The resolution on Haiti adopted at the OAS General Assembly two weeks ago may eventually be remembered less for what it promises than for what it quietly acknowledges: that Haiti’s crisis has become inseparable from the future stability of the wider hemisphere.
Such
broader recognition is long overdue, even as Caricom appears to have intimately
engaged the journey for some time now. This is particularly so when it comes to
nearby member states Jamaica and The Bahamas. But visa requirements for Haitians
remain intact in a majority of Caricom states.
For
many years, responses in the wider Americas have oscillated between expressions
of solidarity and carefully managed distance, including complete silence.
Haiti
has often been treated as a country somehow detached from the mainstream,
despite sharing a history of colonial exploitation, economic vulnerability, and
democratic fragility.
The
latest OAS resolution abandons some of that pretence. For example, it accepts
that Haiti’s multidimensional crisis cannot be addressed through security
measures alone.
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| The OAS hosted its 56th General Assembly in Panama |
For
Caribbean governments, the resolution also reflects responsibilities extending beyond
diplomatic endorsement and posturing, though we too have had our share of negligence
and/or incapacity.
Caricom
has already assumed a prominent, if not under-resourced role in the current
period. It continues to participate in the Standing Group of Partners
overseeing the Gang Suppression Force while facilitating political dialogue
through its Eminent Persons Group while working alongside the OAS and United
Nations on the Haiti Roadmap for Stability and Peace.
This
represents perhaps the most sustained, multi-dimensional, regional engagement
with Haiti in decades. Yet, as hemispheric representatives conceded in Panama,
the implications reach beyond Port-au-Prince.
If
the hemisphere accepts that organised criminal violence can overwhelm a
neighbouring state without a broad, coordinated response, it effectively lowers
the threshold for similar instability elsewhere.
The
OAS Secretary General, Albert Ramdin, is strong on that point as no country in
the hemisphere remains untouched by the hand of transnational crime. This is
manifest in domestic turmoil and instability.
Firearms
trafficking, illicit financial flows, irregular migration, human trafficking,
and transnational organised crime recognise neither maritime boundaries nor
diplomatic sensitivities.
The
resolution therefore serves another purpose. It is not simply about rescuing
Haiti. It is about strengthening regional resilience before comparable
pressures become unmanageable elsewhere. There is evidence this is already
emerging, if not already the established case.
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| "Haitian Bus" - Wesley Gibbings watercolour |
That
lesson deserves attention throughout the OAS landscape and perhaps beyond.
Across
the region, political polarisation is deepening. Public confidence in
institutions is weakening. Criminal organisations continue expanding their
influence. Economic pressures increasingly test governmental capacity. And
states have not always acted in accordance with accepted international human
rights norms.
These
may differ in degree from Haiti’s circumstances, but not necessarily in
direction.
There
is also another subtle message within the OAS resolution. It repeatedly
emphasises transparency, coordination and accountability - not only for Haiti
itself but also for the international agencies intervening there. It demands
regular reporting, institutional review, and clearer coordination among the
OAS, the United Nations, Caricom, and international partners.
This
point represents an implicit admission that previous international
interventions have often suffered from duplication, fragmented mandates, an
absence of cultural awareness, and inadequate oversight.
People
of the Caribbean should welcome that honesty.
Too
often, external assistance has arrived in Haiti accompanied by competing
priorities and short political attention spans. Sustainable recovery requires
coherence rather than episodic interventions responding to successive
emergencies.
Ultimately,
this resolution asks governments to think differently about regional security
itself.
Security
can no longer be confined to military or policing responses. It now encompasses
functioning democratic institutions, social inclusion, economic opportunity,
humanitarian protection, and effective governance. Those elements reinforce one
another.
Whether
the new roadmap succeeds remains uncertain. Haiti has witnessed many ambitious
international commitments before.
But
failure this time would not belong to Haiti alone.

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