphere, we should do the right thing as it relates to the economy.
  But also what comes along with drugs is, what, violence. What happens 
especially when you do not have police, when you do not have 
individuals that are provided jobs, then you will have a very small 
population of individuals that are gangs that will take control and 
will arm themselves and will end up giving the government the problems 
that they have now.
  I said I was going to go back to the Coast Guard, and I think it is 
important. I do not want Members to feel that the Coast Guard is doing 
something wrong; they are doing everything right in my opinion. They 
are doing what they are told. Being a member of the Committee on the 
Armed Services, the Coast Guard carries out their orders. They report 
to the committee I serve on as it relates to the Select Committee on 
Homeland Security; but as it relates to U.S. policy towards Haitians 
that are interdicted at sea, it is not just, it is not fair and it is a 
violation of international law, period. No qualms about it.
  Let me just share something with Members. This is not even what has 
happened over the last few years. The Coast Guard in January of 2004 
intercepted and repatriated 113 Haitians. In February of 2004, they 
intercepted 1,076 Haitians, but only 11 out of 1,076 Haitians actually 
were found to have a credible claim of fear of persecution. Eleven out 
of 1,076. That means 1,065 went back to Haiti, and they were 
repatriated in Port-au-Prince. A lot of them were leaving because of 
political persecution. They were paraded right through Port-au-Prince. 
Many of them left from the northern and southern claw of Haiti, trying 
to escape political persecution; and they were repatriated. We do not 
know if those individuals made it home or did not. It is a violation of 
international law for us to do that.
  Now, I said that to say this, what is important for us to do here in 
this Congress, the most important thing that we can do is to make sure 
that we appropriate the necessary dollars, just like we appropriate 
throughout the world. We have Members saying we have our own issues and 
we have the deficit and other things. Let me say I am overly concerned 
as relates to the deficit. I do not take pride as it relates to being 
in the 108th Congress, and history will say I was in Congress when we 
had the highest deficit in the history of the country, the history of 
the Republic. But at the same time we are giving

[[Page 7466]]

international assistance to other countries, in the billions and in the 
millions. Haiti is slated to receive in the millions, a very small 
number as it relates to the big numbers that many of the other 
countries are receiving.
  There will be an appropriations amendment to ask for $50 million for 
Haiti. The President has asked for $20 million, and some of that is in 
in-kind contributions, not necessarily hard dollars. It is important 
for the U.S. to be able to appropriate more than what the President has 
asked for for Haiti for two reasons. One, we cannot carry out acts of 
repatriating over 1,076 Haitians and say there is no real reason, you 
are leaving for other reasons. The 11 that had credible claims of fear, 
they are not in the United States; they are in Guantanamo Bay along 
with the terrorists from the Middle East, the enemy combatants that are 
jailed and are an issue before the Supreme Court right now.
  So if we do not want Haitians coming over to the United States of 
America, if we do not want Haitians risking their lives, and we no 
longer want to see on the nightly news 300 Haitians falling in the 
middle of the Gulf Stream, and one may see with the Gulf Stream right 
off the coast of Florida where they will go on and on and we will never 
find these individuals, if we do not want that to happen, we should 
have more thrust to make sure we do right in Haiti. I want to say it is 
very, very important that we do this.
  Mr. Speaker, I will be leaving, along with a bipartisan delegation, 
at 7:20 a.m. from Andrews Air Force Base to fly to Haiti and meet with 
Haitian government officials, those who we may call stewards of 
democracy at this time. But it is a very, very important message that 
we are sending to the Haitian Government, and that is they have to rule 
with a level hand.
  To the ministers, the Prime Minister, I have not met with the 
President, maybe we will do that tomorrow, but it is important if they 
are going to set out warrants for members of the Lavalas Party and for 
the Aristide government, the interior minister has already been jailed 
of the Aristide government, if you are going to do that, I have no 
qualms about you carrying out the rule of law. But if you are putting 
out warrants there, you have to put out warrants for the arrest of 
individuals who are in the rebel forces and other parties that we know 
and they are known criminals and are carrying out daily acts of 
thuggery throughout Haiti.
  There are some Members in this body that will cut off dollars, 
assistance dollars, if the Haitian Government does not stand for 
equality in making sure that we have security for all Haitians. The 
backdrop of American people is making sure that we set forth an 
environment for elections. Right now in Haiti they do not have this 
democracy that we celebrate here this evening, this Congress that 
allows representatives from different parts of Haiti to come to the 
capital to represent their constituents.

                              {time}  1930

  They no longer have a parliament. They no longer have an elected 
president. They no longer are able to have mayors in their cities. Many 
of the cities are mayorless, without leadership; and so it is important 
that we set the security stage, that we help Haiti set the policy stage 
of making sure that we are able to have those elections so they can 
move forth.
  So on this 200th bicentennial of Haiti's history and future, this 
country that was one of the first countries to get its own 
independence, Haitians. I share with the Prime Minister, who is a 
Haitian who was living in Boca Raton, Florida, in my State, that his 
role in this government in this time in this place will speak for the 
next 200 years. By the agreement of the Prime Minister's being in the 
office that he is in, he can no longer run for office in Haiti. He 
cannot run for office in Haiti. He cannot move on to the next 
government that hopefully will be elected. He cannot take part in that. 
So he has an opportunity to be an honest broker. The people around him 
in the ministry have an opportunity to be honest brokers of making sure 
that Haitians get a fair opportunity to have power, to be able to 
stimulate an economy in Haiti, and to be able to work with the 
international community to provide the kind of assistance that the 
Haitian people deserve.
  Mr. Speaker, if anyone has traveled to Haiti, and I will tell the 
Members right now, it cannot help but pull on their heart to see people 
living under those circumstances and those conditions to do the things 
that they do day in and day out, to lay flat down and attend house that 
is clean, which may be the ground but it is swept, living under those 
conditions of not being able to have the clean water that they need, 
having electricity, but every day they try to send their children to 
school. Ninety-five percent of the schools in Haiti are privatized. 
USAID is building schools. We commend them for that. But the missions 
and things of that nature are providing an opportunity for them to 
educate themselves. But I can say, Mr. Speaker, that it is so very 
important.
  So if we are concerned about Haitians coming to the United States 
illegally trying to escape political persecution because of thuggery in 
their local town or city, then we should have an effort here in Haiti 
to make sure that we provide the best environment possible for this 
country.
  We are providing food, yes. We are providing medicine, yes. Are we 
helping Haiti as it relates to HIV and AIDS? Of course we are. But 
those are issues of providing fish, not providing the resources so that 
they can go and fish for themselves.
  There are some countries that we have been in in Europe since World 
War II, Mr. Speaker. It is important that we do it right this time so 
that we do not have to deploy U.S. troops, so that we do not have to 
call in Reservists to go because our military is stretched too thin, so 
that we do not have to have emergency orders through the Security 
Council at the UN. It is very important.
  The gentleman from New York (Mr. Meeks), no relation to me, also 
represents a large concentration. I have the highest concentration of 
Haitians in my district, Haitian Americans. He has the second largest 
in New York.
  I yield to the gentleman.
  Mr. MEEKS of New York. Mr. Speaker, I thank the gentleman from 
Florida (Mr. Meek) for his leadership and for his courageous battle to 
make sure that the people of Haiti are not forgotten, and that is 
really what this is all about, and that is why the leadership of the 
gentleman from Florida's focus has been not on the politics, not on 
what is in the best interest of this one or that one. His focus has 
been on what can we do for those people, those average everyday 
citizens that live in Haiti who have dreams and aspirations just like 
we do, who all they want is for their children to be able to have a 
better life, to be able to get an education, to be able to go to work 
to provide a living so that they can have a family themselves and live 
a life that is a life that is free of violence and that is free of the 
deprivation of food and human rights violations. And that is what this 
is really all about. It is about people.
  And I am going to travel with the gentleman because he is going, and 
I know there is a bipartisan CODEL that will be leaving for Haiti 
tomorrow morning, and I have decided to change my schedule based upon 
his courageous trip that he has already taken, that he already visited, 
and he has gone out to not just the big cities. He has gone out to the 
side roads. He has gone out to the rural areas. He has gone out to 
where the people are.
  And I want to just get a chance to get a feel of that so that we can 
make sure when we come back here that we can implement a kind of 
program and a kind of attention on Haiti that does not last just for 6 
months, just for 1 year or 2 years, but something where it is 
sustained, 10, 15, 20 years, to establish a true and strong democratic 
institution, not for the United States of America, quite frankly, not 
for Canada, not for France, not for anybody else, but for the people of 
Haiti, that little country that is connected to the island of 
Hispaniola. We need to make sure that we do something for those people,

[[Page 7467]]

and I just appreciate the gentleman's leadership on that.
  Mr. MEEK of Florida. Mr. Speaker, I just want to say to the gentleman 
from New York (Mr. Meeks) quickly that I appreciate his speaking out 
not only here on the floor of this great House of Representatives but 
also speaking out in the halls of Congress. As the gentleman knows, we 
partner in a bipartisan effort to try to do what is best for Haiti. 
Regardless of the politics, regardless of who is in control, we are 
supporters; and I know that he joins me in that, of democracy. And the 
only way we are going to get to truly elect a democracy is making sure 
that we bring the level of safety, number one, up in Haiti; number two, 
set the real stage for elections, which the United Nations is going to 
play a role in it.
  And I am glad that he points out the fact that we are not trying to 
impose anything on the Haitian people. We want to make sure that we are 
there to be the bridge for the Haitian people to move forth and elect 
its government. And the interim government that is in there that, I 
must add, cannot continue on past the 2005 elections, that is in the 
agreement, that they have the necessary tools to be able to provide 
some of the things that I talked about here tonight. But it is good to 
have not only a partner like the gentleman from New York but someone 
who is willing to look at the big picture on behalf of the Haitian 
people. That is just the bottom line.
  Mr. MEEKS of New York. That is it, Mr. Speaker. I think if we do not 
create the kind of democratic institutions and help them go along, and 
not just America, I think that he said it absolutely right. Not just 
us, but with the help of the United Nations, with them involved, so 
that we can create a climate of security. Because only if they have 
security can they have elections, and then only with elections can they 
have a true democratic government. And I do not like to get into these 
comparisons to Haiti and Iraq and things of that nature. We know that 
there are substantial differences. But one thing that is clear is there 
is a question as to what people of Iraq want and wanted. There is no 
question as to what the people want. Yes, they want us and they want 
the United Nations there to help them. They are begging for us to do 
this. So this is not something that is imposed, and they are just 
saying, if you give us the window of opportunity to create a secure 
environment, we know what we want to do and we just need that kind of 
help, not just for a day or for a week, as I said, but where it is a 
continuous help, and just help us get on par with the Dominican 
Republic, for example. Forget being another United States.
  Help us so that when it is time to negotiate trade agreements when we 
are doing the FTAA that we as a country can take advantage of it and we 
can create the jobs. As the gentleman appropriately said, we can fish 
on our own.
  So we are moving now. We have got the FTAA coming. We have got some 
other pieces dealing with the Caribbean Basin Initiative. We have got 
various other trade agreements. And if we do not help now, these people 
could be left out. But if we help now, they can be included in. And 
guess what? It will be short-term pain for us for long-term gain for 
everybody because then they will not be dependent upon us. Our troops 
will not be necessary there. They then will become a prosperous 
neighbor, and we do not have to worry about people coming over in a 
boat trying to get to our Nation, trying to flee an island that should 
be one of the most beautiful islands in all of the Caribbean. That is 
what this is all about.
  Mr. MEEK of Florida. Mr. Speaker, they have some of the best beaches 
in the world, and the cruise ships used to go there all the time. Now 
there is a little small part of Haiti on the northern tip that is 
gated, secured, and they go there.
  Does the gentleman from New York wish to share with us anything else 
this evening? Because I am going to close because I know we have an 
early morning and we have other Members who have to address the House.
  Mr. MEEKS of New York. Mr. Speaker, I will close with this: I will 
follow his leadership. He has been a great leader, and I think that the 
people of Miami, but more importantly, the people of Haiti, are well 
served by his leadership. I think he is doing this not in a political 
way, but in a bipartisan manner; and I look forward to being with him 
in the morning.
  Mr. MEEK of Florida. Mr. Speaker, I cannot tell the gentleman how 
much I appreciate his saying that. I hope my mother was watching, who 
is a past Member of this body. Hopefully, she will see how important 
and how my colleagues think of me. I thank the gentleman from coming 
down.
  I just want to say this very quickly in closing, Mr. Speaker, that it 
is very important we do what is right on behalf of this Nation. It is 
very important, if we are going to have a policy and interdict Haitians 
at sea and we want to save lives so that the Coast Guard will not have 
to pick bodies out floating face down around the waters of Haiti and 
between the United States of America that we provide the kind of 
atmosphere for economic development, and I would also say to the 
Members that it is vitally important that we continue to pay very close 
attention in a bipartisan way and do what is right on behalf of this 
nation that helped us fight for our independence.

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