This discovery comes from an incredibly deep well of
information in the writings of Ezili Danto (Marguerite Laurent), in her
article, Part
2, Oil in Haiti as the economic reasons for the US/UN occupation, written
in January. Danto’s opening line links to Part
1 of the story from her website, and contains a cache of press clippings by
her and other Haitian authors, dated October 2009. Both parts are worth their
weight in the gold of truth, revealing recent events as part of an ongoing
privatization of Haiti’s abundant assets, with Papa Clinton plus 20,000 US
troops there to put a benign face on guarding those assets as a “humanitarian
effort.”
She writes, “After the earthquake, I questioned whether oil
drilling could have triggered the earthquake (Did mining and oil drilling trigger the Haiti earthquake?)
Then suddenly, after spending years hitting myself against
Officialdom’s colonial rock that kept denying Haiti had significant resources.
After being called crazy and un-American for writing that the 2010 earthquake
gives the US the perfect disaster-capitalism opportunity to come out from
behind the UN and openly occupy Haiti to secure Haiti’s oil, strategic location
and other riches for the corporatocracy. Just after I wrote about oil drilling
causing earthquakes, on the following Tuesday, a veteran oil company man comes
forward in Businessweek to say, and one wonders how he can so authoritatively
speculate about the area of the faultline without intimate knowledge of the
drillings, explorations, Haiti’s wellheads and oil map, et al, but nonetheless
his sudden, seemingly unprompted REVELATION, is that Haiti lies in an area that
has undiscovered amounts of oil, it must have oil and the earthquake ‘may have
left clues’ to petroleum reservoirs! Oil that, uhmmm, ‘could aid economic
recovery in the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation, a geologist said.’ (Haiti
Earthquake May Have Exposed Gas, Aiding Economy by Jim Polson, Jan. 26,
2010, Bloomberg.) Yep, yep he may really mean: ‘that could aid Haiti’s
US-occupied economy recover its strategic oil reserves’ for the global elite.
No? I could be wrong, but I am thinking ‘and the cover up, starts.’ But I won’t
say so. Let Stephen Pierce tell the story.”
The geologist, Stephen Pierce, who worked in the region for
30 years for companies like Mobil Corp, reported in a telephone interview with
Business Week, “The quake may have cracked rock formations along the fault,
allowing gas or oil to temporarily seep towards the surface.”
Pierce added that “A geologist . . . tracing that fault zone
from Port-au-Prince
to the border looking for gas and oil seeps, may find a structure that hasn’t
been drilled.” Pierce, now working for Zion Oil & Gas Company, a
Dallas-based company drilling in Israel, also said, “A discovery could
significantly improve the country’s economy and stimulate further exploration,”
as Danto said earlier.
He also contributed information that “The Greater Antilles,
which includes Cuba, Haiti, the Dominican
Republic, Puerto Rico
and their offshore waters, probably hold at least 142 million barrels of oil
and 159 cubic feet of gas, according to a 2000 report by the US Geological
Survey. Undiscovered amounts may be as high as 941 million barrels of oil and
1.2 trillion cubic feet of gas, according to the report. Among nations in the
northern Caribbean, Cuba and
Jamaica
have awarded offshore leases for oil and gas development. Trinidad and Tobago, South American islands off
the coast of Venezuela,
account for most Caribbean oil production,
according to the US Energy Department.”
So, quite naturally Haiti has a sizeable reserve of oil
and natural gas. Why would it not? It shares the Caribbean
waters with surrounding oil producing islands. Also, it isn’t news to the US, but it
definitely is not news to a 30-year geology veteran who worked for oil
companies like Mobil Corp.
In fact, there’s always been oil in Haiti. US/USAID
actually guaranteed an oil contract for a US businessman named Charles C.
Valentine as far back as November 1962, curiously a year before the JFK
assassination, one of the things on JFK’s plate back then being the cancelation
of oil-depletion allowances. Meanwhile, US/USAI gave Valentine’s company
monopoly control over pretty much everything to do with oil in Haiti.
Then the agency paid him to take a walk. He claimed $327,304 from the agency,
which was itself able to “extract” it from the Haitian government, plus $4,398
in interest charges. So there’s a not to pretty a picture here of what was
going on then and, most probably, now.
Danto provides material from the Haitian scholar Dr. Georges
Michel, who claims the US knew about oil and natural gas reserves back in 1908
and began explorations in the 1950s, locking up “strategic gas reserves for the
US,” to be tapped when Mid-East oil became less valuable. The unspoken rule
here is that hyped scarcities of oil keep prices high. Yet, oil companies have
to have a full tank somewhere in case Mid-East supplies diminish sharply,
raising prices, for whatever reasons, the War on Terror, hostilities in Iraq,
embargos on Iran, to mention a few.
But the US still needed to keep dictatorial governments in
power in Haiti as its ace in the hole, and try to overthrow any duly elected
democratic governments from 1991 on, for fear some popular president might want
to nationalize oil and gas reserves for the benefit of the bitingly poor
Haitian people as Hugo Chavez did in Venezuela. Ms. Danto points us to an
article by Ginette and Daniel Mathurin that says there’s more
oil in Haiti than in Venezuela.
As mentioned earlier, Danto writes, “The earthquake(s) may
have just been a large hydraulic fracturing or ‘fracking’ operation . . . to
release the hydrocarbons from isolated pockets so oil and natural gas could be
more easily accessed. Or, perhaps drilling at the existing wellheads in Port au
Prince may have linked up with existing fractures and interconnected to affect
the fault-line and cause the earthquake as an unintended consequence. There
have been reports of minor earthquakes in Port au Prince these last few years
of very small magnitudes. They could have caused damage that interconnected
with the latest fracking to destabilize the fault line, cause the earthquake.”
(And then there’s always the ever present HAARP).
That said, read every word of this article. Then move to the
articles in part one, including one on Clinton’s reasons for being there, “Deep
Water ports built to take tanker off-loads from other oil or Haitian oil
sources.” Part 2 also provides you with a detailed history of US privatizing while
Haiti
battles for its life, struggling with human trafficking, abduction of children
for slave labor and pedophilia. Frankly, I can’t write it any better than Ms.
Danto and her fellow Haitian writers, whose hearts are as deep as the ocean,
intellect clear as the Haitian sky, souls angry as the island hurricanes.
Beyond that look for a significant article from Part 2, Haiti’s
Riches: Interview with Ezili Danto on Mining in Haiti. This interview goes
beyond oil and gas to the US
and other foreign powers mining for gold, copper, uranium, bauxite, and other
natural resources in Haiti.
Her comments note the potential environmental impact, poisoning of water, air,
earth, and people, in the mining processes. It also deals with the absence of
significant payment to the Haitian people for their resources, but rather using
the people as low-paid, slave laborers to extract and give away their own
national wealth. It’s the awful irony of colonialism revisited.
It includes tales of US deal-making with puppet governments
under the first coup d’etat from 1991-4 (under Bush Sr.), and from the last
coup d’etat in 2004 (under Bush Jr.). The 10-year period between coups, during
which the duly elected Aristide was Haiti’s president, were halcyon years for
Haiti. But Aristide, a catholic priest, was kidnapped after the last coup from
his own country by US operatives. Consequently, the misery, human and natural,
severely intensified by 2008.
This interview comes also with a call for accountability,
transparency, and laws for a fair share of financial reparations to the people
of Haiti.
Danto points out that her people are not beggars, except through the actions of
their foreign oppressors, primarily the US. This article, as the others, is
well worth your time and attention. It will take the wind out of the sails of
our current media rhetoric, projecting ourselves as Haiti’s benefactors fallen like
angels from the sky.
In fact, Danto writes, “imposed famine from fraudulent ‘free
trade’ policies are destroying Haitian food sovereignty, increasing violence
and organized kidnappings, drug-dealings and arms trafficking, and, perhaps
genocide and forced sterilization by this wholesale foreign-foreign-imposed
(UNICEF/WHO [World Health Organization] $10 million dollar) vaccination program
in UN occupied Haiti).” This is excerpted from Danto’s Note “Genocide by
vaccination in Haiti”
and “Is this a way to sterilize women, as was done to Puerto Rican women?” from
June 15, 2008.
Let me sign off now, so you can get to read these links.
Class is out. Life begins again, with all of us trying to make a united effort
to help Haiti
grab the helm of its future, and not drown in the schemes and avarice of the
giant from the north, including some Canadian sharpies. They constitute, as
Danto says, “the UN/US military proxy occupation securing oil/gas reserves from
Haiti.
The wealthy, powerful and well-armed . . . robbing the Haitian people blind.”
In short, Danto’s writings and press-clippings constitute one of the few
sources in the world where you will find these crimes against humanity so
explicitly described.
Jerry Mazza is a freelance writer and life-long
resident of New York City. Reach him at gvmaz@verizon.net. His new book, “State Of
Shock: Poems from 9/11 on” is available at
www.jerrymazza.com, Amazon or Barnesandnoble.com.