PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti (AP) — A key U.S. senator sharply criticized Haiti’s president Thursday, portraying him as an ineffectual leader who is hindering recovery from January’s devastating earthquake.
Sen. Richard Lugar, the senior Republican on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, advised U.S. legislators to reconsider sending money to Haiti if reforms are not made.
The paper is another slap in what has become a protracted fight between the Senate committee and Haitian President Rene Preval.
After earlier critical reports from the panel, including one issued by its chairman, Democratic Sen. John Kerry, Preval called a news conference last month to flat-out reject proposals aimed at stamping out alleged corruption ahead of the Nov. 28 presidential election. He accused the committee of overreach and called the proposals “inadmissible.”
The 16-page paper issued Thursday says Preval has “demonstrated marginal capacity to lead his country’s reconstruction.” A section on the last two decades of U.S. aid and investment in Haiti is titled “Observations: A lot of money but few results.”
“President Preval’s actions do not suggest a departure from the self-destructive political behavior that has kept Haiti the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere,” Lugar wrote in an opening letter.
In an accompanying statement, he warned: “It is incumbent upon Congress to reassess our government’s investments in Haiti if this partnership is in question.”
The Senate is considering a bill that includes $1.15 billion in U.S. aid pledged for Haiti’s reconstruction at a March donors conference. Less than 10 percent of the total $5.3 billion in international donations pledged for the first two years of rebuilding has been delivered.
Committee staff declined to comment further on what measures it would take if Preval again rejected their advice.
The report’s proposals cut to the heart of some of Haiti’s most intractable pre-earthquake conflicts, which it said have left rebuilding “almost at a standstill because of a dearth of political will and leadership.”
For one, it calls for modernization of the land-title system, an archaic and anarchic void that plunges anyone trying to build on undeveloped terrain into a morass of competing claims, contradictory deeds and interfamily conflicts.
The aid group Oxfam studied land-title reform for six months after the quake before deciding the problem is too thorny to be tackled in the short term.
The Senate report also advises Haiti’s leaders to make it easier to start and operate businesses and urges them to set up a six-month term to evaluate investment proposals. In the past, it said, “some dragged on for years until investors simply gave up.”
The report was prepared after meetings with 10 of Haiti’s most powerful businessmen, more than a dozen of their counterparts in the neighboring Dominican Republic, U.S. diplomats and World Bank staff. The lone Haitian government official listed is Lionel Delatour, who consults for the Haitian committee aimed at increasing garment exports to the U.S.
Dominican entrepreneurs are quoted as complaining that corruption, crime, kidnapping, political instability and poor infrastructure threaten to make their involvement in reconstruction “a waste of time.”
Preval has been president for nearly 10 of the last 15 years. In that time Haiti has suffered government upheaval including the bloody ouster President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the tumultuous reign of a U.S.-backed interim government, numerous hurricanes and floods and the Jan. 12 earthquake.
His term is scheduled to end in February, with a successor to be chosen in a Nov. 28 vote.
Opponents are trying to postpone those elections, accusing the current electoral council of rigging the vote for an as-yet-unnamed Preval-picked successor. Unions called for a general strike Thursday to pressure the government to replace the council’s members, but it failed to materialize.
Meanwhile, in New York, former U.S. President Bill Clinton and Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive met with major donors to encourage them to make good on the $5.3 billion worth of reconstruction aid pledges. Almost none of the money has been turned over yet.
The International Monetary Fund also announced it was canceling $268 million of Haiti’s debt, including some issued after the quake. At the same time, it issued a new three-year $60 million low-interest loan to help stabilize Haiti’s currency.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.