Activities by Country


President and Mrs. Carter, along with Colin Powell and Sam Nunn, assess election preparations in February 1995.
Carter Center Photo

President and Mrs. Carter, along with Colin Powell and Sam Nunn, assess election preparations in February 1995.

Haiti

In September 1994, U.S. President Bill Clinton asked President Jimmy Carter to undertake a mission to negotiate the departure of Haiti's military leaders, paving the way for the restoration of Jean-Bertrande Aristide as president.


Building Hope


A primary goal of The Carter Center is to promote peace throughout the world. In the early 1990s, Haiti's President Jean-Bertrande Aristide was overthrown by the military, and great civil unrest ensued. The Carter Center was there, offering a calm voice amid the disquiet. Today, The Carter Center continues to monitor Haiti, promoting peace and democracy in the nation.


Waging Peace


Monitoring Elections

In 1987, members of the Carter Center's Council of Presidents and Prime Ministers of the Americas, an informal group of current and former leaders from the Western Hemisphere, met to discuss the electoral process in Haiti. A presidential candidate had been assassinated, which threatened to undermine the entire process. Former U.S. President Jimmy Carter, former Prime Minister George Price of Belize, and Dr. Robert Pastor, then director of the Center's Americas Program, flew to the island to try to steer the elections back on track. They succeeded at the time, but in December, the military intervened and prevented the election.

In July 1990, the council was invited by then President Ertha Pascal-Trouillot and opposition leaders to monitor the election. In this effort, the council joined the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, visited the country several times in advance of the Dec. 15 ballot, and sent an international delegation to monitor the vote. President Aristide won in Haiti's first free and fair election in its history, but less than a year later, he was overthrown in a military coup.

The Carter Center became actively involved in assisting the international community to restore constitutional government to Haiti in September 2001. Visiting the Center in December 1992, former Prime Minister Michael Manley of Jamaica and U.N. Secretary-general Boutros Boutros-Ghali discussed possible involvement by the United Nations or Organization of American States in Haiti, and President Aristide visited the Center the next month. President Aristide remained in close contact with President Carter and Dr. Pastor and participated in several discussions at the Center on how to restore democracy to Haiti.

Many of those ideas bore fruit in September 1994, when President Carter was asked by Haitian General Raoul Cédras to help avoid a U.S. military invasion of Haiti. President Carter relayed this information to President Clinton, who asked him to undertake a mission to Haiti with Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., and former Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Colin Powell. The team successfully negotiated the departure of Haiti's military leaders, paving the way for the restoration of Jean-Bertrande Aristide as president.

In February 1995, the negotiating team returned to Haiti to assess the country's progress. Their visit focused on the transfer of authority from American-led forces to the United Nations and on preparations for parliamentary and presidential elections. They found signs of progress but warned of pitfalls that could mar the June 1995 elections.

Visiting Haiti during the June 1995 election, The Carter Center found it flawed by technical and administrative problems, and its results were widely disputed. However, he said, "Compared to 200 years of dictatorship and repression, the election was a step out of the past. Whether it will be a step forward or sideways remains to be seen."

The Carter Center was again called on after the 2000 elections. The Caribbean Community  and the Organization of American States led a mission to seek solutions to an impasse on the disputed election results and to develop plans to fortify Haiti's democratic institutions. The Carter Center served as an adviser to the mission. The OAS has continued to serve as the mediator for this dispute, and The Carter Center continues to monitor the evolution of democracy and prospects for development in Haiti.


Urging a Moratorium on Arms Sales

Although Latin America spends relatively less on defense than most other regions, expenditures on expensive weapons systems divert scarce foreign exchange from more effective investments, including education. They also compel neighbors to spend more on defense and, by doing so, generate international tensions. Concerned about an arms race in Latin America, the Carter Center's Council of Presidents and Prime Ministers of the Americas urged governments in the region to pause before embarking on major arms purchases. Between April 1997 and March 1998, 28 current heads of government and 14 former heads of government signed a written pledge to accept a moratorium of two years on purchasing sophisticated weapons. Among the signatories was Haiti President René Preval.

Learn more about the Carter Center's Americas Program.


Updated May 2006


Election Reports

Assessment Mission to Haiti (March 1995) (PDF)
Report on the Elections in Haiti, June 25, 1995, by Robert Pastor.
 

Assessment Mission to Haiti (January 1995) (PDF)
Report on the Council of Freely Elected Heads of Government's December 1994 mission to assess Haiti's political and economic climate and to explore opportunities to assist with economic development.

 

Final Report: Observing the 1990 Haiti Elections (PDF), released May 1, 1991
At the invitation of the President of Provisional President Ertha Pascal Trouillot, the Provisional Electoral Council and leaders of the major political parties, The Carter Center's Council of Freely Elected Heads of Government, along with the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs (NDI), monitored the 1990 elections.
 



Map of Haiti
(Click to enlarge)



QUICK FACTS: HAITI

Size: 27,750 square kilometers

Population: 8,706,497

Average annual income: $480 USD
Population below poverty line: 80 percent
Religions: Roman Catholic, 80 percent; Protestant; others -- roughly half of the population practices voodoo

Life expectancy: 57 years

Languages: French (official), Creole (official)
Ethnic groups: African origin, 95 percent; mulatto; and white

(Source: U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, World Factbook 2008; The World Bank 2006)