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Haiti

Haiti,[b] officially the Republic of Haiti,[c][d] is a country on the island of Hispaniola in the Caribbean Sea, east of Cuba and Jamaica, and south of The Bahamas. It occupies the western three-eighths of the island which it shares with the Dominican Republic.[18][19] Haiti is 27,750 km2 (10,714 sq mi), the third largest country in the Caribbean, and has an estimated population of 11.4 million,[20][21] making it the most populous Caribbean country. The capital is Port-au-Prince.

Republic of Haiti
République d'Haïti (French)
Repiblik d Ayiti (Haitian Creole)[1]
Motto: 
"Liberté, égalité, fraternité" (French)[2]
"Libète, Egalite, Fratènite" (Haitian Creole)
"Liberty, Equality, Fraternity"
Motto on traditional coat of arms:
"L'union fait la force" (French)
"Inite se fòs" (Haitian Creole)[3]
"Union makes strength"
Anthem: La Dessalinienne (French)
Desalinyèn (Haitian Creole)
"The Dessalines Song"
Capital
and largest city
Port-au-Prince
18°32′N 72°20′W / 18.533°N 72.333°W / 18.533; -72.333
Official languages
Ethnic groups
95% Black
5% Mixed or White[4]
Religion
(2020)[5]
Demonym(s)Haitian
GovernmentUnitary semi-presidential republic under an interim government
Fritz Belizaire (acting)[6]
• President of the Court of Cassation
Jean Joseph Lebrun
LegislatureNational Assembly[a]
Senate[a] (vacant)
Chamber of Deputies[a] (vacant)
Independence from France
• Declared
1 January 1804
• Recognized
17 April 1825
22 September 1804
9 March 1806
17 October 1806
• Kingdom
28 March 1811
9 February 1822
• Dissolution
27 February 1844
26 August 1849
• Republic
15 January 1859
28 July 1915 – 1 August 1934
29 March 1987
Area
• Total
27,750[7] km2 (10,710 sq mi) (143rd)
• Water (%)
0.7
Population
• 2023 estimate
11,470,261[8] (83rd)
• Density
382/km2 (989.4/sq mi) (32nd)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$38.952 billion[9] (144th)
• Per capita
$3,185[9] (174th)
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$25.986 billion[9] (139th)
• Per capita
$2,125[9] (172nd)
Gini (2012)41.1[10]
medium
HDI (2022) 0.552[11]
medium (158th)
CurrencyGourde (G) (HTG)
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
• Summer (DST)
UTC−4 (EDT)
Driving sideright
Calling code+509
ISO 3166 codeHT
Internet TLD.ht

The island was originally inhabited by the Taíno people.[22] The first Europeans arrived in December 1492 during the first voyage of Christopher Columbus.[23] Columbus founded the first European settlement in the Americas, La Navidad, on what is now the northeastern coast of Haiti.[24][25][26][27] The island was claimed by Spain, forming part of the Spanish Empire until the early 17th century. Competing claims and settlements led to the west of the island being ceded to France in 1697, which was subsequently named Saint-Domingue. French colonists established sugarcane plantations, worked by enslaved persons brought from Africa, which made the colony one of the world's richest.

In the midst of the French Revolution, enslaved persons, maroons, and free people of color launched the Haitian Revolution (1791–1804), led by a former slave and general of the French Army, Toussaint Louverture. Napoleon's forces were defeated by Louverture's successor, Jean-Jacques Dessalines (later Emperor Jacques I), who declared Haiti's sovereignty on 1 January 1804, leading to a massacre of the French. The country became the first independent nation of the Caribbean, the second republic in the Americas, the first country in the Americas to officially abolish slavery, and only country established by a slave revolt.[28][29][30] President Jean-Pierre Boyer decided to invade and occupy Santo Domingo in February 1822, which eventually led to the long Haitian–Dominican war. Defeated, Haiti recognized Dominican independence in 1867, following their declaration in 1844. Haiti's first century of independence was characterized by political instability, ostracism by the international community, payment of a crippling debt to France and the vast cost of the war and the occupation of Santo Domingo. Political volatility and foreign economic influence prompted the US to occupy the country between 1915 and 1934. The last contingent of US Marines departed on August 15, 1934, after a formal transfer of authority to the Garde and Haïti regained its independence.[31] François 'Papa Doc' Duvalier took power in 1957, ushering in a long period of autocratic rule continued by his son, Jean-Claude 'Baby Doc' Duvalier, that lasted until 1986; the period was characterized by state-sanctioned violence against the opposition and civilians, corruption, and economic stagnation. The country endured a 2004 coup d'état, which prompted U.N. intervention, as well as a catastrophic earthquake in 2010 that killed over 250,000 people and a cholera outbreak. Many countries canceled Haiti's debt, including France and the United States. With its deteriorating economic situation,[32] Haiti has experienced a socioeconomic and political crisis marked by riots and protests, widespread hunger, and increased gang activity.[33] As of February 2023, Haiti has no remaining elected government officials and has been described as a failed state.[34][35]

Haiti is a founding member of the United Nations, Organization of American States (OAS),[36] Association of Caribbean States,[37] and the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie. In addition to CARICOM, it is a member of the International Monetary Fund,[38] World Trade Organization,[39] and Community of Latin American and Caribbean States. Historically poor and politically unstable, Haiti has the lowest Human Development Index in the Americas, as well as widespread slavery.

Etymology

Haiti (also earlier Hayti)[d] comes from the indigenous Taíno language, and means "land of high mountains";[40] it was the native name[e] for the entire island of Hispaniola. The name was restored by Haitian revolutionary Jean-Jacques Dessalines as the official name of independent Saint-Domingue, as a tribute to the Amerindian predecessors.[44]

In French, the ï in Haïti has a diacritical mark (used to show that the second vowel is pronounced separately, as in the word naïve), while the H is silent.[45] (In English, this rule for the pronunciation is often disregarded, thus the spelling Haiti is used.) There are different anglicizations for its pronunciation such as HIGH-ti, high-EE-ti and haa-EE-ti, which are still in use, but HAY-ti is the most widespread and best-established.[46] In French, Haiti's nickname means the "Pearl of the Antilles" (La Perle des Antilles) because of both its natural beauty[47] and the amount of wealth it accumulated for the Kingdom of France.[48] In Haitian Creole, it is spelled and pronounced with a y but no H: Ayiti. Another theory on the name Haiti is its origin in African tradition, in Fon language one of the most spoken by the bossales (Haitians born in Africa), Ayiti-Tomè means: From nowadays this land is our land.[citation needed]

In the Haitian community the country has multiple nicknames: Ayiti-Toma (as its origin in Ayiti Tomè), Ayiti-Cheri (Ayiti my Darling), Tè-Desalin (Dessalines' Land) or Lakay (Home).

History

Taino history

 
The five caciquedoms of Hispaniola at the time of the arrival of Christopher Columbus

The island of Hispaniola, of which Haiti occupies the western three-eighths,[18][19] has been inhabited since about 5000 BC by groups of Native Americans thought to have arrived from Central or South America.[49] Genetic studies show that some of these groups were related to the Yanomami of the Amazon Basin.[22][50] Amongst these early settlers were the Ciboney peoples, followed by the Taíno, speakers of an Arawakan language, elements of which have been preserved in Haitian Creole. The Taíno name for the entire island was Haiti, or alternatively Quisqeya.[51]

In Taíno society the largest unit of political organization was led by a cacique, or chief, as the Europeans understood them. The island of Hispaniola was divided among five 'caciquedoms': the Magua in the north east, the Marien in the north west, the Jaragua in the south west, the Maguana in the central regions of Cibao, and the Higüey in the south east.[52][53]

Taíno cultural artifacts include cave paintings in several locations in the country. These have become national symbols of Haiti and tourist attractions. Modern-day Léogâne, started as a French colonial town in the southwest, is beside the former capital of the caciquedom of Xaragua.[54]

Colonial era

Spanish rule (1492–1625)

 
Artist's impression of Christopher Columbus landing on Hispaniola, engraving by Theodor de Bry

Navigator Christopher Columbus landed in Haiti on 6 December 1492, in an area that he named Môle-Saint-Nicolas,[55] and claimed the island for the Crown of Castile. Nineteen days later, his ship the Santa María ran aground near the present site of Cap-Haïtien. Columbus left 39 men on the island, who founded the settlement of La Navidad on 25 December 1492.[49] Relations with the native peoples, initially good, broke down and the settlers were later killed by the Taíno.[56]

The sailors carried endemic Eurasian infectious diseases, causing epidemics that killed a large number of native people.[57][58] The first recorded smallpox epidemic in the Americas erupted on Hispaniola in 1507.[59] Their numbers were further reduced by the harshness of the encomienda system, in which the Spanish forced natives to work in gold mines and plantations.[60][56]

The Spanish passed the Laws of Burgos (1512–1513), which forbade the maltreatment of natives, endorsed their conversion to Catholicism,[61] and gave legal framework to encomiendas. The natives were brought to these sites to work in specific plantations or industries.[62]

As the Spanish re-focused their colonization efforts on the greater riches of mainland Central and South America, Hispaniola became reduced largely to a trading and refueling post. As a result piracy became widespread, encouraged by European powers hostile to Spain such as France (based on Île de la Tortue) and England.[56] The Spanish largely abandoned the western third of the island, focusing their colonization effort on the eastern two-thirds.[63][49] The western part of the island was thus gradually settled by French buccaneers; among them was Bertrand d'Ogeron, who succeeded in growing tobacco and recruited many French colonial families from Martinique and Guadeloupe.[64] In 1697 France and Spain settled their hostilities on the island by way of the Treaty of Ryswick of 1697, which divided Hispaniola between them.[65][49]

French rule (1625–1804)

France received the western third and subsequently named it Saint-Domingue, the French equivalent of Santo Domingo, the Spanish colony on Hispaniola.[66] The French set about creating sugar and coffee plantations, worked by vast numbers of those enslaved imported from Africa, and Saint-Domingue grew to become their richest colonial possession,[65][49] generating 40% of France’s foreign trade and doubling the wealth generation of all of England’s colonies, combined.[67]

The French settlers were outnumbered by enslaved persons by almost 10 to 1.[65] According to the 1788 Census, Haiti's population consisted of nearly 25,000 Europeans, 22,000 free coloreds and 700,000 Africans in slavery.[68] In contrast, by 1763 the white population of French Canada, a far larger territory, had numbered only 65,000.[69] In the north of the island, those enslaved were able to retain many ties to African cultures, religion and language; these ties were continually being renewed by newly imported Africans. Some West Africans in slavery held on to their traditional Vodou beliefs by secretly syncretizing it with Catholicism.[49]

The French enacted the Code Noir ("Black Code"), prepared by Jean-Baptiste Colbert and ratified by Louis XIV, which established rules on slave treatment and permissible freedoms.[70] Saint-Domingue has been described as one of the most brutally efficient slave colonies; at the end of the eighteenth century it was supplying two-thirds of Europe's tropical produce while one-third of newly imported Africans died within a few years.[71] Many enslaved persons died from diseases such as smallpox and typhoid fever.[72] They had low birth rates,[73] and there is evidence that some women aborted fetuses rather than give birth to children within the bonds of slavery.[74] The colony's environment also suffered, as forests were cleared to make way for plantations and the land was overworked so as to extract maximum profit for French plantation owners.[49]

 
Saint-Domingue slave revolt in 1791

As in its Louisiana colony, the French colonial government allowed some rights to free people of color (gens de couleur), the mixed-race descendants of European male colonists and African enslaved females (and later, mixed-race women).[65] Over time, many were released from slavery and they established a separate social class. White French Creole fathers frequently sent their mixed-race sons to France for their education. Some men of color were admitted into the military. More of the free people of color lived in the south of the island, near Port-au-Prince, and many intermarried within their community.[65] They frequently worked as artisans and tradesmen, and began to own some property, including enslaved persons of their own.[49][65] The free people of color petitioned the colonial government to expand their rights.[65]

The brutality of slave life led many people in bondage to escape to mountainous regions, where they set up their own autonomous communities and became known as maroons.[49] One maroon leader, François Mackandal, led a rebellion in the 1750s; however, he was later captured and executed by the French.[65]

Haitian Revolution (1791–1804)

 
General Toussaint Louverture

Inspired by the French Revolution of 1789 and principles of the rights of man, the French settlers and free people of color pressed for greater political freedom and more civil rights.[70] Tensions between these two groups led to conflict, as a militia of free-coloreds was set up in 1790 by Vincent Ogé, resulting in his capture, torture and execution.[49] Sensing an opportunity, in August 1791 the first slave armies were established in northern Haiti under the leadership of Toussaint Louverture inspired by the Vodou houngan (priest) Boukman, and backed by the Spanish in Santo Domingo – soon a full-blown slave rebellion had broken out across the entire colony.[49]

In 1792, the French government sent three commissioners with troops to re-establish control; to build an alliance with the gens de couleur and enslaved persons commissioners Léger-Félicité Sonthonax and Étienne Polverel abolished slavery in the colony.[70] Six months later, the National Convention, led by Maximilien de Robespierre and the Jacobins, endorsed abolition and extended it to all the French colonies.[75]

The United States, which was a new republic itself, oscillated between supporting or not supporting Toussaint Louverture and the emerging country of Haiti, depending on who was President of the US. Washington, who was a slave holder and isolationist, kept the United States neutral, although private US citizens at times provided aid to French planters trying to put down the revolt. John Adams, a vocal opponent of slavery, fully supported the slave revolt by providing diplomatic recognition, financial support, munitions and warships (including the USS Constitution) beginning in 1798. This support ended in 1801 when Jefferson, another slave-holding president, took office and recalled the US Navy.[76][77][78]

With slavery abolished, Toussaint Louverture pledged allegiance to France, and he fought off the British and Spanish forces who had taken advantage of the situation and invaded Saint-Domingue.[79][80] The Spanish were later forced to cede their part of the island to France under the terms of the Peace of Basel in 1795, uniting the island under one government. However, an insurgency against French rule broke out in the east, and in the west there was fighting between Louverture's forces and the free people of color led by André Rigaud in the War of the Knives (1799–1800).[81][82] The United States' support for the blacks in the war contributed to their victory over the mulattoes.[83] More than 25,000 whites and free blacks left the island as refugees.[84]

 
Battle between Polish troops in French service and the Haitian rebels. The majority of Polish soldiers eventually deserted the French army and fought alongside the Haitians.

After Louverture created a separatist constitution and proclaimed himself governor-general for life, Napoléon Bonaparte in 1802 sent an expedition of 20,000 soldiers and as many sailors[85] under the command of his brother-in-law, Charles Leclerc, to reassert French control. The French achieved some victories, but within a few months most of their army had died from yellow fever.[86] Ultimately more than 50,000 French troops died in an attempt to retake the colony, including 18 generals.[87] The French managed to capture Louverture, transporting him to France for trial. He was imprisoned at Fort de Joux, where he died in 1803 of exposure and possibly tuberculosis.[71][88]

 
Haitians hanging French soldiers

The enslaved persons, along with free gens de couleur and allies, continued their fight for independence, led by generals Jean-Jacques Dessalines, Alexandre Pétion and Henry Christophe.[88] The rebels finally managed to decisively defeat the French troops at the Battle of Vertières on 18 November 1803, establishing the first nation ever to successfully gain independence through a slave revolt.[89] Under the overall command of Dessalines, the Haitian armies avoided open battle, and instead conducted a successful guerrilla campaign against the Napoleonic forces, working with diseases such as yellow fever to reduce the numbers of French soldiers.[90] Later that year France withdrew its remaining 7,000 troops from the island and Napoleon gave up his idea of re-establishing a North American empire, selling Louisiana (New France) to the United States, in the Louisiana Purchase.[88]

Throughout the revolution, an estimated 20,000 French troops succumbed to yellow fever, while another 37,000 were killed in action,[91] exceeding the total French soldiers killed in action across various 19th-century colonial campaigns in Algeria, Mexico, Indochina, Tunisia, and West Africa, which resulted in approximately 10,000 French soldiers killed in action combined.[92] The British sustained 100,000 casualties.[83] Additionally, 350,000 ex-enslaved Haitians died.[93] In the process, Dessalines became arguably the most successful military commander in the struggle against Napoleonic France.[94]

Independent Haiti

First Empire (1804–1806)

 
Pétion and Dessalines swearing allegiance to each other before God; painting by Guillon-Lethière

The independence of Saint-Domingue was proclaimed under the native name 'Haiti' by Jean-Jacques Dessalines on 1 January 1804 in Gonaïves[95][96] and he was proclaimed "Emperor for Life" as Emperor Jacques I by his troops.[97] Dessalines at first offered protection to the white planters and others.[98] However, once in power, he ordered the genocide of nearly all the remaining white men, women, children; between January and April 1804, 3,000 to 5,000 whites were killed, including those who had been friendly and sympathetic to the black population.[99] Only three categories of white people were selected out as exceptions and spared: Polish soldiers, the majority of whom had deserted from the French army and fought alongside the Haitian rebels; the small group of German colonists invited to the north-west region; and a group of medical doctors and professionals.[100] Reportedly, people with connections to officers in the Haitian army were also spared, as well as the women who agreed to marry non-white men.[101]

Fearful of the potential impact the slave rebellion could have in the slave states, U.S. President Thomas Jefferson refused to recognize the new republic. The Southern politicians who were a powerful voting bloc in the American Congress prevented U.S. recognition for decades until they withdrew in 1861 to form the Confederacy.[102]

The revolution led to a wave of emigration.[103] In 1809, 9,000 refugees from Saint-Domingue, both white planters and people of color, settled en masse in New Orleans, doubling the city's population, having been expelled from their initial refuge in Cuba by Spanish authorities.[104] In addition, the newly arrived enslaved persons added to the city's African population.[105]

The plantation system was re-established in Haiti, albeit for wages; however, many Haitians were marginalized and resented the heavy-handed manner in which this was enforced in the new nation's politics.[88] The rebel movement splintered, and Dessalines was assassinated by rivals on 17 October 1806.[106][Link to precise page][88]

State of Haiti, Kingdom of Haiti and the Republic (1806–1820)

 
Citadelle Laferrière, built 1805–1822, is the largest fortress in the Americas, and is considered locally to be an eighth wonder of the world.[107]

After Dessalines' death Haiti became split into two, with the Kingdom of Haiti in the north directed by Henri Christophe, later declaring himself Henri I, and a republic in the south centered on Port-au-Prince, directed by Alexandre Pétion, an homme de couleur.[108][109][110][111][88] Christophe established a semi-feudal corvée system, with a rigid education and economic code.[112] Pétion's republic was less absolutist, and he initiated a series of land reforms which benefited the peasant class.[88] President Pétion also gave military and financial assistance to the revolutionary leader Simón Bolívar, which were critical in enabling him to liberate the Viceroyalty of New Granada.[113] Meanwhile, the French, who had managed to maintain a precarious control of eastern Hispaniola, were defeated by insurgents led by Juan Sánchez Ramírez, with the area returning to Spanish rule in 1809 following the Battle of Palo Hincado.[114]

Unification of Hispaniola (1821–1844)

 
Jean-Pierre Boyer, ruler of Haiti 1818–1843

Beginning in 1821, President Jean-Pierre Boyer, also an homme de couleur and successor to Pétion, reunified the island following the suicide of Henry Christophe.[49][115] After Santo Domingo declared its independence from Spain on 30 November 1821, Boyer invaded, seeking to unite the entire island by force and ending slavery in Santo Domingo.[116]

Struggling to revive the agricultural economy to produce commodity crops, Boyer passed the Code Rural, which denied peasant laborers the right to leave the land, enter the towns, or start farms or shops of their own, causing much resentment as most peasants wished to have their own farms rather than work on plantations.[117][118]

Starting in September 1824, more than 6,000 African Americans migrated to Haiti, with transportation paid by an American philanthropic group similar in function to the American Colonization Society and its efforts in Liberia.[119] Many found the conditions too harsh and returned to the United States.

In July 1825, King Charles X of France, during a period of restoration of the French monarchy, sent a fleet to reconquer Haiti. Under pressure, President Boyer agreed to a treaty by which France formally recognized the independence of the nation in exchange for a payment of 150 million francs.[49] By an order of 17 April 1826, the King of France renounced his rights of sovereignty and formally recognized the independence of Haiti.[120][121][122] The enforced payments to France hampered Haiti's economic growth for years, exacerbated by the fact that many Western nations continued to refuse formal diplomatic recognition to Haiti; Britain recognized Haitian independence in 1833, and the United States not until 1862.[49] Haiti borrowed heavily from Western banks at extremely high interest rates to repay the debt. Although the amount of the reparations was reduced to 90 million in 1838, by 1900 80% of Haiti's government spending was debt repayment and the country did not finish repaying it until 1947.[123][88]

Loss of the Spanish portion of the island

After losing the support of Haiti's elite, Boyer was ousted in 1843, with Charles Rivière-Hérard replacing him as president.[49] Nationalist Dominican forces in eastern Hispaniola led by Juan Pablo Duarte seized control of Santo Domingo on 27 February 1844.[49] The Haitian forces, unprepared for a significant uprising, capitulated to the rebels, effectively ending Haitian rule of eastern Hispaniola. In March Rivière-Hérard attempted to reimpose his authority, but the Dominicans inflicted heavy losses.[124] Rivière-Hérard was removed from office by the mulatto hierarchy and replaced with the aged general Philippe Guerrier, who assumed the presidency on 3 May 1844.

Guerrier died in April 1845, and was succeeded by General Jean-Louis Pierrot.[125] Pierrot's most pressing duty as the new president was to check the incursions of the Dominicans, who were harassing the Haitian troops.[125] Dominican gunboats were also making depredations on Haiti's coasts.[125] President Pierrot decided to open a campaign against the Dominicans, whom he considered merely as insurgents; however, the Haitian offensive of 1845 was stopped on the frontier.[124]

On 1 January 1846 Pierrot announced a fresh campaign to reimpose Haitian suzerainty over eastern Hispaniola, but his officers and men greeted this fresh summons with contempt.[124] Thus, a month later – February 1846 – when Pierrot ordered his troops to march against the Dominicans, the Haitian army mutinied, and its soldiers proclaimed his overthrow as president of the republic.[124] With the war against the Dominicans having become very unpopular in Haiti, it was beyond the power of the new president, General Jean-Baptiste Riché, to stage another invasion.[124]

Second Empire (1849–1859)

 
Faustin I, from The Illustrated London News, 16 February 1856

On 27 February 1847, President Riché died after only a year in power and was replaced by an obscure officer, General Faustin Soulouque.[49] During the first two years of Soulouque's administration the conspiracies and opposition he faced in retaining power were so manifold that the Dominicans were given a further breathing space in which to consolidate their independence.[124] But, when in 1848 France finally recognized the Dominican Republic as a free and independent state and provisionally signed a treaty of peace, friendship, commerce and navigation, Haiti immediately protested, claiming the treaty was an attack upon their own security.[124] Soulouque decided to invade the new Republic before the French Government could ratify the treaty.[124]

On 21 March 1849, Haitian soldiers attacked the Dominican garrison at Las Matas. The demoralized defenders offered almost no resistance before abandoning their weapons. Soulouque pressed on, capturing San Juan. This left only the town of Azua as the remaining Dominican stronghold between the Haitian army and the capital. On 6 April, Azua fell to the 18,000-strong Haitian army, with a 5,000-man Dominican counterattack failing to oust them.[79] The way to Santo Domingo was now clear. But the news of discontent existing at Port-au-Prince, which reached Soulouque, arrested his further progress and caused him to return with the army to his capital.[126]

Emboldened by the sudden retreat of the Haitian army, the Dominicans counter-attacked. Their flotilla went as far as Dame-Marie on the west coast of Haiti, which they plundered and set on fire.[126] After another Haitian campaign in 1855, Britain and France intervened and obtained an armistice on behalf of the Dominicans, who declared independence as the Dominican Republic.[126]

The sufferings endured by the soldiers during the campaign of 1855, and the losses and sacrifices inflicted on the country without yielding any compensation or any practical results provoked great discontent.[126] In 1858 a revolution began, led by General Fabre Geffrard, Duke of Tabara. In December of that year, Geffrard defeated the Imperial Army and seized control of most of the country.[49] As a result, the Emperor abdicated his throne on 15 January 1859. Faustin was taken into exile and General Geffrard succeeded him as president.

Late 19th century–early 20th century

 
German Captain Thiele of the Charlotte handing over the German Ultimatum on 6 December 1897 during the Lüders Affair

The period following Soulouque's overthrow down to the turn of the century was a turbulent one for Haiti, with repeated bouts of political instability. President Geffrard was overthrown in a coup in 1867,[127] as was his successor, Sylvain Salnave, in 1869.[128] Under the Presidency of Michel Domingue (1874–76) relations with the Dominican Republic were dramatically improved by the signing of a treaty, in which both parties acknowledged the independence of the other. Some modernisation of the economy and infrastructure also occurred in this period, especially under the Presidencies of Lysius Salomon (1879–1888) and Florvil Hyppolite (1889–1896).[129]

Haiti's relations with outside powers were often strained. In 1889 the United States attempted to force Haiti to permit the building of a naval base at Môle Saint-Nicolas, which was firmly resisted by President Hyppolite.[130] In 1892 the German government supported suppression of the reform movement of Anténor Firmin, and in 1897, the Germans used gunboat diplomacy to intimidate and then humiliate the Haitian government of President Tirésias Simon Sam (1896–1902) during the Lüders Affair.[131]

In the first decades of the 20th century, Haiti experienced great political instability and was heavily in debt to France, Germany and the United States. A series of short lived presidencies came and went: President Pierre Nord Alexis was forced from power in 1908,[132][133] as was his successor François C. Antoine Simon in 1911;[134] President Cincinnatus Leconte (1911–12) was killed in a (possibly deliberate) explosion at the National Palace;[135] Michel Oreste (1913–14) was ousted in a coup, as was his successor Oreste Zamor in 1914.[136]

United States occupation (1915–1934)

 
U.S. Marines and guide in search of Haitian Cacos fighters against the U.S. occupation of Haiti, c. 1919

Germany increased its influence in Haiti in this period, with a small community of German settlers wielding disproportionate influence in Haiti's economy.[137][138] The German influence prompted anxieties in the United States, who had also invested heavily in the country, and whose government defended their right to oppose foreign interference in the Americas under the Monroe Doctrine.[49][138] In December 1914, the Americans removed $500,000 from the Haitian National Bank, but rather than seize it to help pay the debt, it was removed for safe-keeping in New York, thus giving the United States control of the bank and preventing other powers from doing so. This gave a stable financial base on which to build the economy, and so enable the debt to be repaid.[139]

In 1915, Haiti's new President Vilbrun Guillaume Sam sought to strengthen his tenuous rule by a mass execution of 167 political prisoners. Outrage at the killings led to riots, and Sam was captured and killed by a lynch mob.[138][140] Fearing possible foreign intervention, or the emergence of a new government led by the anti-American Haitian politician Rosalvo Bobo, President Woodrow Wilson sent U.S. Marines into Haiti in July 1915. The USS Washington, under Rear Admiral Caperton, arrived in Port-au-Prince in an attempt to restore order and protect U.S. interests. Within days, the Marines had taken control of the capital city and its banks and customs house. The Marines declared martial law and severely censored the press. Within weeks, a new pro-U.S. Haitian president, Philippe Sudré Dartiguenave, was installed and a new constitution written that was favorable to the interests of the United States. The constitution (written by future US President Franklin D. Roosevelt) included a clause that allowed, for the first time, foreign ownership of land in Haiti, which was bitterly opposed by the Haitian legislature and citizenry.[138][141]

 
The body of caco leader Charlemagne Péralte on display after his execution by US forces; the image was counterproductive, with the resemblance to the deposition of Jesus gaining Péralte the status of national martyr.

The occupation improved some of Haiti's infrastructure and centralized power in Port-au-Prince.[138] 1700 km of roads were made usable, 189 bridges were built, many irrigation canals were rehabilitated, hospitals, schools, and public buildings were constructed, and drinking water was brought to the main cities.[citation needed] Agricultural education was organized, with a central school of agriculture and 69 farms in the country.[142][incomplete short citation] However, many infrastructure projects were built using the corvée system that allowed the government/occupying forces to take people from their homes and farms, at gunpoint if necessary, to build roads, bridges etc. by force, a process that was deeply resented by ordinary Haitians.[143][138] Sisal was also introduced to Haiti, and sugarcane and cotton became significant exports, boosting prosperity.[144] Haitian traditionalists, based in rural areas, were highly resistant to U.S.-backed changes, while the urban elites, typically mixed-race, welcomed the growing economy, but wanted more political control.[49] Together they helped secure an end to the occupation in 1934, under the Presidency of Sténio Vincent (1930–1941).[49][145] The debts were still outstanding, though less due to increased prosperity, and the U.S. financial advisor-general receiver handled the budget until 1941.[146][49]

The U.S. Marines were instilled with a special brand of paternalism towards Haitians "expressed in the metaphor of a father's relationship with his children."[147] Armed opposition to the US presence was led by the cacos under the command of Charlemagne Péralte; his capture and execution in 1919 earned him the status of a national martyr.[148][49][138] During Senate hearings in 1921, the commandant of the Marine Corps reported that, in the 20 months of active unrest, 2,250 Haitians had been killed. However, in a report to the Secretary of the Navy, he reported the death toll as being 3,250.[149] Haitian historians have claimed the true number was much higher, but this is not supported by most historians outside Haiti.[150]

Post-occupation era (1934–1957)

After US forces left in 1934, Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo used anti-Haitian sentiment as a nationalist tool. In an event that became known as the Parsley Massacre, he ordered his army to kill Haitians living on the Dominican side of the border.[151][152] Few bullets were used; instead, 20,000–30,000 Haitians were bludgeoned and bayoneted, then herded into the sea, where sharks finished what Trujillo had begun.[153] The indiscriminate massacre occurred over a period of five days.

President Vincent became increasingly dictatorial, and resigned under US pressure in 1941, being replaced by Élie Lescot (1941–46).[154] In 1941, during the Second World War, Lescot declared war on Japan (8 December), Germany (12 December), Italy (12 December), Bulgaria (24 December), Hungary (24 December) and Romania (24 December).[155] Out of these six Axis countries, only Romania reciprocated, declaring war on Haiti on the same day (24 December 1941).[156] On 27 September 1945,[157] Haiti became a founding member of the United Nations (the successor to the League of Nations, of which Haiti was also a founding member).[158][159]

In 1946 Lescot was overthrown by the military, with Dumarsais Estimé later becoming the new president (1946–50).[49] He sought to improve the economy and education, and to boost the role of black Haitians; however, as he sought to consolidate his rule he too was overthrown in a coup led by Paul Magloire, who replaced him as president (1950–56).[49][160] Firmly anti-Communist, he was supported by the United States; with greater political stability tourists started to visit Haiti.[161] The waterfront area of Port-au-Prince was redeveloped to allow cruise ship passengers to walk to cultural attractions.

Duvalier dynasty (1957–1986)

 
"Papa Doc" Duvalier in 1968

In 1956–57 Haiti underwent severe political turmoil; Magloire was forced to resign and leave the country in 1956 and he was followed by four short-lived presidencies.[49] In the September 1957 election François Duvalier was elected President of Haiti. Known as 'Papa Doc' and initially popular, Duvalier remained President until his death in 1971.[162] He advanced black interests in the public sector, where over time, people of color had predominated as the educated urban elite.[49][163] Not trusting the army, despite his frequent purges of officers deemed disloyal, Duvalier created a private militia known as Tontons Macoutes ("Bogeymen"), which maintained order by terrorizing the populace and political opponents.[162][164] In 1964 Duvalier proclaimed himself 'President for Life'; an uprising against his rule that year in Jérémie was violently suppressed, with the ringleaders publicly executed and hundreds of mixed-raced citizens in the town killed.[162] The bulk of the educated and professional class began leaving the country, and corruption became widespread.[49][162] Duvalier sought to create a personality cult, identifying himself with Baron Samedi, one of the loa (or lwa), or spirits, of Haitian Vodou. Despite the well-publicized abuses under his rule, Duvalier's firm anti-Communism earned him the support of the Americans, who furnished the country with aid.[162][165]

In 1971 Duvalier died, and he was succeeded by his son Jean-Claude Duvalier, nicknamed 'Baby Doc', who ruled until 1986.[166][162] He largely continued his father's policies, though curbed some of the worst excesses in order to court international respectability.[49] Tourism, which had nosedived in Papa Doc's time, again became a growing industry.[167] However, as the economy continued to decline, Baby Doc's grip on power began to weaken. Haiti's pig population was slaughtered following an outbreak of swine fever in the late 1970s, causing hardship to rural communities who used them as an investment.[49][168] The opposition became more vocal, bolstered by a visit to the country by Pope John Paul II in 1983, who publicly lambasted the president.[169] Demonstrations occurred in Gonaïves in 1985 which then spread across the country; under pressure from the United States, Duvalier left the country for France in February 1986.

In total, roughly 40,000 to 60,000 Haitians are estimated to have been killed during the reign of the Duvaliers.[170] Through the use of his intimidation tactics and executions, many intellectual Haitians had fled, leaving the country with a massive brain-drain from which it has yet to recover.[171]

Post-Duvalier era (1986–2004)

 
Jean-Bertrand Aristide returns to Haiti following the U.S.-led invasion in 1994 designed to remove the regime installed by the 1991 Haitian coup d'état

Following Duvalier's departure, army leader General Henri Namphy headed a new National Governing Council.[49] Elections scheduled for November 1987 were aborted after dozens of inhabitants were shot in the capital by soldiers and Tontons Macoutes.[172][49] Fraudulent elections followed in 1988, in which only 4% of the citizenry voted.[173][49] The newly elected president, Leslie Manigat, was then overthrown some months later in the June 1988 Haitian coup d'état.[49][174]

Another coup followed in September 1988, after the St. Jean Bosco massacre in which approximately 13 to 50 people attending a mass led by prominent government critic and Catholic priest Jean-Bertrand Aristide were killed.[174][175] General Prosper Avril subsequently led a military regime until March 1990.[49][176][177]

Avril transferred power to the army chief of staff, Gen. Hérard Abraham, on March 10, 1990. Abraham gave up power three days later, becoming the only military leader in Haiti during the twentieth century to voluntarily give up power. Abraham later helped to secure the 1990–91 Haitian general election.

In December 1990, Jean-Bertrand Aristide was elected president in the Haitian general election. However, his ambitious reformist agenda worried the elites, and in September of the following year he was overthrown by the military, led by Raoul Cédras, in the 1991 Haitian coup d'état.[49][178] Amidst the continuing turmoil many Haitians attempted to flee the country.[162][49]

In September 1994, the United States negotiated the departure of Haiti's military leaders and the peaceful entry of 20,000 US troops under Operation Uphold Democracy.[162] This enabled the restoration of the democratically elected Jean-Bertrand Aristide as president, who returned to Haiti in October to complete his term.[179][180] As part of the deal Aristide had to implement free market reforms in an attempt to improve the Haitian economy, with mixed results.[181][49] In November 1994, Hurricane Gordon brushed Haiti, dumping heavy rain and creating flash flooding that triggered mudslides. Gordon killed an estimated 1,122 people, although some estimates go as high as 2,200.[182][183]

Elections were held in 1995 which were won by René Préval, gaining 88% of the popular vote, albeit on a low turnout.[184][185][49] Aristide subsequently formed his own party, Fanmi Lavalas, and political deadlock ensued; the November 2000 election returned Aristide to the presidency with 92% of the vote.[186] The election had been boycotted by the opposition, then organized into the Convergence Démocratique, over a dispute in the May legislative elections. In subsequent years, there was increasing violence between rival political factions and human rights abuses.[187][188] Aristide spent years negotiating with the Convergence Démocratique on new elections, but the Convergence's inability to develop a sufficient electoral base made elections unattractive.[citation needed]

In 2004 an anti-Aristide revolt began in northern Haiti. The rebellion eventually reached the capital, and Aristide was forced into exile.[187][49] The precise nature of the events are disputed; some, including Aristide and his bodyguard, Franz Gabriel, stated that he was the victim of a "new coup d'état or modern kidnapping" by U.S. forces.[187][189][190] These charges were denied by the US government.[191][187] As political violence and crime continued to grow, a United Nations Stabilisation Mission (MINUSTAH) was brought in to maintain order.[192] However, MINUSTAH proved controversial, since their periodically heavy-handed approach to maintaining law and order and several instances of abuses, including the alleged sexual abuse of civilians, provoked resentment and distrust among ordinary Haitians.[193][194][49]

Boniface Alexandre assumed interim authority until 2006, when René Préval was re-elected President following elections.[192][49][195]

Post-Aristide era (2004–present)

Amidst the continuing political chaos, a series of natural disasters hit Haiti. In 2004 Tropical Storm Jeanne skimmed the north coast, leaving 3,006 people dead in flooding and mudslides, mostly in the city of Gonaïves.[196] In 2008 Haiti was again struck by tropical storms; Tropical Storm Fay, Hurricane Gustav, Hurricane Hanna and Hurricane Ike all produced heavy winds and rain, resulting in 331 deaths and about 800,000 in need of humanitarian aid.[197] The state of affairs produced by these storms was intensified by already high food and fuel prices that had caused a food crisis and political unrest in April 2008.[198][199][49]

 
The Haitian National Palace, located in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, heavily damaged after the earthquake of 2010. This was originally a two-story structure; the second story completely collapsed.

On 12 January 2010, at 4:53 pm local time, Haiti was struck by a magnitude-7.0 earthquake. This was the country's most severe earthquake in over 200 years.[200] The earthquake was reported to have left between 160,000 and 300,000 people dead and up to 1.6 million homeless, making it one of the deadliest natural disasters ever recorded.[201][202] It is also one of the deadliest earthquakes ever recorded.[203] The situation was exacerbated by a subsequent massive cholera outbreak that was triggered when cholera-infected waste from a United Nations peacekeeping station contaminated the country's main river, the Artibonite.[192][204][205] In 2017, it was reported that roughly 10,000 Haitians had died and nearly a million had been made ill. After years of denial, the United Nations apologized in 2016, but as of 2017, they have refused to acknowledge fault, thus avoiding financial responsibility.[206]

General elections had been planned for January 2010 but were postponed due to the earthquake.[49] Elections were held on 28 November 2010 for the senate, the parliament and the first round of the presidential elections. The run-off between Michel Martelly and Mirlande Manigat took place on 20 March 2011, and preliminary results, released on 4 April, named Michel Martelly the winner.[207][208] In 2011 both former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier and Jean-Bertrand Aristide returned to Haiti; attempts to try Duvalier for crimes committed under his rule were shelved following his death in 2014.[209][210][211][207] In 2013, Haiti called for European nations to pay reparations for slavery and establish an official commission for the settlement of past wrongdoings.[212][213] Meanwhile, after continuing political wrangling with the opposition and allegations of electoral fraud, Martelly agreed to step down in 2016 without a successor in place.[207][214] After numerous postponements, partly owing to the effects of devastating Hurricane Matthew, elections were held in November 2016.[215][216] The victor, Jovenel Moïse of the Haitian Tèt Kale Party, was sworn in as president in 2017.[217][218] Protests began on 7 July 2018, in response to increased fuel prices. Over time these protests evolved into demands for the resignation of president Moïse.[219]

On 7 July 2021, President Moïse was assassinated in an attack on his private residence, and First Lady Martine Moïse was hospitalized.[220] Amid the political crisis, the government of Haiti installed Ariel Henry as both the Prime Minister and the President on 20 July 2021.[221][222] On 14 August 2021, Haiti suffered another huge earthquake, with many casualties.[223] The earthquake has also damaged Haiti's economic conditions and led to a rise in gang violence which by May 2020 had escalated to a long-lasting full-blown gang war and other violent crimes.[224][225] As of March 2022, Haiti still had no president, no parliamentary quorum, and a dysfunctional high court due to a lack of judges.[221] In 2022, protests against the government and rising fuel prices intensified.[226][227]

In 2023, kidnapping jumped 72% from the first quarter of the previous year.[228] Doctors, lawyers, and other wealthy members of society were kidnapped and held for ransom.[229] Many victims were killed when ransom demands were not met, leading those with the means to do so to flee the country, further hampering efforts to pull the country out of the crisis.[229] It is estimated that amidst the crisis up to 20% of qualified medical staff had left Haiti by the end of 2023.[230]

In March 2024, Ariel Henry was prevented by gangs from returning to Haiti, following a visit to Kenya.[231] Henry agreed to resign once a transitional government had been formed. As of that month, nearly half of Haiti's population was living under acute food insecurity, according to the World Food Programme.[26] On April 25, 2024 Transitional Presidential Council of Haiti took over the Governance of Haiti and is cheduled to stay in power until 2026.[232]

Geography

 
Topographical map of Haiti

Haiti forms the western three-eighths of Hispaniola, the second largest island in the Greater Antilles. At 27,750 km2 (10,710 sq mi) Haiti is the third largest country in the Caribbean behind Cuba and the Dominican Republic, the latter sharing a 360-kilometer (224 mi) border with Haiti. The country has a roughly horseshoe shape and because of this it has a disproportionately long coastline, second in length (1,771 km or 1,100 mi) behind Cuba in the Greater Antilles.[233][234]

Haiti is the most mountainous nation in the Caribbean, its terrain consists of mountains interspersed with small coastal plains and river valleys.[235] The climate is tropical, with some variation depending on altitude. The highest point is Pic la Selle, at 2,680 meters (8,793 ft).[23][235][49]

The northern region or Marien Region consists of the Massif du Nord (Northern Massif) and the Plaine du Nord (Northern Plain). The Massif du Nord is an extension of the Cordillera Central in the Dominican Republic.[49] It begins at Haiti's eastern border, north of the Guayamouc River, and extends to the northwest through the northern peninsula. The lowlands of the Plaine du Nord lie along the northern border with the Dominican Republic, between the Massif du Nord and the North Atlantic Ocean.

The central region or Artibonite Region consists of two plains and two sets of mountain ranges. The Plateau Central (Central Plateau) extends along both sides of the Guayamouc River, south of the Massif du Nord. It runs from the southeast to the northwest. To the southwest of the Plateau Central are the Montagnes Noires, whose most northwestern part merges with the Massif du Nord. Haiti's most important valley in terms of crops is the Plaine de l'Artibonite, which lies between the Montagnes Noires and the Chaîne des Matheux.[49] This region supports the country's longest river, the Riviere l'Artibonite, which begins in the western region of the Dominican Republic and continues for most of its length through central Haiti, where it then empties into the Golfe de la Gonâve.[49] Also in this valley lies Haiti's second largest lake, Lac de Péligre, formed as a result of the construction of the Péligre Dam in the mid-1950s.[236]

 
Saint-Marc Arrondissement, Artibonite Department

The southern region or Xaragua Region consists of the Plaine du Cul-de-Sac (the southeast) and the mountainous southern peninsula (the Tiburon Peninsula). The Plaine du Cul-de-Sac is a natural depression that harbors the country's saline lakes, such as Trou Caïman and Haiti's largest lake, Étang Saumatre. The Chaîne de la Selle mountain range – an extension of the southern mountain chain of the Dominican Republic (the Sierra de Baoruco) – extends from the Massif de la Selle in the east to the Massif de la Hotte in the west.[49]

Haiti also includes several offshore islands. The island of Tortuga is located off the coast of northern Haiti. The arrondissement of La Gonâve is located on the island of the same name, in the Golfe de la Gonâve; Haiti's largest island, Gonâve is moderately populated by rural villagers. Île à Vache is located off the southwest coast; also part of Haiti are the Cayemites, located in the Gulf of Gonâve north of Pestel. Navassa Island, located 40 nautical miles (46 mi; 74 km) west of Jérémie on the south west peninsula of Haiti,[237] is subject to an ongoing territorial dispute with the United States, who currently administer the island.[238]

Climate

 
Köppen climate types of Haiti

Haiti's climate is tropical with some variation depending on altitude.[235] Port-au-Prince ranges in January from an average minimum of 23 °C (73.4 °F) to an average maximum of 31 °C (87.8 °F); in July, from 25–35 °C (77–95 °F). The rainfall pattern is varied, with rain heavier in some of the lowlands and the northern and eastern slopes of the mountains. Haiti's dry season occurs from November to January.

Port-au-Prince receives an average annual rainfall of 1,370 mm (53.9 in). There are two rainy seasons, April–June and October–November. Haiti is subject to periodic droughts and floods, made more severe by deforestation. Hurricanes are a menace, and the country is also prone to flooding and earthquakes.[235]

Geology

 
Saut-d'Eau waterfall

There are blind thrust faults associated with the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault system over which Haiti lies.[239] After the earthquake of 2010, there was no evidence of surface rupture and geologists' findings were based on seismological, geological and ground deformation data.[240]

The northern boundary of the fault is where the Caribbean tectonic plate shifts eastwards by about 20 mm (0.79 inches) per year in relation to the North American plate. The strike-slip fault system in the region has two branches in Haiti, the Septentrional-Oriente fault in the north and the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault in the south.

A 2007 earthquake hazard study, noted that the Enriquillo-Plantain Garden fault zone could be at the end of its seismic cycle and concluded that a worst-case forecast would involve a 7.2 Mw earthquake, similar in size to the 1692 Jamaica earthquake.[241] A study team performing a hazard assessment of the fault system recommended "high priority" historical geologic rupture studies, as the fault was fully locked and had recorded few earthquakes in the preceding 40 years.[242] The magnitude 7.0 2010 Haiti earthquake happened on this fault zone on 12 January 2010.

Haiti also has rare elements such as gold, which can be found at The Mont Organisé gold mine.[243]

Haiti has no currently active volcanoes. "In the Terre-Neuve Mountains, about 12 kilometers from the Eaux Boynes, small intrusions at least as late as Oligocene and probably of Miocene age are known. No other volcanic activity of as late a date is known near any of the other warm springs."[244]

Environment

 
Haiti's border with the Dominican Republic in 2002, showing the extent of deforestation on the Haitian side (left)

The soil erosion released from the upper catchments and deforestation have caused periodic and severe flooding, as experienced, for example, on 17 September 2004. Earlier in May that year, floods had killed over 3,000 people on Haiti's southern border with the Dominican Republic.[245]

Haiti's forests covered 60% of the country as recently as 50 years ago, but that has been halved to a current estimate of 30% tree cover. This estimate poses a stark difference from the erroneous figure of 2% which has been oft-cited in discourse concerning the country's environmental condition.[246] Haiti had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 4.01/10, ranking it 137th globally out of 172 countries.[247]

Scientists at the Columbia University's Center for International Earth Science Information Network and the United Nations Environment Programme are working on the Haiti Regenerative Initiative, an initiative aiming to reduce poverty and natural disaster vulnerability through ecosystem restoration and sustainable resource management.[248]

Biodiversity

 
The endangered Hispaniolan solenodon, endemic to the island

Haiti is home to four ecoregions: Hispaniolan moist forests, Hispaniolan dry forests, Hispaniolan pine forests, and Greater Antilles mangroves.[249]

Despite its small size, Haiti's mountainous terrain and resultant multiple climatic zones has resulted in a wide variety of plant life.[250] Notable tree species include the breadfruit tree, mango tree, acacia, mahogany, coconut palm, royal palm and West Indian cedar.[250] The forests were formerly much more extensive, but have been subject to severe deforestation.[49]

Most mammal species are not native, having been brought to the island since colonial times.[250] However, there are various native bat species, as well as the endemic Hispaniolan hutia and Hispaniolan solenodon.[250] Whale and dolphin species can also be found off Haiti's coast.

There are over 260 species of birds, 31 endemic to Hispaniola.[251] Notable endemic species include the Hispaniolan trogon, Hispaniolan parakeet, grey-crowned tanager and the Hispaniolan Amazon.[251] There are also several raptors, as well as pelicans, ibis, hummingbirds and ducks.

Reptiles are common, with species such as the rhinoceros iguana, Haitian boa, American crocodile and gecko.[252]

Government and politics

 
Jovenel Moïse was the President of Haiti from 7 February 2017 until his assassination on 7 July 2021.

The government of Haiti is a semi-presidential republic, a multiparty system wherein the president of Haiti is head of state and elected directly by popular elections held every five years.[49][253] The prime minister of Haiti acts as head of government and is appointed by the president, chosen from the majority party in the National Assembly.[49] Executive power is exercised by the president and prime minister who together constitute the government.

Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of the National Assembly of Haiti, the Senate (Sénat) and the Chamber of Deputies (Chambre des Députés).[49][235] The government is organized unitarily, thus the central government delegates powers to the departments without a constitutional need for consent. The current structure of Haiti's political system was set forth in the Constitution of Haiti on 29 March 1987.[235]

Haitian politics have been contentious: since independence, Haiti has suffered 32 coups.[254] Haiti is the only country in the Western Hemisphere to undergo a successful slave revolution; however, a long history of oppression by dictators such as François Duvalier and his son Jean-Claude Duvalier has markedly affected the nation. Since the end of the Duvalier era Haiti has been transitioning to a democratic system.[49]

Administrative divisions

Administratively, Haiti is divided into ten departments.[235] The departments are listed below, with the departmental capital cities in parentheses.

 
Departments of Haiti
  1. Nord-Ouest (Port-de-Paix)
  2. Nord (Cap-Haïtien)
  3. Nord-Est (Fort-Liberté)
  4. Artibonite (Gonaïves)
  5. Centre (Hinche)
  6. Ouest (Port-au-Prince)
  7. Grand'Anse (Jérémie)
  8. Nippes (Miragoâne)
  9. Sud (Les Cayes)
  10. Sud-Est (Jacmel)

The departments are further divided into 42 arrondissements, 145 communes and 571 communal sections. These serve as, respectively, second- and third-level administrative divisions.[255][256][257]

Foreign relations

Haiti is a member of a wide range of international and regional organizations, such as the United Nations, CARICOM, Community of Latin American and Caribbean States, International Monetary Fund, Organisation of American States, Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, OPANAL and the World Trade Organization.[235]

In February 2012, Haiti signaled it would seek to upgrade its observer status to full associate member status of the African Union (AU).[258] The AU was reported to be planning to upgrade Haiti's status from observer to associate at its June 2013 summit[259] but the application had still not been ratified by May 2016.[260]

Military

Haiti has a strong military history dating to the pre-independence struggle. The Indigenous Army is essential in the construction of the state the management of land and public finances. Up to the 20th century, every Haitian president was an officer in the army. During the US intervention, the army was remodeled as Gendarmerie d'Haiti and later on as Force Armée d'Haiti (FAdH). In the early 1990s, the army was unconstitutionally decommissioned and replaced by the Haitian National Police (PNH). In 2018, Président Jovenel Moise reactivated the FAdH.

Haiti's Ministry of Defense is the main body of the armed forces.[261] The former Haitian Armed Forces were demobilized in 1995; however, efforts to reconstitute it are currently underway.[262] The current defense force for Haiti is the Haitian National Police, which has a highly trained SWAT team, and works alongside the Haitian Coast Guard. In 2010, the Haitian National Police force numbered 7,000.[263]

As of 2023, the Haitian army includes one infantry battalion that is in the process of being formed, with 700 personnel.[264]

Law enforcement and crime

 
Members of the Haitian National Police Force marching band stand at parade

The legal system is based on a modified version of the Napoleonic Code.[265][49]

Haiti has consistently ranked among the most corrupt countries in the world on the Corruption Perceptions Index.[266] According to a 2006 report by the Corruption Perceptions Index, there is a strong correlation between corruption and poverty in Haiti. The nation ranked first of all countries surveyed for levels of perceived domestic corruption.[267] It is estimated that President "Baby Doc" Duvalier, his wife Michele, and their agents stole US $504 million from the treasury between 1971 and 1986.[268] Similarly, after the Haitian Army folded in 1995, the Haitian National Police (HNP) gained sole power of authority on the Haitian citizens. Many Haitians as well as observers believe that this monopolized power could have given way to a corrupt police force.[269] Some media outlets alleged that millions were stolen by former president Jean-Bertrand Aristide.[270][271][272][273] The BBC also described pyramid schemes, in which Haitians lost hundreds of millions in 2002, as the "only real economic initiative" of the Aristide years.[274]

Conversely, according to the 2013 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) report, murder rates (10.2 per 100,000) are far below the regional average (26 per 100,000); less than 1/4 that of Jamaica (39.3 per 100,000) and nearly 1/2 that of the Dominican Republic (22.1 per 100,000), making it among the safer countries in the region.[275][276] In large part, this is due to the country's ability to fulfil a pledge by increasing its national police yearly by 50%, a four-year initiative that was started in 2012. In addition to the yearly recruits, the Haitian National Police (HNP) has been using innovative technologies to crack down on crime. A notable bust in recent years[when?] led to the dismantlement of the largest kidnapping ring in the country with the use of an advanced software program developed by a West Point-trained Haitian official that proved to be so effective that it has led to its foreign advisers to make inquiries.[277][278]

In 2010, the New York City Police Department (NYPD) sent a team of officers to Haiti to assist in the rebuilding of its police force with special training in investigative techniques, anti-kidnapping strategies and community outreach. It has also helped the HNP set up a police unit in Delmas, a neighborhood of Port-au-Prince.[279][280][281][282]

In 2012 and 2013, 150 HNP officers received specialized training funded by the US government, which also contributed to the infrastructure and communications support by upgrading radio capacity and constructing new police stations from the most violent-prone neighborhoods of Cité Soleil and Grande Ravine in Port-au-Prince to the new northern industrial park at Caracol.[280]

Haitian penitentiary system

Port-au-Prince penitentiary is home to half of Haiti's prisoners. The prison has a capacity of 1,200 detainees but as of November 2017 the penitentiary was obliged to keep 4,359 detainees, a 363% occupancy level.[283] The inability to receive sufficient funds has caused deadly cases of malnutrition, combined with the tight living conditions, increases the risk of infectious diseases such as tuberculosis.[283]

Haitian law states that once arrested, one must go before a judge within 48 hours; however, this is very rare. In an interview with Unreported World, the prison governor stated that around 529 detainees were never sentenced, and there are 3,830 detainees who are in prolonged detained trial detention. Therefore, 80% are not convicted.[284] Unless families are able to provide the necessary funds for inmates to appear before a judge there is a very slim chance the inmate would have a trial, on average, within 10 years.[285]

In confined living spaces for 22–23 hours a day, inmates are not provided with latrines and are forced to defecate into plastic bags. These conditions were considered inhumane by the Inter-American Court of Human Rights in 2008.[286]

On 3 March 2024, armed gangs stormed the main prison in Port-au-Prince and around 3700 inmates escaped, while 12 people were killed.[287]

Economy

 
Historical GDP per capita development

Haiti has a highly regulated, predominantly state-controlled economy, ranking 145th out of the 177 countries given a "freedom index" by the Heritage Foundation.[288] Haiti's per capita GDP is $1,800 and its GDP is $19.97 billion (2017 estimates).[235] The country uses the Haitian gourde as its currency. Despite its tourism industry, Haiti is one of the poorest countries in the Americas, with corruption, political instability, poor infrastructure, lack of health care and lack of education cited as the main causes.[235] Unemployment is high and many Haitians seek to emigrate. Trade declined dramatically after the 2010 earthquake and subsequent outbreak of cholera, with the country's purchasing power parity GDP falling by 8% (from US$12.15 billion to US$11.18 billion).[4] Haiti ranked 145th of 182 countries in the 2010 United Nations Human Development Index, with 57.3% of the population being deprived in at least three of the HDI's poverty measures.[289]

Following the disputed 2000 election and accusations about President Aristide's rule,[290] US aid to the Haitian government was cut off between 2001 and 2004.[291] After Aristide's departure in 2004, aid was restored and the Brazilian army led a United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti peacekeeping operation. After almost four years of recession, the economy grew by 1.5% in 2005.[292] In September 2009, Haiti met the conditions set out by the IMF and World Bank's Heavily Indebted Poor Countries program to qualify for cancellation of its external debt.[293]

More than 90 percent of the government's budget comes from an agreement with Petrocaribe, a Venezuela-led oil alliance.[294]

Foreign aid

Haiti received more than US$4 billion in aid from 1990 to 2003, including US$1.5 billion from the United States.[295] The largest donor is the US, followed by Canada and the European Union.[296] In January 2010, following the earthquake, US President Barack Obama promised US$1.15 billion in assistance.[297] European Union nations pledged more than €400 million (US$616 million).[298] Neighboring Dominican Republic has also provided extensive humanitarian aid to Haiti, including the funding and construction of a public university,[299] human capital, free healthcare services in the border region, and logistical support after the 2010 earthquake.[300]

The United Nations states that US$13.34 billion has been earmarked for post-earthquake reconstruction through 2020, though two years after the 2010 quake, less than half of that amount had actually been released. As of 2015, the US government has allocated US$4 billion, US$3 billion has already been spent, and the rest is dedicated to longer-term projects.[301]

Trade

According to the 2015 CIA World Factbook, Haiti's main import partners are: Dominican Republic 35%, US 26.8%, Netherlands Antilles 8.7%, China 7% (est. 2013). Haiti's main export partner is the US 83.5% (est. 2013).[302] Haiti had a trade deficit of US$3 billion in 2011, or 41% of GDP.[303]

Energy

 
Haiti electricity production by source

Haiti relies heavily on an oil alliance with Petrocaribe for much of its energy requirements. In recent years, hydroelectric, solar and wind energy have been explored as possible sustainable energy sources.[304]

 
Power plant in Port-au-Prince

As of 2017, among all the countries in the Americas, Haiti is producing the least energy. Less than a quarter of the country has electric coverage.[305] Most regions of Haiti that do have energy are powered by generators. These generators are often expensive and produce a lot of pollution. The areas that do get electricity experience power cuts on a daily basis, and some areas are limited to 12 hours of electricity a day. Electricity is provided by a small number of independent companies: Sogener, E-power, and Haytrac.[306] There is no national electricity grid.[307] The most common source of energy is wood, along with charcoal. About 4 million metric tons of wood products are consumed yearly.[308] Like charcoal and wood, petroleum is also an important source of energy. Since Haiti cannot produce its own fuel, all fuel is imported. Yearly, around 691,000 tons of oil is imported into the country.[307]

In 2018, a 24-hour electricity project was announced; for this purpose 236 MW needs to installed in Port-au-Prince alone, with an additional 75 MW needed in all other regions. Presently only 27.5% of the population has access to electricity; moreover, the national energy agency l'Électricité d'Haïti (Ed'H) is only able to meet 62% of overall electricity demand.[309]

Personal income

 
A market in Cap-Haïtien

Haiti suffers from a shortage of skilled labor, widespread unemployment, and underemployment. Most Haitians in the labor force have informal jobs. Three-quarters of the population lives on US$2 or less per day.[310]

Remittances from Haitians living abroad are the primary source of foreign exchange, equaling one-fifth (20%) of GDP and more than five times the earnings from exports as of 2012.[311] In 2004, 80% or more of college graduates from Haiti were living abroad.[312]

Occasionally, families who are unable to care for children may send them to live with a wealthier family as a restavek, or house servant. In return the family are supposed to ensure that the child is educated and provided with food and shelter; however, the system is open to abuse and has proved controversial, with some likening it to child slavery.[313][314]

Real estate

In rural areas, people often live in wooden huts with corrugated iron roofs. Outhouses are located in back of the huts. In Port-au-Prince, colorful shantytowns surround the central city and go up the mountainsides.[315]

The middle and upper classes live in suburbs, or in the central part of the bigger cities in apartments, where there is urban planning. Many of the houses they live in are like miniature fortresses, located behind walls embedded with metal spikes, barbed wire, broken glass, and sometimes all three. The houses have backup generators, because the electrical grid is unreliable. Some even have rooftop reservoirs for water.[315]

Agriculture

 
Rows of cabbage, Haiti

Haiti is the world's leading producer of vetiver, a root plant used to make luxury perfumes, essential oils and fragrances, providing for half the world's supply.[316][317][318] Roughly 40–50% of Haitians work in the agricultural sector.[235][319] However, according to soil surveys by the United States Department of Agriculture in the early 1980s, only 11.3 percent of the land was highly suitable for crops. Haiti relies upon imports for half its food needs and 80% of its rice.[319]

Haiti exports crops such as mangoes, cacao, coffee, papayas, mahogany nuts, spinach, and watercress.[320] Agricultural products constitute 6% of all exports.[303] In addition, local agricultural products include maize, beans, cassava, sweet potato, peanuts, pistachios, bananas, millet, pigeon peas, sugarcane, rice, sorghum, and wood.[320][321]

Currency

The Haitian gourde (HTG) is the national currency. The "Haitian dollar" equates to 5 gourdes (goud), which is a fixed exchange rate that exists in concept only, but are commonly used as informal prices.[citation needed] The vast majority of the business sector and individuals will also accept US dollars, though at the outdoor markets gourdes may be preferred. Locals may refer to the USD as "dollar américain" (dola ameriken) or "dollar US" (pronounced oo-es).[322]

Tourism

 
Labadee, a cruise ship destination

The tourism market in Haiti is undeveloped and the government is heavily promoting this sector. Haiti has many of the features that attract tourists to other Caribbean destinations, such as white sand beaches, mountainous scenery and a year-round warm climate. However, the country's poor image overseas, at times exaggerated, has hampered the development of this sector.[49] In 2014, the country received 1,250,000 tourists (mostly from cruise ships), and the industry generated US$200 million in 2014.[citation needed]

Several hotels were opened in 2014, including an upscale Best Western Premier,[323][324] a five-star Royal Oasis hotel by Occidental Hotel and Resorts in Pétion-Ville,[325][326][327] a four-star Marriott Hotel in the Turgeau area of Port-au-Prince[328] and other new hotel developments in Port-au-Prince, Les Cayes, Cap-Haïtien and Jacmel.[citation needed]

Caracol Industrial Park

On 21 October 2012, Haitian President Michel Martelly, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Bill Clinton, Richard Branson, Ben Stiller and Sean Penn inaugurated the 240-hectare (600-acre) Caracol industrial park, the largest in the Caribbean.[329] The project cost US$300 million and included a 10-megawatt power plant, a water-treatment plant and worker housing.[329] The plan for the park pre-dated the 2010 earthquake but was fast-tracked as part of US foreign aid strategy to help Haiti recover.[330] The park was part of a "master plan" for Haiti's North and North-East departments, including the expansion of the Cap-Haïtien International Airport to accommodate large international flights, the construction of an international seaport in Fort-Liberté and the opening of the $50 million Roi Henri Christophe Campus of a new university in Limonade (near Cap-Haïtien) on 12 January 2012.[331]

In 2012, USAID believed the park had the potential to create as many as 65,000 jobs once fully developed.[332][333] South Korean clothing manufacturer Sae-A Trading Co. Ltd, the park's only major tenant, created 5,000 permanent jobs out of the 20,000 it had projected and promised to build 5,000 houses yet only 750 homes had been built near Caracol by 2014.[330]

Ten years later, the park was considered to have failed to uphold its promise to deliver the transformation the Clintons had promised.[334] The US invested tens of millions of dollars into the port project but eventually abandoned it.[334] In order to establish the park, hundreds of families of small farmers had to be removed from the land, approximately 3,500 people overall.[335] An audit by the United States Government Accountability Office uncovered that the port project lacked "staff with technical expertise in planning, construction, and oversight of a port" and revealed that USAid hadn't constructed a port anywhere since the 1970s.[334] A USAid feasibility study in 2015 found that "a new port was not viable for a variety of technical, environmental and economic reasons", that the US was short US$72m in funds to cover the majority of the projected costs, and that private companies USAid had wanted to attract "had no interest in supporting the construction of a new port in northern Haiti".[334]

Infrastructure

Transportation

 
Rail map as of 1925

Haiti has two main highways that run from one end of the country to the other. The northern highway, Route Nationale No. 1 (National Highway One), originates in Port-au-Prince, winding through the coastal towns of Montrouis and Gonaïves, before reaching its terminus at the northern port Cap-Haïtien. The southern highway, Route Nationale No. 2, links Port-au-Prince with Les Cayes via Léogâne and Petit-Goâve. The state of Haiti's roads are generally poor, many being potholed and becoming impassable in rough weather.[49]

The port at Port-au-Prince, Port international de Port-au-Prince, has more registered shipping than any of the other dozen ports in the country. The port's facilities include cranes, large berths, and warehouses, but these facilities are not in good condition. The port is underused, possibly due to the substantially high port fees. The port of Saint-Marc is currently the preferred port of entry for consumer goods.

In the past, Haiti used rail transport; however, the rail infrastructure was poorly maintained when in use and cost of rehabilitation is beyond the means of the Haitian economy. In 2018 the Regional Development Council of the Dominican Republic proposed a "trans-Hispaniola" railway between both countries.[336]

Airports

 
Toussaint L'Ouverture International Airport

Toussaint Louverture International Airport, located ten kilometers (six miles) north-northeast of Port-au-Prince proper in the commune of Tabarre, is the primary hub for entry and exit into the country. It has Haiti's main jetway, and along with Cap-Haïtien International Airport handles the vast majority of the country's international flights. Cities such as Jacmel, Jérémie, Les Cayes, and Port-de-Paix have smaller, less accessible airports that are serviced by regional airlines and private aircraft.

In 2013, plans for the development of an international airport on Île-à-Vache were introduced by the Prime Minister.[337]

Bus service

 
A "tap tap" bus in Port-Salut

Tap tap buses are colorfully painted buses or pick-up trucks that serve as shared taxis. The "tap tap" name comes from the sound of passengers tapping on the metal bus body to indicate they want off.[338] These vehicles for hire are often privately owned and extensively decorated. They follow fixed routes, do not leave until filled with passengers, and riders can usually disembark at any point. The decorations are a typically Haitian form of art.[339]

Communications

In Haiti, communications include the radio, television, fixed and mobile telephones, and the Internet. Haiti ranked last among North American countries in the World Economic Forum's Network Readiness Index (NRI) – an indicator for determining the development level of a country's information and communication technologies. Haiti ranked number 143 out of 148 overall in the 2014 NRI ranking, down from 141 in 2013.[340]

Water supply and sanitation

Haiti faces key challenges in the water supply and sanitation sector. Notably, access to public services is very low, their quality is inadequate and public institutions remain very weak despite foreign aid and the government's declared intent to strengthen the sector's institutions. Foreign and Haitian NGOs play an important role in the sector, especially in rural and urban slum areas.

Demographics

 
Haiti's population (1800–2021)

In 2018, Haiti's population was estimated to be about 10,788,000.[235] In 2006, half of the population was younger than age 20.[341] In 1950, the first formal census gave a total population of 3.1 million.[342] Haiti averages approximately 350 people per square kilometer (910 people/sq mi), with its population concentrated most heavily in urban areas, coastal plains, and valleys.

 
People in Port-au-Prince

Most Haitians are descendants of black Africans who were enslaved and trafficked from Africa during the Atlantic slave trade. Many are also descendants of Mulattoes who are mixed-race.[235] The remainder are primarily of European or Arab descent.[343][344]

Millions of Haitian descent live abroad in the United States, Dominican Republic, Cuba, Canada (primarily Montreal), the Bahamas, France, the French Antilles, the Turks and Caicos, Jamaica, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Brazil, Suriname and French Guiana. There were an estimated 881,500 people of Haitian ancestry in the United States in 2015,[345] while in the Dominican Republic there were an estimated 800,000 in 2007.[346] There were 300,000 in Cuba in 2013,[347] 100,000 in Canada in 2006,[348] 80,000 in Metropolitan France (2010),[349] and up to 80,000 in the Bahamas (2009).[350]

In 2018, the life expectancy at birth was 63.66 years.[351]

Racial discrimination

Under colonial rule, Haitian mulattoes were generally privileged above the black majority, though they possessed fewer rights than the white population. Following the country's independence, they became the nation's social elite. Numerous leaders throughout Haiti's history have been mulattoes. During this time, the enslaved persons and the affranchis were given limited opportunities toward education, income, and occupations, but even after gaining independence, the social structure remains a legacy today as the disparity between the upper and lower classes have not been reformed significantly since the colonial days.[352] Making up 5% of the nation's population, mulattoes have retained their preeminence, evident in the political, economic, social and cultural hierarchy in Haiti.[353] As a result, the elite class today consists of a small group of influential people who are generally light in color.[354]

Religion

Religion in Haiti according to the Pew Research Center (2010)[355]

  Catholicism (56.8%)
  Protestantism (29.6%)
  Unaffiliated (10.6%)
  Other (3%)

The 2018 CIA World Factbook reported that 55% of Haitians were Catholics and 29% were Protestants (Baptist 15.4%, Pentecostal 7.9%, Seventh-day Adventist 3%, Methodist 1.5%, other 0.7%). Other sources put the Protestant population higher, suggesting that it might have formed one-third of the population in 2001.[356] Like other countries in Latin America, Haiti has witnessed a general Protestant expansion, which is largely Evangelical and Pentecostal in nature.[357][358][359]

Haitian Cardinal Chibly Langlois is president of the National Bishops Conference of the Catholic Church.

Vodou, a religion with West African roots similar to those of Cuba and Brazil, is formally practiced by 2.1% of the population; however, it is estimated that 50-80% of Haitians incorporate some elements of Vodou belief or practices into their religion, particularly with Catholicism. This reflect Vodou's colonial origins, when enslaved persons were obliged to disguise their traditional loa (lwa), or spirits, as Catholic saints, as part of a process called syncretism. As such, it is difficult to estimate the number of Vodouists in Haiti,[360][361] especially given the legacy of historic persecution and misrepresentation in popular media and culture, as well as modern stigmatization among segments of the growing Protestant population. Nonetheless, Vodou was officially recognized by the Haitian government in 2003.[235]

Reflecting the ubiquity of Vodou culture and beliefs, while many Catholics and Protestants in Haiti denounce Vodou as devil worship, they do not deny the power or existence of its spirits; rather, they are regarded as "evil" and "satanic" adversaries that require intervention through Christian prayer. Protestants view Catholic veneration of saints as idol worship, and some Protestants would often destroy statues and other Catholic paraphernalia.[362]

Minority religions in Haiti include Islam, Bahá'í Faith, Judaism, and Buddhism.[4]

Languages

The two official languages of Haiti are French and Haitian Creole. French is the principal written and administratively authorized language (as well as the main language of the press) and is spoken by 42% of Haitians.[363][364] It is spoken by all educated Haitians, is the medium of instruction in most schools, and is used in the business sector. It is also used in ceremonial events such as weddings, graduations and church Masses. Haiti is one of two independent nations in the Americas (along with Canada) to designate French as an official language; the other French-speaking areas are all overseas départements, or collectivités, of France, such as French Guiana. Haitian Creole is spoken by nearly all of the Haitian population. French, the base language for Haitian Creole, is popular among the Haitian elite and upper classes. French is also popular in the business sector, and to a far lesser degree, English due to American influence. Spanish is spoken by some Haitians who live along the Haitian-Dominican border.[365] English and Spanish may also be spoken by Haitian deportees from the United States and various Latin American countries. Overall, about 90–95% of Haitians only speak Haitian Creole/French fluently, with over half only knowing Creole.[366]

Haitian Creole,[367] locally called Kreyòl,[368] has recently undergone standardization and is spoken by virtually the entire population.[369] One of the French-based creole languages, Haitian Creole has a vocabulary overwhelmingly derived from French, but its grammar resembles that of some West African languages. It also has influences from Taino, Spanish, and Portuguese.[370] Haitian Creole is related to the other French creoles, and in particular to the Antillean and Louisiana Creole variants.

Emigration

There is a large Haitian diaspora community, predominantly based in the US and Canada, France, and the wealthier Caribbean islands.

Emigrants from Haiti have constituted a segment of American and Canadian society since before the independence of Haiti from France in 1804.[371][372] Many influential early American settlers and black freemen, including Jean Baptiste Point du Sable and W. E. B. Du Bois, were of Haitian origin.[373][374][375][376]

Education

 
The Universite Roi Henri Christophe in Limonade

The educational system of Haiti is based on the French system. Higher education, under the responsibility of the Ministry of Education,[377] is provided by universities and other public and private institutions.[378]

More than 80% of primary schools are privately managed by nongovernmental organizations, churches, communities, and for-profit operators, with minimal government oversight.[379] According to the 2013 Millennium Development Goals Report, Haiti has steadily boosted net enrollment rate in primary education from 47% in 1993 to 88% in 2011, achieving equal participation of boys and girls in education.[380] Charity organizations, including Food for the Poor and Haitian Health Foundation, are building schools for children and providing necessary school supplies. According to the 2015 World Factbook, Haiti's literacy rate is 60.7% .

Many reformers have advocated the creation of a free, public and universal education system for all primary school-age students in Haiti. The Inter-American Development Bank estimates that the government will need at least US$3 billion to create an adequately funded system.[381]

Upon successful graduation of secondary school, students may continue into higher education. The higher education schools in Haiti include the University of Haiti. There are also medical schools and law schools offered at both the University of Haiti and abroad. Brown University is cooperating with L'Hôpital Saint-Damien in Haiti to coordinate a pediatric health care curriculum.[382]

Health

As of 2012, 60% of children in Haiti under the age of 10 were vaccinated,[383][384] compared to 93–95% in other countries.[385] Recently there have been mass vaccination campaigns claiming to vaccinate as many as 91% of a target population against specific diseases (measles and rubella in this case).[386] Most people have no transportation or access to Haitian hospitals.[387]

The World Health Organization cites diarrheal diseases, HIV/AIDS, meningitis, and respiratory infections as common causes of death in Haiti.[388] Ninety percent of Haiti's children suffer from waterborne diseases and intestinal parasites.[389] HIV infection is found in 1.71% of Haiti's population (est. 2015).[390] The incidence of tuberculosis (TB) in Haiti is more than ten times as high as in the rest of Latin America.[citation needed] Approximately 30,000 Haitians fall ill with malaria each year.[391]

Roughly 75% of Haitian households lack running water. Unsafe water, along with inadequate housing and unsanitary living conditions, contributes to the high incidence of infectious diseases. There is a chronic shortage of health care personnel and hospitals lack resources, a situation that became readily apparent after the January 2010 earthquake.[392] The infant mortality rate in Haiti in 2019 was 48.2 deaths per 1,000 live births, compared to 5.6 per 1,000 in the United States.[393]

After the 2010 earthquake, Partners In Health founded the Hôpital Universitaire de Mirebalais, the largest solar-powered hospital in the world.[394][395]

Largest cities

Culture

Haiti has a lasting and unique cultural identity, blending traditional French and African customs, mixed with sizable acquirements from the Spanish and indigenous Taíno cultures.[396]

Art

 
Swearing-in ceremony of Haitian Diaspora GwètòDe

Haitian art is distinctive, particularly through its paintings and sculptures.[396][397][398] Brilliant colors, naïve perspectives, and sly humor characterize Haitian art. Frequent subjects in Haitian art include big, foods, landscapes, market activities, jungle animals, rituals, dances, and gods. As a result of a deep history and strong African ties, symbols take on great meaning within Haitian society. Many artists cluster in 'schools' of painting, such as the Cap-Haïtien school, which features depictions of daily life in the city, the Jacmel School, which reflects the steep mountains and bays of that coastal town, or the Saint-Soleil School, which is characterized by abstracted human forms and is heavily influenced by Vodou symbolism.[citation needed]

In the 1920s the indigéniste movement gained international acclaim, with its expressionist paintings inspired by Haiti's culture and African roots. Notable painters of this movement include Hector Hyppolite, Philomé Oban and Préfète Duffaut.[399] Some notable artists of more recent times include Edouard Duval-Carrié, Frantz Zéphirin, Leroy Exil, Prosper Pierre Louis and Louisiane Saint Fleurant.[399] Sculpture is also practiced in Haiti; noted artists in this form include George Liautaud and Serge Jolimeau.[400]

Music and dance

Haitian music combines a wide range of influences drawn from the many people who have settled here. It reflects French, African and Spanish elements and others who have inhabited the island of Hispaniola, and minor native Taino influences. Styles of music unique to the nation of Haiti include music derived from Vodou ceremonial traditions, Rara parading music, Twoubadou ballads, mini-jazz rock bands, Rasin movement, Hip hop kreyòl, méringue,[401] and compas. Youth attend parties at nightclubs called discos, and attend Bal (ball, as in a formal dance).

Compas (konpa)[402] is a complex, ever-changing music that arose from African rhythms and European ballroom dancing, mixed with Haiti's bourgeois culture. It is a refined music, with méringue as its basic rhythm. Haiti had no recorded music until 1937 when Jazz Guignard was recorded non-commercially.[403]

Literature

Haiti has always been a literary nation that has produced poetry, novels, and plays of international recognition. The French colonial experience established the French language as the venue of culture and prestige, and since then it has dominated the literary circles and the literary production. However, since the 18th century there has been a sustained effort to write in Haitian Creole. The recognition of Creole as an official language has led to an expansion of novels, poems, and plays in Creole.[404] In 1975, Franketienne was the first to break with the French tradition in fiction with the publication of Dezafi, the first novel written entirely in Haitian Creole.[405] Other well known Haitian authors include Jean Price-Mars, Jacques Roumain, Jacques Stephen Alexis, Marie Vieux-Chauvet, Pierre Clitandre, René Depestre, Edwidge Danticat, Lyonel Trouillot and Dany Laferrière.

Cinema

Haiti has a small though growing cinema industry. Well-known directors working primarily in documentary film-making include Raoul Peck and Arnold Antonin. Directors producing fictional films include Patricia Benoît, Wilkenson Bruna and Richard Senecal.

Cuisine

Haiti is famous for its creole cuisine (related to Cajun cuisine), and its soup joumou.[406]

Architecture

 
Sans-Souci Palace, National History Park, Haiti

Monuments include the Sans-Souci Palace and the Citadelle Laferrière, inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1982.[407] Situated in the Northern Massif du Nord, in the National History Park, the structures date from the early 19th century.[408] The buildings were among the first built after Haiti's independence from France. The Citadelle Laferrière, the largest fortress in the Americas, is located in northern Haiti. It was built between 1805 and 1820 and is today referred to by some Haitians as the eighth wonder of the world.[107]

The Institute for the Protection of National Heritage has preserved 33 historical monuments and the historic center of Cap-Haïtien.[409]

Jacmel, a colonial city that was tentatively accepted as a World Heritage Site, was extensively damaged by the 2010 earthquake.[408]

Museums

 
Santa María's anchor on display

The anchor of Christopher Columbus's largest ship, the Santa María rests in the Musée du Panthéon National Haïtien (MUPANAH), in Port-au-Prince.[410]

Folklore and mythology

Haiti is known for its folklore traditions.[411] Much of this is rooted in Haitian Vodou tradition. Belief in zombies is also common.[412] Other folkloric creatures include the lougarou.[412]

National holidays and festivals

The Haitian Carnival has been one of the most popular carnivals in the Caribbean. In 2010, the government decided to stage the event in a different city outside Port-au-Prince every year.[413][414] The National Carnival follows the popular Jacmel Carnival, which takes place a week earlier in February or March.[413]

Rara is a festival celebrated before Easter. The festival has generated a style of Carnival music.[415][416]

Sports

 
Haiti national football team training in Port-au-Prince, 2004

Football (soccer) is the most popular sport in Haiti with hundreds of small clubs competing at the local level. Basketball and baseball are growing in popularity.[417][418] Stade Sylvio Cator is the multi-purpose stadium in Port-au-Prince, currently used mostly for association football matches. In 1974, the Haiti national football team were only the second Caribbean team to make the World Cup. The national team won the 2007 Caribbean Nations Cup.[419]

Haiti has participated in the Olympic Games since the year 1900 and won a number of medals. Haitian footballer Joe Gaetjens played for the United States national team in the 1950 FIFA World Cup, scoring the winning goal in the 1–0 upset of England.[420]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c The National Assembly currently has zero members, with all 30 seats in the Senate and all 119 seats in the Chamber of Deputies vacant since all previous members have served their terms as prescribed by the Haitian Constitution and no election has been held to fill those vacated seats.
  2. ^ /ˈhti/ HAY-tee; French: Haïti [a.iti]; Haitian Creole: Ayiti [ajiti]
  3. ^ French: République d'Haïti; Haitian Creole: Repiblik d Ayiti[12]
  4. ^ a b The nation was officially founded as Hayti in its Declaration of Independence and early prints,[13][14] constitutions,[15] and imperial declarations.[16] Published writings of 1802–1919 in the United States commonly used the name Hayti (e.g. The Blue Book of Hayti (1919), a book with official standing in Haiti). By 1873 Haiti was common among titles of US published books as well as in US congressional publications. In all of Frederick Douglass' publications after 1890, he used Haiti. As late as 1949, the name Hayti continued to be used in books published in England (e.g. Hayti: 145 Years of Independence—The Bi-Centenary of Port-au-Prince published in London, England in 1949) but by 1950, usage in England had shifted to Haiti.[17]
  5. ^ The Taínos may have used Bohío as another name for the island.[41][42][43]

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  4. ^ a b c "Haiti". The World Factbook. Central Intelligence Agency. 22 September 2021.
  5. ^ "Religious Composition by Country, 2010–2050". Pew Research Center. 21 December 2022. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  6. ^ Press, DÁNICA COTO Associated (30 April 2024). "Haiti's transitional council names a new prime minister in the hopes of quelling stifling violence". ABC News. Retrieved 30 April 2024.
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  8. ^ "Haiti". The World Factbook (2024 ed.). Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
  9. ^ a b c d "World Economic Outlook Database, October 2023 Edition. (Haiti)". IMF.org. International Monetary Fund. 10 October 2023. Retrieved 15 October 2023.
  10. ^ "Gini Index". The World Bank. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  11. ^ "Human Development Report 2021/2022" (PDF). United Nations Development Programme. 8 September 2022. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
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    The Haitian and U.S. governments reached a mutually satisfactory agreement in the Executive Accord of August 7, 1933, and on August 15, the last marines departed.
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  225. ^ "Haiti facing stalled elections, kidnapping surge, rampant insecurity". UN News. United Nations. 4 October 2021.
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haiti, hayti, redirects, here, other, uses, hayti, disambiguation, disambiguation, officially, republic, country, island, hispaniola, caribbean, east, cuba, jamaica, south, bahamas, occupies, western, three, eighths, island, which, shares, with, dominican, rep. Hayti redirects here For other uses see Hayti disambiguation and Haiti disambiguation Haiti b officially the Republic of Haiti c d is a country on the island of Hispaniola in the Caribbean Sea east of Cuba and Jamaica and south of The Bahamas It occupies the western three eighths of the island which it shares with the Dominican Republic 18 19 Haiti is 27 750 km2 10 714 sq mi the third largest country in the Caribbean and has an estimated population of 11 4 million 20 21 making it the most populous Caribbean country The capital is Port au Prince Republic of HaitiRepublique d Haiti French Repiblik d Ayiti Haitian Creole 1 Flag Coat of armsMotto Liberte egalite fraternite French 2 Libete Egalite Fratenite Haitian Creole Liberty Equality Fraternity Motto on traditional coat of arms L union fait la force French Inite se fos Haitian Creole 3 Union makes strength Anthem La Dessalinienne French Desalinyen Haitian Creole The Dessalines Song source source track track track track track track track Location in the Western HemisphereHaiti and its neighborsCapitaland largest cityPort au Prince18 32 N 72 20 W 18 533 N 72 333 W 18 533 72 333Official languagesFrenchHaitian CreoleEthnic groups95 Black5 Mixed or White 4 Religion 2020 5 87 0 Christianity10 7 no religion2 1 folk religions0 2 othersDemonym s HaitianGovernmentUnitary semi presidential republic under an interim government Transitional Presidential CouncilEdgard Leblanc Fils Chairman Fritz JeanLaurent St CyrEmmanuel VertilaireSmith AugustinLeslie VoltaireLouis Gerald Gilles Prime MinisterFritz Belizaire acting 6 President of the Court of CassationJean Joseph LebrunLegislatureNational Assembly a Upper houseSenate a vacant Lower houseChamber of Deputies a vacant Independence from France Declared1 January 1804 Recognized17 April 1825 First Empire22 September 1804 Southern Republic9 March 1806 Northern State17 October 1806 Kingdom28 March 1811 Unification of Hispaniola9 February 1822 Dissolution27 February 1844 Second Empire26 August 1849 Republic15 January 1859 United States occupation28 July 1915 1 August 1934 Current constitution29 March 1987Area Total27 750 7 km2 10 710 sq mi 143rd Water 0 7Population 2023 estimate11 470 261 8 83rd Density382 km2 989 4 sq mi 32nd GDP PPP 2023 estimate Total 38 952 billion 9 144th Per capita 3 185 9 174th GDP nominal 2023 estimate Total 25 986 billion 9 139th Per capita 2 125 9 172nd Gini 2012 41 1 10 mediumHDI 2022 0 552 11 medium 158th CurrencyGourde G HTG Time zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT Driving siderightCalling code 509ISO 3166 codeHTInternet TLD ht The island was originally inhabited by the Taino people 22 The first Europeans arrived in December 1492 during the first voyage of Christopher Columbus 23 Columbus founded the first European settlement in the Americas La Navidad on what is now the northeastern coast of Haiti 24 25 26 27 The island was claimed by Spain forming part of the Spanish Empire until the early 17th century Competing claims and settlements led to the west of the island being ceded to France in 1697 which was subsequently named Saint Domingue French colonists established sugarcane plantations worked by enslaved persons brought from Africa which made the colony one of the world s richest In the midst of the French Revolution enslaved persons maroons and free people of color launched the Haitian Revolution 1791 1804 led by a former slave and general of the French Army Toussaint Louverture Napoleon s forces were defeated by Louverture s successor Jean Jacques Dessalines later Emperor Jacques I who declared Haiti s sovereignty on 1 January 1804 leading to a massacre of the French The country became the first independent nation of the Caribbean the second republic in the Americas the first country in the Americas to officially abolish slavery and only country established by a slave revolt 28 29 30 President Jean Pierre Boyer decided to invade and occupy Santo Domingo in February 1822 which eventually led to the long Haitian Dominican war Defeated Haiti recognized Dominican independence in 1867 following their declaration in 1844 Haiti s first century of independence was characterized by political instability ostracism by the international community payment of a crippling debt to France and the vast cost of the war and the occupation of Santo Domingo Political volatility and foreign economic influence prompted the US to occupy the country between 1915 and 1934 The last contingent of US Marines departed on August 15 1934 after a formal transfer of authority to the Garde and Haiti regained its independence 31 Francois Papa Doc Duvalier took power in 1957 ushering in a long period of autocratic rule continued by his son Jean Claude Baby Doc Duvalier that lasted until 1986 the period was characterized by state sanctioned violence against the opposition and civilians corruption and economic stagnation The country endured a 2004 coup d etat which prompted U N intervention as well as a catastrophic earthquake in 2010 that killed over 250 000 people and a cholera outbreak Many countries canceled Haiti s debt including France and the United States With its deteriorating economic situation 32 Haiti has experienced a socioeconomic and political crisis marked by riots and protests widespread hunger and increased gang activity 33 As of February 2023 Haiti has no remaining elected government officials and has been described as a failed state 34 35 Haiti is a founding member of the United Nations Organization of American States OAS 36 Association of Caribbean States 37 and the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie In addition to CARICOM it is a member of the International Monetary Fund 38 World Trade Organization 39 and Community of Latin American and Caribbean States Historically poor and politically unstable Haiti has the lowest Human Development Index in the Americas as well as widespread slavery Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Taino history 2 2 Colonial era 2 2 1 Spanish rule 1492 1625 2 2 2 French rule 1625 1804 2 2 3 Haitian Revolution 1791 1804 2 3 Independent Haiti 2 3 1 First Empire 1804 1806 2 3 2 State of Haiti Kingdom of Haiti and the Republic 1806 1820 2 3 3 Unification of Hispaniola 1821 1844 2 3 4 Loss of the Spanish portion of the island 2 3 5 Second Empire 1849 1859 2 3 6 Late 19th century early 20th century 2 3 7 United States occupation 1915 1934 2 3 8 Post occupation era 1934 1957 2 3 9 Duvalier dynasty 1957 1986 2 3 10 Post Duvalier era 1986 2004 2 3 11 Post Aristide era 2004 present 3 Geography 3 1 Climate 3 2 Geology 3 3 Environment 3 3 1 Biodiversity 4 Government and politics 4 1 Administrative divisions 4 2 Foreign relations 4 3 Military 4 4 Law enforcement and crime 4 5 Haitian penitentiary system 5 Economy 5 1 Foreign aid 5 2 Trade 5 3 Energy 5 4 Personal income 5 5 Real estate 5 6 Agriculture 5 7 Currency 5 8 Tourism 5 9 Caracol Industrial Park 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Transportation 6 2 Airports 6 3 Bus service 6 4 Communications 6 5 Water supply and sanitation 7 Demographics 7 1 Racial discrimination 7 2 Religion 7 3 Languages 7 4 Emigration 7 5 Education 7 6 Health 7 7 Largest cities 8 Culture 8 1 Art 8 2 Music and dance 8 3 Literature 8 4 Cinema 8 5 Cuisine 8 6 Architecture 8 7 Museums 8 8 Folklore and mythology 8 9 National holidays and festivals 8 10 Sports 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymologyHaiti also earlier Hayti d comes from the indigenous Taino language and means land of high mountains 40 it was the native name e for the entire island of Hispaniola The name was restored by Haitian revolutionary Jean Jacques Dessalines as the official name of independent Saint Domingue as a tribute to the Amerindian predecessors 44 In French the i in Haiti has a diacritical mark used to show that the second vowel is pronounced separately as in the word naive while the H is silent 45 In English this rule for the pronunciation is often disregarded thus the spelling Haiti is used There are different anglicizations for its pronunciation such as HIGH ti high EE ti and haa EE ti which are still in use but HAY ti is the most widespread and best established 46 In French Haiti s nickname means the Pearl of the Antilles La Perle des Antilles because of both its natural beauty 47 and the amount of wealth it accumulated for the Kingdom of France 48 In Haitian Creole it is spelled and pronounced with a y but no H Ayiti Another theory on the name Haiti is its origin in African tradition in Fon language one of the most spoken by the bossales Haitians born in Africa Ayiti Tome means From nowadays this land is our land citation needed In the Haitian community the country has multiple nicknames Ayiti Toma as its origin in Ayiti Tome Ayiti Cheri Ayiti my Darling Te Desalin Dessalines Land or Lakay Home HistoryMain article History of Haiti Taino history nbsp The five caciquedoms of Hispaniola at the time of the arrival of Christopher ColumbusThe island of Hispaniola of which Haiti occupies the western three eighths 18 19 has been inhabited since about 5000 BC by groups of Native Americans thought to have arrived from Central or South America 49 Genetic studies show that some of these groups were related to the Yanomami of the Amazon Basin 22 50 Amongst these early settlers were the Ciboney peoples followed by the Taino speakers of an Arawakan language elements of which have been preserved in Haitian Creole The Taino name for the entire island was Haiti or alternatively Quisqeya 51 Main article Chiefdoms of HispaniolaIn Taino society the largest unit of political organization was led by a cacique or chief as the Europeans understood them The island of Hispaniola was divided among five caciquedoms the Magua in the north east the Marien in the north west the Jaragua in the south west the Maguana in the central regions of Cibao and the Higuey in the south east 52 53 Taino cultural artifacts include cave paintings in several locations in the country These have become national symbols of Haiti and tourist attractions Modern day Leogane started as a French colonial town in the southwest is beside the former capital of the caciquedom of Xaragua 54 Colonial era Spanish rule 1492 1625 Main articles Columbian Viceroyalty New Spain and Captaincy General of Santo Domingo nbsp Artist s impression of Christopher Columbus landing on Hispaniola engraving by Theodor de Bry Navigator Christopher Columbus landed in Haiti on 6 December 1492 in an area that he named Mole Saint Nicolas 55 and claimed the island for the Crown of Castile Nineteen days later his ship the Santa Maria ran aground near the present site of Cap Haitien Columbus left 39 men on the island who founded the settlement of La Navidad on 25 December 1492 49 Relations with the native peoples initially good broke down and the settlers were later killed by the Taino 56 The sailors carried endemic Eurasian infectious diseases causing epidemics that killed a large number of native people 57 58 The first recorded smallpox epidemic in the Americas erupted on Hispaniola in 1507 59 Their numbers were further reduced by the harshness of the encomienda system in which the Spanish forced natives to work in gold mines and plantations 60 56 The Spanish passed the Laws of Burgos 1512 1513 which forbade the maltreatment of natives endorsed their conversion to Catholicism 61 and gave legal framework to encomiendas The natives were brought to these sites to work in specific plantations or industries 62 As the Spanish re focused their colonization efforts on the greater riches of mainland Central and South America Hispaniola became reduced largely to a trading and refueling post As a result piracy became widespread encouraged by European powers hostile to Spain such as France based on Ile de la Tortue and England 56 The Spanish largely abandoned the western third of the island focusing their colonization effort on the eastern two thirds 63 49 The western part of the island was thus gradually settled by French buccaneers among them was Bertrand d Ogeron who succeeded in growing tobacco and recruited many French colonial families from Martinique and Guadeloupe 64 In 1697 France and Spain settled their hostilities on the island by way of the Treaty of Ryswick of 1697 which divided Hispaniola between them 65 49 French rule 1625 1804 Main articles Saint Domingue and French West Indies France received the western third and subsequently named it Saint Domingue the French equivalent of Santo Domingo the Spanish colony on Hispaniola 66 The French set about creating sugar and coffee plantations worked by vast numbers of those enslaved imported from Africa and Saint Domingue grew to become their richest colonial possession 65 49 generating 40 of France s foreign trade and doubling the wealth generation of all of England s colonies combined 67 The French settlers were outnumbered by enslaved persons by almost 10 to 1 65 According to the 1788 Census Haiti s population consisted of nearly 25 000 Europeans 22 000 free coloreds and 700 000 Africans in slavery 68 In contrast by 1763 the white population of French Canada a far larger territory had numbered only 65 000 69 In the north of the island those enslaved were able to retain many ties to African cultures religion and language these ties were continually being renewed by newly imported Africans Some West Africans in slavery held on to their traditional Vodou beliefs by secretly syncretizing it with Catholicism 49 The French enacted the Code Noir Black Code prepared by Jean Baptiste Colbert and ratified by Louis XIV which established rules on slave treatment and permissible freedoms 70 Saint Domingue has been described as one of the most brutally efficient slave colonies at the end of the eighteenth century it was supplying two thirds of Europe s tropical produce while one third of newly imported Africans died within a few years 71 Many enslaved persons died from diseases such as smallpox and typhoid fever 72 They had low birth rates 73 and there is evidence that some women aborted fetuses rather than give birth to children within the bonds of slavery 74 The colony s environment also suffered as forests were cleared to make way for plantations and the land was overworked so as to extract maximum profit for French plantation owners 49 nbsp Saint Domingue slave revolt in 1791 As in its Louisiana colony the French colonial government allowed some rights to free people of color gens de couleur the mixed race descendants of European male colonists and African enslaved females and later mixed race women 65 Over time many were released from slavery and they established a separate social class White French Creole fathers frequently sent their mixed race sons to France for their education Some men of color were admitted into the military More of the free people of color lived in the south of the island near Port au Prince and many intermarried within their community 65 They frequently worked as artisans and tradesmen and began to own some property including enslaved persons of their own 49 65 The free people of color petitioned the colonial government to expand their rights 65 The brutality of slave life led many people in bondage to escape to mountainous regions where they set up their own autonomous communities and became known as maroons 49 One maroon leader Francois Mackandal led a rebellion in the 1750s however he was later captured and executed by the French 65 Haitian Revolution 1791 1804 Main article Haitian Revolution nbsp General Toussaint Louverture Inspired by the French Revolution of 1789 and principles of the rights of man the French settlers and free people of color pressed for greater political freedom and more civil rights 70 Tensions between these two groups led to conflict as a militia of free coloreds was set up in 1790 by Vincent Oge resulting in his capture torture and execution 49 Sensing an opportunity in August 1791 the first slave armies were established in northern Haiti under the leadership of Toussaint Louverture inspired by the Vodou houngan priest Boukman and backed by the Spanish in Santo Domingo soon a full blown slave rebellion had broken out across the entire colony 49 In 1792 the French government sent three commissioners with troops to re establish control to build an alliance with the gens de couleur and enslaved persons commissioners Leger Felicite Sonthonax and Etienne Polverel abolished slavery in the colony 70 Six months later the National Convention led by Maximilien de Robespierre and the Jacobins endorsed abolition and extended it to all the French colonies 75 The United States which was a new republic itself oscillated between supporting or not supporting Toussaint Louverture and the emerging country of Haiti depending on who was President of the US Washington who was a slave holder and isolationist kept the United States neutral although private US citizens at times provided aid to French planters trying to put down the revolt John Adams a vocal opponent of slavery fully supported the slave revolt by providing diplomatic recognition financial support munitions and warships including the USS Constitution beginning in 1798 This support ended in 1801 when Jefferson another slave holding president took office and recalled the US Navy 76 77 78 With slavery abolished Toussaint Louverture pledged allegiance to France and he fought off the British and Spanish forces who had taken advantage of the situation and invaded Saint Domingue 79 80 The Spanish were later forced to cede their part of the island to France under the terms of the Peace of Basel in 1795 uniting the island under one government However an insurgency against French rule broke out in the east and in the west there was fighting between Louverture s forces and the free people of color led by Andre Rigaud in the War of the Knives 1799 1800 81 82 The United States support for the blacks in the war contributed to their victory over the mulattoes 83 More than 25 000 whites and free blacks left the island as refugees 84 nbsp Battle between Polish troops in French service and the Haitian rebels The majority of Polish soldiers eventually deserted the French army and fought alongside the Haitians After Louverture created a separatist constitution and proclaimed himself governor general for life Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802 sent an expedition of 20 000 soldiers and as many sailors 85 under the command of his brother in law Charles Leclerc to reassert French control The French achieved some victories but within a few months most of their army had died from yellow fever 86 Ultimately more than 50 000 French troops died in an attempt to retake the colony including 18 generals 87 The French managed to capture Louverture transporting him to France for trial He was imprisoned at Fort de Joux where he died in 1803 of exposure and possibly tuberculosis 71 88 nbsp Haitians hanging French soldiers The enslaved persons along with free gens de couleur and allies continued their fight for independence led by generals Jean Jacques Dessalines Alexandre Petion and Henry Christophe 88 The rebels finally managed to decisively defeat the French troops at the Battle of Vertieres on 18 November 1803 establishing the first nation ever to successfully gain independence through a slave revolt 89 Under the overall command of Dessalines the Haitian armies avoided open battle and instead conducted a successful guerrilla campaign against the Napoleonic forces working with diseases such as yellow fever to reduce the numbers of French soldiers 90 Later that year France withdrew its remaining 7 000 troops from the island and Napoleon gave up his idea of re establishing a North American empire selling Louisiana New France to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase 88 Throughout the revolution an estimated 20 000 French troops succumbed to yellow fever while another 37 000 were killed in action 91 exceeding the total French soldiers killed in action across various 19th century colonial campaigns in Algeria Mexico Indochina Tunisia and West Africa which resulted in approximately 10 000 French soldiers killed in action combined 92 The British sustained 100 000 casualties 83 Additionally 350 000 ex enslaved Haitians died 93 In the process Dessalines became arguably the most successful military commander in the struggle against Napoleonic France 94 Independent Haiti First Empire 1804 1806 Main articles First Empire of Haiti and 1804 Haiti massacre nbsp Petion and Dessalines swearing allegiance to each other before God painting by Guillon Lethiere The independence of Saint Domingue was proclaimed under the native name Haiti by Jean Jacques Dessalines on 1 January 1804 in Gonaives 95 96 and he was proclaimed Emperor for Life as Emperor Jacques I by his troops 97 Dessalines at first offered protection to the white planters and others 98 However once in power he ordered the genocide of nearly all the remaining white men women children between January and April 1804 3 000 to 5 000 whites were killed including those who had been friendly and sympathetic to the black population 99 Only three categories of white people were selected out as exceptions and spared Polish soldiers the majority of whom had deserted from the French army and fought alongside the Haitian rebels the small group of German colonists invited to the north west region and a group of medical doctors and professionals 100 Reportedly people with connections to officers in the Haitian army were also spared as well as the women who agreed to marry non white men 101 Fearful of the potential impact the slave rebellion could have in the slave states U S President Thomas Jefferson refused to recognize the new republic The Southern politicians who were a powerful voting bloc in the American Congress prevented U S recognition for decades until they withdrew in 1861 to form the Confederacy 102 The revolution led to a wave of emigration 103 In 1809 9 000 refugees from Saint Domingue both white planters and people of color settled en masse in New Orleans doubling the city s population having been expelled from their initial refuge in Cuba by Spanish authorities 104 In addition the newly arrived enslaved persons added to the city s African population 105 The plantation system was re established in Haiti albeit for wages however many Haitians were marginalized and resented the heavy handed manner in which this was enforced in the new nation s politics 88 The rebel movement splintered and Dessalines was assassinated by rivals on 17 October 1806 106 Link to precise page 88 State of Haiti Kingdom of Haiti and the Republic 1806 1820 Main articles State of Haiti and Kingdom of Haiti nbsp Citadelle Laferriere built 1805 1822 is the largest fortress in the Americas and is considered locally to be an eighth wonder of the world 107 After Dessalines death Haiti became split into two with the Kingdom of Haiti in the north directed by Henri Christophe later declaring himself Henri I and a republic in the south centered on Port au Prince directed by Alexandre Petion an homme de couleur 108 109 110 111 88 Christophe established a semi feudal corvee system with a rigid education and economic code 112 Petion s republic was less absolutist and he initiated a series of land reforms which benefited the peasant class 88 President Petion also gave military and financial assistance to the revolutionary leader Simon Bolivar which were critical in enabling him to liberate the Viceroyalty of New Granada 113 Meanwhile the French who had managed to maintain a precarious control of eastern Hispaniola were defeated by insurgents led by Juan Sanchez Ramirez with the area returning to Spanish rule in 1809 following the Battle of Palo Hincado 114 Unification of Hispaniola 1821 1844 Main articles Republic of Haiti 1820 1849 and Haitian occupation of Santo Domingo nbsp Jean Pierre Boyer ruler of Haiti 1818 1843 Beginning in 1821 President Jean Pierre Boyer also an homme de couleur and successor to Petion reunified the island following the suicide of Henry Christophe 49 115 After Santo Domingo declared its independence from Spain on 30 November 1821 Boyer invaded seeking to unite the entire island by force and ending slavery in Santo Domingo 116 Struggling to revive the agricultural economy to produce commodity crops Boyer passed the Code Rural which denied peasant laborers the right to leave the land enter the towns or start farms or shops of their own causing much resentment as most peasants wished to have their own farms rather than work on plantations 117 118 Starting in September 1824 more than 6 000 African Americans migrated to Haiti with transportation paid by an American philanthropic group similar in function to the American Colonization Society and its efforts in Liberia 119 Many found the conditions too harsh and returned to the United States In July 1825 King Charles X of France during a period of restoration of the French monarchy sent a fleet to reconquer Haiti Under pressure President Boyer agreed to a treaty by which France formally recognized the independence of the nation in exchange for a payment of 150 million francs 49 By an order of 17 April 1826 the King of France renounced his rights of sovereignty and formally recognized the independence of Haiti 120 121 122 The enforced payments to France hampered Haiti s economic growth for years exacerbated by the fact that many Western nations continued to refuse formal diplomatic recognition to Haiti Britain recognized Haitian independence in 1833 and the United States not until 1862 49 Haiti borrowed heavily from Western banks at extremely high interest rates to repay the debt Although the amount of the reparations was reduced to 90 million in 1838 by 1900 80 of Haiti s government spending was debt repayment and the country did not finish repaying it until 1947 123 88 Loss of the Spanish portion of the island Main article Dominican War of Independence After losing the support of Haiti s elite Boyer was ousted in 1843 with Charles Riviere Herard replacing him as president 49 Nationalist Dominican forces in eastern Hispaniola led by Juan Pablo Duarte seized control of Santo Domingo on 27 February 1844 49 The Haitian forces unprepared for a significant uprising capitulated to the rebels effectively ending Haitian rule of eastern Hispaniola In March Riviere Herard attempted to reimpose his authority but the Dominicans inflicted heavy losses 124 Riviere Herard was removed from office by the mulatto hierarchy and replaced with the aged general Philippe Guerrier who assumed the presidency on 3 May 1844 Guerrier died in April 1845 and was succeeded by General Jean Louis Pierrot 125 Pierrot s most pressing duty as the new president was to check the incursions of the Dominicans who were harassing the Haitian troops 125 Dominican gunboats were also making depredations on Haiti s coasts 125 President Pierrot decided to open a campaign against the Dominicans whom he considered merely as insurgents however the Haitian offensive of 1845 was stopped on the frontier 124 On 1 January 1846 Pierrot announced a fresh campaign to reimpose Haitian suzerainty over eastern Hispaniola but his officers and men greeted this fresh summons with contempt 124 Thus a month later February 1846 when Pierrot ordered his troops to march against the Dominicans the Haitian army mutinied and its soldiers proclaimed his overthrow as president of the republic 124 With the war against the Dominicans having become very unpopular in Haiti it was beyond the power of the new president General Jean Baptiste Riche to stage another invasion 124 Second Empire 1849 1859 Main article Second Empire of Haiti nbsp Faustin I from The Illustrated London News 16 February 1856 On 27 February 1847 President Riche died after only a year in power and was replaced by an obscure officer General Faustin Soulouque 49 During the first two years of Soulouque s administration the conspiracies and opposition he faced in retaining power were so manifold that the Dominicans were given a further breathing space in which to consolidate their independence 124 But when in 1848 France finally recognized the Dominican Republic as a free and independent state and provisionally signed a treaty of peace friendship commerce and navigation Haiti immediately protested claiming the treaty was an attack upon their own security 124 Soulouque decided to invade the new Republic before the French Government could ratify the treaty 124 On 21 March 1849 Haitian soldiers attacked the Dominican garrison at Las Matas The demoralized defenders offered almost no resistance before abandoning their weapons Soulouque pressed on capturing San Juan This left only the town of Azua as the remaining Dominican stronghold between the Haitian army and the capital On 6 April Azua fell to the 18 000 strong Haitian army with a 5 000 man Dominican counterattack failing to oust them 79 The way to Santo Domingo was now clear But the news of discontent existing at Port au Prince which reached Soulouque arrested his further progress and caused him to return with the army to his capital 126 Emboldened by the sudden retreat of the Haitian army the Dominicans counter attacked Their flotilla went as far as Dame Marie on the west coast of Haiti which they plundered and set on fire 126 After another Haitian campaign in 1855 Britain and France intervened and obtained an armistice on behalf of the Dominicans who declared independence as the Dominican Republic 126 The sufferings endured by the soldiers during the campaign of 1855 and the losses and sacrifices inflicted on the country without yielding any compensation or any practical results provoked great discontent 126 In 1858 a revolution began led by General Fabre Geffrard Duke of Tabara In December of that year Geffrard defeated the Imperial Army and seized control of most of the country 49 As a result the Emperor abdicated his throne on 15 January 1859 Faustin was taken into exile and General Geffrard succeeded him as president Late 19th century early 20th century nbsp German Captain Thiele of the Charlotte handing over the German Ultimatum on 6 December 1897 during the Luders Affair The period following Soulouque s overthrow down to the turn of the century was a turbulent one for Haiti with repeated bouts of political instability President Geffrard was overthrown in a coup in 1867 127 as was his successor Sylvain Salnave in 1869 128 Under the Presidency of Michel Domingue 1874 76 relations with the Dominican Republic were dramatically improved by the signing of a treaty in which both parties acknowledged the independence of the other Some modernisation of the economy and infrastructure also occurred in this period especially under the Presidencies of Lysius Salomon 1879 1888 and Florvil Hyppolite 1889 1896 129 Haiti s relations with outside powers were often strained In 1889 the United States attempted to force Haiti to permit the building of a naval base at Mole Saint Nicolas which was firmly resisted by President Hyppolite 130 In 1892 the German government supported suppression of the reform movement of Antenor Firmin and in 1897 the Germans used gunboat diplomacy to intimidate and then humiliate the Haitian government of President Tiresias Simon Sam 1896 1902 during the Luders Affair 131 In the first decades of the 20th century Haiti experienced great political instability and was heavily in debt to France Germany and the United States A series of short lived presidencies came and went President Pierre Nord Alexis was forced from power in 1908 132 133 as was his successor Francois C Antoine Simon in 1911 134 President Cincinnatus Leconte 1911 12 was killed in a possibly deliberate explosion at the National Palace 135 Michel Oreste 1913 14 was ousted in a coup as was his successor Oreste Zamor in 1914 136 United States occupation 1915 1934 Main article United States occupation of Haiti nbsp U S Marines and guide in search of Haitian Cacos fighters against the U S occupation of Haiti c 1919 Germany increased its influence in Haiti in this period with a small community of German settlers wielding disproportionate influence in Haiti s economy 137 138 The German influence prompted anxieties in the United States who had also invested heavily in the country and whose government defended their right to oppose foreign interference in the Americas under the Monroe Doctrine 49 138 In December 1914 the Americans removed 500 000 from the Haitian National Bank but rather than seize it to help pay the debt it was removed for safe keeping in New York thus giving the United States control of the bank and preventing other powers from doing so This gave a stable financial base on which to build the economy and so enable the debt to be repaid 139 In 1915 Haiti s new President Vilbrun Guillaume Sam sought to strengthen his tenuous rule by a mass execution of 167 political prisoners Outrage at the killings led to riots and Sam was captured and killed by a lynch mob 138 140 Fearing possible foreign intervention or the emergence of a new government led by the anti American Haitian politician Rosalvo Bobo President Woodrow Wilson sent U S Marines into Haiti in July 1915 The USS Washington under Rear Admiral Caperton arrived in Port au Prince in an attempt to restore order and protect U S interests Within days the Marines had taken control of the capital city and its banks and customs house The Marines declared martial law and severely censored the press Within weeks a new pro U S Haitian president Philippe Sudre Dartiguenave was installed and a new constitution written that was favorable to the interests of the United States The constitution written by future US President Franklin D Roosevelt included a clause that allowed for the first time foreign ownership of land in Haiti which was bitterly opposed by the Haitian legislature and citizenry 138 141 nbsp The body of caco leader Charlemagne Peralte on display after his execution by US forces the image was counterproductive with the resemblance to the deposition of Jesus gaining Peralte the status of national martyr The occupation improved some of Haiti s infrastructure and centralized power in Port au Prince 138 1700 km of roads were made usable 189 bridges were built many irrigation canals were rehabilitated hospitals schools and public buildings were constructed and drinking water was brought to the main cities citation needed Agricultural education was organized with a central school of agriculture and 69 farms in the country 142 incomplete short citation However many infrastructure projects were built using the corvee system that allowed the government occupying forces to take people from their homes and farms at gunpoint if necessary to build roads bridges etc by force a process that was deeply resented by ordinary Haitians 143 138 Sisal was also introduced to Haiti and sugarcane and cotton became significant exports boosting prosperity 144 Haitian traditionalists based in rural areas were highly resistant to U S backed changes while the urban elites typically mixed race welcomed the growing economy but wanted more political control 49 Together they helped secure an end to the occupation in 1934 under the Presidency of Stenio Vincent 1930 1941 49 145 The debts were still outstanding though less due to increased prosperity and the U S financial advisor general receiver handled the budget until 1941 146 49 The U S Marines were instilled with a special brand of paternalism towards Haitians expressed in the metaphor of a father s relationship with his children 147 Armed opposition to the US presence was led by the cacos under the command of Charlemagne Peralte his capture and execution in 1919 earned him the status of a national martyr 148 49 138 During Senate hearings in 1921 the commandant of the Marine Corps reported that in the 20 months of active unrest 2 250 Haitians had been killed However in a report to the Secretary of the Navy he reported the death toll as being 3 250 149 Haitian historians have claimed the true number was much higher but this is not supported by most historians outside Haiti 150 Post occupation era 1934 1957 After US forces left in 1934 Dominican dictator Rafael Trujillo used anti Haitian sentiment as a nationalist tool In an event that became known as the Parsley Massacre he ordered his army to kill Haitians living on the Dominican side of the border 151 152 Few bullets were used instead 20 000 30 000 Haitians were bludgeoned and bayoneted then herded into the sea where sharks finished what Trujillo had begun 153 The indiscriminate massacre occurred over a period of five days President Vincent became increasingly dictatorial and resigned under US pressure in 1941 being replaced by Elie Lescot 1941 46 154 In 1941 during the Second World War Lescot declared war on Japan 8 December Germany 12 December Italy 12 December Bulgaria 24 December Hungary 24 December and Romania 24 December 155 Out of these six Axis countries only Romania reciprocated declaring war on Haiti on the same day 24 December 1941 156 On 27 September 1945 157 Haiti became a founding member of the United Nations the successor to the League of Nations of which Haiti was also a founding member 158 159 In 1946 Lescot was overthrown by the military with Dumarsais Estime later becoming the new president 1946 50 49 He sought to improve the economy and education and to boost the role of black Haitians however as he sought to consolidate his rule he too was overthrown in a coup led by Paul Magloire who replaced him as president 1950 56 49 160 Firmly anti Communist he was supported by the United States with greater political stability tourists started to visit Haiti 161 The waterfront area of Port au Prince was redeveloped to allow cruise ship passengers to walk to cultural attractions Duvalier dynasty 1957 1986 Main article Duvalier dynasty nbsp Papa Doc Duvalier in 1968 In 1956 57 Haiti underwent severe political turmoil Magloire was forced to resign and leave the country in 1956 and he was followed by four short lived presidencies 49 In the September 1957 election Francois Duvalier was elected President of Haiti Known as Papa Doc and initially popular Duvalier remained President until his death in 1971 162 He advanced black interests in the public sector where over time people of color had predominated as the educated urban elite 49 163 Not trusting the army despite his frequent purges of officers deemed disloyal Duvalier created a private militia known as Tontons Macoutes Bogeymen which maintained order by terrorizing the populace and political opponents 162 164 In 1964 Duvalier proclaimed himself President for Life an uprising against his rule that year in Jeremie was violently suppressed with the ringleaders publicly executed and hundreds of mixed raced citizens in the town killed 162 The bulk of the educated and professional class began leaving the country and corruption became widespread 49 162 Duvalier sought to create a personality cult identifying himself with Baron Samedi one of the loa or lwa or spirits of Haitian Vodou Despite the well publicized abuses under his rule Duvalier s firm anti Communism earned him the support of the Americans who furnished the country with aid 162 165 In 1971 Duvalier died and he was succeeded by his son Jean Claude Duvalier nicknamed Baby Doc who ruled until 1986 166 162 He largely continued his father s policies though curbed some of the worst excesses in order to court international respectability 49 Tourism which had nosedived in Papa Doc s time again became a growing industry 167 However as the economy continued to decline Baby Doc s grip on power began to weaken Haiti s pig population was slaughtered following an outbreak of swine fever in the late 1970s causing hardship to rural communities who used them as an investment 49 168 The opposition became more vocal bolstered by a visit to the country by Pope John Paul II in 1983 who publicly lambasted the president 169 Demonstrations occurred in Gonaives in 1985 which then spread across the country under pressure from the United States Duvalier left the country for France in February 1986 In total roughly 40 000 to 60 000 Haitians are estimated to have been killed during the reign of the Duvaliers 170 Through the use of his intimidation tactics and executions many intellectual Haitians had fled leaving the country with a massive brain drain from which it has yet to recover 171 Post Duvalier era 1986 2004 nbsp Jean Bertrand Aristide returns to Haiti following the U S led invasion in 1994 designed to remove the regime installed by the 1991 Haitian coup d etat Following Duvalier s departure army leader General Henri Namphy headed a new National Governing Council 49 Elections scheduled for November 1987 were aborted after dozens of inhabitants were shot in the capital by soldiers and Tontons Macoutes 172 49 Fraudulent elections followed in 1988 in which only 4 of the citizenry voted 173 49 The newly elected president Leslie Manigat was then overthrown some months later in the June 1988 Haitian coup d etat 49 174 Another coup followed in September 1988 after the St Jean Bosco massacre in which approximately 13 to 50 people attending a mass led by prominent government critic and Catholic priest Jean Bertrand Aristide were killed 174 175 General Prosper Avril subsequently led a military regime until March 1990 49 176 177 Avril transferred power to the army chief of staff Gen Herard Abraham on March 10 1990 Abraham gave up power three days later becoming the only military leader in Haiti during the twentieth century to voluntarily give up power Abraham later helped to secure the 1990 91 Haitian general election In December 1990 Jean Bertrand Aristide was elected president in the Haitian general election However his ambitious reformist agenda worried the elites and in September of the following year he was overthrown by the military led by Raoul Cedras in the 1991 Haitian coup d etat 49 178 Amidst the continuing turmoil many Haitians attempted to flee the country 162 49 In September 1994 the United States negotiated the departure of Haiti s military leaders and the peaceful entry of 20 000 US troops under Operation Uphold Democracy 162 This enabled the restoration of the democratically elected Jean Bertrand Aristide as president who returned to Haiti in October to complete his term 179 180 As part of the deal Aristide had to implement free market reforms in an attempt to improve the Haitian economy with mixed results 181 49 In November 1994 Hurricane Gordon brushed Haiti dumping heavy rain and creating flash flooding that triggered mudslides Gordon killed an estimated 1 122 people although some estimates go as high as 2 200 182 183 Elections were held in 1995 which were won by Rene Preval gaining 88 of the popular vote albeit on a low turnout 184 185 49 Aristide subsequently formed his own party Fanmi Lavalas and political deadlock ensued the November 2000 election returned Aristide to the presidency with 92 of the vote 186 The election had been boycotted by the opposition then organized into the Convergence Democratique over a dispute in the May legislative elections In subsequent years there was increasing violence between rival political factions and human rights abuses 187 188 Aristide spent years negotiating with the Convergence Democratique on new elections but the Convergence s inability to develop a sufficient electoral base made elections unattractive citation needed In 2004 an anti Aristide revolt began in northern Haiti The rebellion eventually reached the capital and Aristide was forced into exile 187 49 The precise nature of the events are disputed some including Aristide and his bodyguard Franz Gabriel stated that he was the victim of a new coup d etat or modern kidnapping by U S forces 187 189 190 These charges were denied by the US government 191 187 As political violence and crime continued to grow a United Nations Stabilisation Mission MINUSTAH was brought in to maintain order 192 However MINUSTAH proved controversial since their periodically heavy handed approach to maintaining law and order and several instances of abuses including the alleged sexual abuse of civilians provoked resentment and distrust among ordinary Haitians 193 194 49 Boniface Alexandre assumed interim authority until 2006 when Rene Preval was re elected President following elections 192 49 195 Post Aristide era 2004 present See also Haitian crisis 2018 present Amidst the continuing political chaos a series of natural disasters hit Haiti In 2004 Tropical Storm Jeanne skimmed the north coast leaving 3 006 people dead in flooding and mudslides mostly in the city of Gonaives 196 In 2008 Haiti was again struck by tropical storms Tropical Storm Fay Hurricane Gustav Hurricane Hanna and Hurricane Ike all produced heavy winds and rain resulting in 331 deaths and about 800 000 in need of humanitarian aid 197 The state of affairs produced by these storms was intensified by already high food and fuel prices that had caused a food crisis and political unrest in April 2008 198 199 49 nbsp The Haitian National Palace located in Port au Prince Haiti heavily damaged after the earthquake of 2010 This was originally a two story structure the second story completely collapsed On 12 January 2010 at 4 53 pm local time Haiti was struck by a magnitude 7 0 earthquake This was the country s most severe earthquake in over 200 years 200 The earthquake was reported to have left between 160 000 and 300 000 people dead and up to 1 6 million homeless making it one of the deadliest natural disasters ever recorded 201 202 It is also one of the deadliest earthquakes ever recorded 203 The situation was exacerbated by a subsequent massive cholera outbreak that was triggered when cholera infected waste from a United Nations peacekeeping station contaminated the country s main river the Artibonite 192 204 205 In 2017 it was reported that roughly 10 000 Haitians had died and nearly a million had been made ill After years of denial the United Nations apologized in 2016 but as of 2017 update they have refused to acknowledge fault thus avoiding financial responsibility 206 General elections had been planned for January 2010 but were postponed due to the earthquake 49 Elections were held on 28 November 2010 for the senate the parliament and the first round of the presidential elections The run off between Michel Martelly and Mirlande Manigat took place on 20 March 2011 and preliminary results released on 4 April named Michel Martelly the winner 207 208 In 2011 both former dictator Jean Claude Duvalier and Jean Bertrand Aristide returned to Haiti attempts to try Duvalier for crimes committed under his rule were shelved following his death in 2014 209 210 211 207 In 2013 Haiti called for European nations to pay reparations for slavery and establish an official commission for the settlement of past wrongdoings 212 213 Meanwhile after continuing political wrangling with the opposition and allegations of electoral fraud Martelly agreed to step down in 2016 without a successor in place 207 214 After numerous postponements partly owing to the effects of devastating Hurricane Matthew elections were held in November 2016 215 216 The victor Jovenel Moise of the Haitian Tet Kale Party was sworn in as president in 2017 217 218 Protests began on 7 July 2018 in response to increased fuel prices Over time these protests evolved into demands for the resignation of president Moise 219 On 7 July 2021 President Moise was assassinated in an attack on his private residence and First Lady Martine Moise was hospitalized 220 Amid the political crisis the government of Haiti installed Ariel Henry as both the Prime Minister and the President on 20 July 2021 221 222 On 14 August 2021 Haiti suffered another huge earthquake with many casualties 223 The earthquake has also damaged Haiti s economic conditions and led to a rise in gang violence which by May 2020 had escalated to a long lasting full blown gang war and other violent crimes 224 225 As of March 2022 Haiti still had no president no parliamentary quorum and a dysfunctional high court due to a lack of judges 221 In 2022 protests against the government and rising fuel prices intensified 226 227 In 2023 kidnapping jumped 72 from the first quarter of the previous year 228 Doctors lawyers and other wealthy members of society were kidnapped and held for ransom 229 Many victims were killed when ransom demands were not met leading those with the means to do so to flee the country further hampering efforts to pull the country out of the crisis 229 It is estimated that amidst the crisis up to 20 of qualified medical staff had left Haiti by the end of 2023 230 In March 2024 Ariel Henry was prevented by gangs from returning to Haiti following a visit to Kenya 231 Henry agreed to resign once a transitional government had been formed As of that month nearly half of Haiti s population was living under acute food insecurity according to the World Food Programme 26 On April 25 2024 Transitional Presidential Council of Haiti took over the Governance of Haiti and is cheduled to stay in power until 2026 232 GeographyMain article Geography of Haiti nbsp Topographical map of Haiti Haiti forms the western three eighths of Hispaniola the second largest island in the Greater Antilles At 27 750 km2 10 710 sq mi Haiti is the third largest country in the Caribbean behind Cuba and the Dominican Republic the latter sharing a 360 kilometer 224 mi border with Haiti The country has a roughly horseshoe shape and because of this it has a disproportionately long coastline second in length 1 771 km or 1 100 mi behind Cuba in the Greater Antilles 233 234 Haiti is the most mountainous nation in the Caribbean its terrain consists of mountains interspersed with small coastal plains and river valleys 235 The climate is tropical with some variation depending on altitude The highest point is Pic la Selle at 2 680 meters 8 793 ft 23 235 49 The northern region or Marien Region consists of the Massif du Nord Northern Massif and the Plaine du Nord Northern Plain The Massif du Nord is an extension of the Cordillera Central in the Dominican Republic 49 It begins at Haiti s eastern border north of the Guayamouc River and extends to the northwest through the northern peninsula The lowlands of the Plaine du Nord lie along the northern border with the Dominican Republic between the Massif du Nord and the North Atlantic Ocean The central region or Artibonite Region consists of two plains and two sets of mountain ranges The Plateau Central Central Plateau extends along both sides of the Guayamouc River south of the Massif du Nord It runs from the southeast to the northwest To the southwest of the Plateau Central are the Montagnes Noires whose most northwestern part merges with the Massif du Nord Haiti s most important valley in terms of crops is the Plaine de l Artibonite which lies between the Montagnes Noires and the Chaine des Matheux 49 This region supports the country s longest river the Riviere l Artibonite which begins in the western region of the Dominican Republic and continues for most of its length through central Haiti where it then empties into the Golfe de la Gonave 49 Also in this valley lies Haiti s second largest lake Lac de Peligre formed as a result of the construction of the Peligre Dam in the mid 1950s 236 nbsp Saint Marc Arrondissement Artibonite Department The southern region or Xaragua Region consists of the Plaine du Cul de Sac the southeast and the mountainous southern peninsula the Tiburon Peninsula The Plaine du Cul de Sac is a natural depression that harbors the country s saline lakes such as Trou Caiman and Haiti s largest lake Etang Saumatre The Chaine de la Selle mountain range an extension of the southern mountain chain of the Dominican Republic the Sierra de Baoruco extends from the Massif de la Selle in the east to the Massif de la Hotte in the west 49 Haiti also includes several offshore islands The island of Tortuga is located off the coast of northern Haiti The arrondissement of La Gonave is located on the island of the same name in the Golfe de la Gonave Haiti s largest island Gonave is moderately populated by rural villagers Ile a Vache is located off the southwest coast also part of Haiti are the Cayemites located in the Gulf of Gonave north of Pestel Navassa Island located 40 nautical miles 46 mi 74 km west of Jeremie on the south west peninsula of Haiti 237 is subject to an ongoing territorial dispute with the United States who currently administer the island 238 Climate nbsp Koppen climate types of Haiti Haiti s climate is tropical with some variation depending on altitude 235 Port au Prince ranges in January from an average minimum of 23 C 73 4 F to an average maximum of 31 C 87 8 F in July from 25 35 C 77 95 F The rainfall pattern is varied with rain heavier in some of the lowlands and the northern and eastern slopes of the mountains Haiti s dry season occurs from November to January Port au Prince receives an average annual rainfall of 1 370 mm 53 9 in There are two rainy seasons April June and October November Haiti is subject to periodic droughts and floods made more severe by deforestation Hurricanes are a menace and the country is also prone to flooding and earthquakes 235 Geology nbsp Saut d Eau waterfall There are blind thrust faults associated with the Enriquillo Plantain Garden fault system over which Haiti lies 239 After the earthquake of 2010 there was no evidence of surface rupture and geologists findings were based on seismological geological and ground deformation data 240 The northern boundary of the fault is where the Caribbean tectonic plate shifts eastwards by about 20 mm 0 79 inches per year in relation to the North American plate The strike slip fault system in the region has two branches in Haiti the Septentrional Oriente fault in the north and the Enriquillo Plantain Garden fault in the south A 2007 earthquake hazard study noted that the Enriquillo Plantain Garden fault zone could be at the end of its seismic cycle and concluded that a worst case forecast would involve a 7 2 Mw earthquake similar in size to the 1692 Jamaica earthquake 241 A study team performing a hazard assessment of the fault system recommended high priority historical geologic rupture studies as the fault was fully locked and had recorded few earthquakes in the preceding 40 years 242 The magnitude 7 0 2010 Haiti earthquake happened on this fault zone on 12 January 2010 Haiti also has rare elements such as gold which can be found at The Mont Organise gold mine 243 Haiti has no currently active volcanoes In the Terre Neuve Mountains about 12 kilometers from the Eaux Boynes small intrusions at least as late as Oligocene and probably of Miocene age are known No other volcanic activity of as late a date is known near any of the other warm springs 244 Environment Main articles Environment of Haiti and Deforestation in Haiti nbsp Haiti s border with the Dominican Republic in 2002 showing the extent of deforestation on the Haitian side left The soil erosion released from the upper catchments and deforestation have caused periodic and severe flooding as experienced for example on 17 September 2004 Earlier in May that year floods had killed over 3 000 people on Haiti s southern border with the Dominican Republic 245 Haiti s forests covered 60 of the country as recently as 50 years ago but that has been halved to a current estimate of 30 tree cover This estimate poses a stark difference from the erroneous figure of 2 which has been oft cited in discourse concerning the country s environmental condition 246 Haiti had a 2019 Forest Landscape Integrity Index mean score of 4 01 10 ranking it 137th globally out of 172 countries 247 Scientists at the Columbia University s Center for International Earth Science Information Network and the United Nations Environment Programme are working on the Haiti Regenerative Initiative an initiative aiming to reduce poverty and natural disaster vulnerability through ecosystem restoration and sustainable resource management 248 Biodiversity Main article Wildlife of Haiti nbsp The endangered Hispaniolan solenodon endemic to the island Haiti is home to four ecoregions Hispaniolan moist forests Hispaniolan dry forests Hispaniolan pine forests and Greater Antilles mangroves 249 Despite its small size Haiti s mountainous terrain and resultant multiple climatic zones has resulted in a wide variety of plant life 250 Notable tree species include the breadfruit tree mango tree acacia mahogany coconut palm royal palm and West Indian cedar 250 The forests were formerly much more extensive but have been subject to severe deforestation 49 Most mammal species are not native having been brought to the island since colonial times 250 However there are various native bat species as well as the endemic Hispaniolan hutia and Hispaniolan solenodon 250 Whale and dolphin species can also be found off Haiti s coast There are over 260 species of birds 31 endemic to Hispaniola 251 Notable endemic species include the Hispaniolan trogon Hispaniolan parakeet grey crowned tanager and the Hispaniolan Amazon 251 There are also several raptors as well as pelicans ibis hummingbirds and ducks Reptiles are common with species such as the rhinoceros iguana Haitian boa American crocodile and gecko 252 Government and politicsMain article Politics of Haiti nbsp Jovenel Moise was the President of Haiti from 7 February 2017 until his assassination on 7 July 2021 The government of Haiti is a semi presidential republic a multiparty system wherein the president of Haiti is head of state and elected directly by popular elections held every five years 49 253 The prime minister of Haiti acts as head of government and is appointed by the president chosen from the majority party in the National Assembly 49 Executive power is exercised by the president and prime minister who together constitute the government Legislative power is vested in both the government and the two chambers of the National Assembly of Haiti the Senate Senat and the Chamber of Deputies Chambre des Deputes 49 235 The government is organized unitarily thus the central government delegates powers to the departments without a constitutional need for consent The current structure of Haiti s political system was set forth in the Constitution of Haiti on 29 March 1987 235 Haitian politics have been contentious since independence Haiti has suffered 32 coups 254 Haiti is the only country in the Western Hemisphere to undergo a successful slave revolution however a long history of oppression by dictators such as Francois Duvalier and his son Jean Claude Duvalier has markedly affected the nation Since the end of the Duvalier era Haiti has been transitioning to a democratic system 49 Administrative divisions Main article Administrative divisions of Haiti Administratively Haiti is divided into ten departments 235 The departments are listed below with the departmental capital cities in parentheses nbsp Departments of Haiti Nord Ouest Port de Paix Nord Cap Haitien Nord Est Fort Liberte Artibonite Gonaives Centre Hinche Ouest Port au Prince Grand Anse Jeremie Nippes Miragoane Sud Les Cayes Sud Est Jacmel The departments are further divided into 42 arrondissements 145 communes and 571 communal sections These serve as respectively second and third level administrative divisions 255 256 257 Foreign relations Main article Foreign relations of Haiti Haiti is a member of a wide range of international and regional organizations such as the United Nations CARICOM Community of Latin American and Caribbean States International Monetary Fund Organisation of American States Organisation internationale de la Francophonie OPANAL and the World Trade Organization 235 In February 2012 Haiti signaled it would seek to upgrade its observer status to full associate member status of the African Union AU 258 The AU was reported to be planning to upgrade Haiti s status from observer to associate at its June 2013 summit 259 but the application had still not been ratified by May 2016 260 Military Main article Defence Force of Haiti Haiti has a strong military history dating to the pre independence struggle The Indigenous Army is essential in the construction of the state the management of land and public finances Up to the 20th century every Haitian president was an officer in the army During the US intervention the army was remodeled as Gendarmerie d Haiti and later on as Force Armee d Haiti FAdH In the early 1990s the army was unconstitutionally decommissioned and replaced by the Haitian National Police PNH In 2018 President Jovenel Moise reactivated the FAdH Haiti s Ministry of Defense is the main body of the armed forces 261 The former Haitian Armed Forces were demobilized in 1995 however efforts to reconstitute it are currently underway 262 The current defense force for Haiti is the Haitian National Police which has a highly trained SWAT team and works alongside the Haitian Coast Guard In 2010 the Haitian National Police force numbered 7 000 263 As of 2023 the Haitian army includes one infantry battalion that is in the process of being formed with 700 personnel 264 Law enforcement and crime Main articles Haitian National Police and Crime in Haiti nbsp Members of the Haitian National Police Force marching band stand at parade The legal system is based on a modified version of the Napoleonic Code 265 49 Haiti has consistently ranked among the most corrupt countries in the world on the Corruption Perceptions Index 266 According to a 2006 report by the Corruption Perceptions Index there is a strong correlation between corruption and poverty in Haiti The nation ranked first of all countries surveyed for levels of perceived domestic corruption 267 It is estimated that President Baby Doc Duvalier his wife Michele and their agents stole US 504 million from the treasury between 1971 and 1986 268 Similarly after the Haitian Army folded in 1995 the Haitian National Police HNP gained sole power of authority on the Haitian citizens Many Haitians as well as observers believe that this monopolized power could have given way to a corrupt police force 269 Some media outlets alleged that millions were stolen by former president Jean Bertrand Aristide 270 271 272 273 The BBC also described pyramid schemes in which Haitians lost hundreds of millions in 2002 as the only real economic initiative of the Aristide years 274 Conversely according to the 2013 United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime UNODC report murder rates 10 2 per 100 000 are far below the regional average 26 per 100 000 less than 1 4 that of Jamaica 39 3 per 100 000 and nearly 1 2 that of the Dominican Republic 22 1 per 100 000 making it among the safer countries in the region 275 276 In large part this is due to the country s ability to fulfil a pledge by increasing its national police yearly by 50 a four year initiative that was started in 2012 In addition to the yearly recruits the Haitian National Police HNP has been using innovative technologies to crack down on crime A notable bust in recent years when led to the dismantlement of the largest kidnapping ring in the country with the use of an advanced software program developed by a West Point trained Haitian official that proved to be so effective that it has led to its foreign advisers to make inquiries 277 278 In 2010 the New York City Police Department NYPD sent a team of officers to Haiti to assist in the rebuilding of its police force with special training in investigative techniques anti kidnapping strategies and community outreach It has also helped the HNP set up a police unit in Delmas a neighborhood of Port au Prince 279 280 281 282 In 2012 and 2013 150 HNP officers received specialized training funded by the US government which also contributed to the infrastructure and communications support by upgrading radio capacity and constructing new police stations from the most violent prone neighborhoods of Cite Soleil and Grande Ravine in Port au Prince to the new northern industrial park at Caracol 280 Haitian penitentiary system Port au Prince penitentiary is home to half of Haiti s prisoners The prison has a capacity of 1 200 detainees but as of November 2017 update the penitentiary was obliged to keep 4 359 detainees a 363 occupancy level 283 The inability to receive sufficient funds has caused deadly cases of malnutrition combined with the tight living conditions increases the risk of infectious diseases such as tuberculosis 283 Haitian law states that once arrested one must go before a judge within 48 hours however this is very rare In an interview with Unreported World the prison governor stated that around 529 detainees were never sentenced and there are 3 830 detainees who are in prolonged detained trial detention Therefore 80 are not convicted 284 Unless families are able to provide the necessary funds for inmates to appear before a judge there is a very slim chance the inmate would have a trial on average within 10 years 285 In confined living spaces for 22 23 hours a day inmates are not provided with latrines and are forced to defecate into plastic bags These conditions were considered inhumane by the Inter American Court of Human Rights in 2008 286 On 3 March 2024 armed gangs stormed the main prison in Port au Prince and around 3700 inmates escaped while 12 people were killed 287 EconomyMain article Economy of Haiti nbsp Historical GDP per capita development Haiti has a highly regulated predominantly state controlled economy ranking 145th out of the 177 countries given a freedom index by the Heritage Foundation 288 Haiti s per capita GDP is 1 800 and its GDP is 19 97 billion 2017 estimates 235 The country uses the Haitian gourde as its currency Despite its tourism industry Haiti is one of the poorest countries in the Americas with corruption political instability poor infrastructure lack of health care and lack of education cited as the main causes 235 Unemployment is high and many Haitians seek to emigrate Trade declined dramatically after the 2010 earthquake and subsequent outbreak of cholera with the country s purchasing power parity GDP falling by 8 from US 12 15 billion to US 11 18 billion 4 Haiti ranked 145th of 182 countries in the 2010 United Nations Human Development Index with 57 3 of the population being deprived in at least three of the HDI s poverty measures 289 Following the disputed 2000 election and accusations about President Aristide s rule 290 US aid to the Haitian government was cut off between 2001 and 2004 291 After Aristide s departure in 2004 aid was restored and the Brazilian army led a United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti peacekeeping operation After almost four years of recession the economy grew by 1 5 in 2005 292 In September 2009 Haiti met the conditions set out by the IMF and World Bank s Heavily Indebted Poor Countries program to qualify for cancellation of its external debt 293 More than 90 percent of the government s budget comes from an agreement with Petrocaribe a Venezuela led oil alliance 294 Foreign aid Further information Foreign aid to Haiti Haiti received more than US 4 billion in aid from 1990 to 2003 including US 1 5 billion from the United States 295 The largest donor is the US followed by Canada and the European Union 296 In January 2010 following the earthquake US President Barack Obama promised US 1 15 billion in assistance 297 European Union nations pledged more than 400 million US 616 million 298 Neighboring Dominican Republic has also provided extensive humanitarian aid to Haiti including the funding and construction of a public university 299 human capital free healthcare services in the border region and logistical support after the 2010 earthquake 300 The United Nations states that US 13 34 billion has been earmarked for post earthquake reconstruction through 2020 though two years after the 2010 quake less than half of that amount had actually been released As of 2015 update the US government has allocated US 4 billion US 3 billion has already been spent and the rest is dedicated to longer term projects 301 Trade According to the 2015 CIA World Factbook Haiti s main import partners are Dominican Republic 35 US 26 8 Netherlands Antilles 8 7 China 7 est 2013 Haiti s main export partner is the US 83 5 est 2013 302 Haiti had a trade deficit of US 3 billion in 2011 or 41 of GDP 303 Energy Main article Electricity sector in Haiti nbsp Haiti electricity production by source Haiti relies heavily on an oil alliance with Petrocaribe for much of its energy requirements In recent years hydroelectric solar and wind energy have been explored as possible sustainable energy sources 304 nbsp Power plant in Port au Prince As of 2017 among all the countries in the Americas Haiti is producing the least energy Less than a quarter of the country has electric coverage 305 Most regions of Haiti that do have energy are powered by generators These generators are often expensive and produce a lot of pollution The areas that do get electricity experience power cuts on a daily basis and some areas are limited to 12 hours of electricity a day Electricity is provided by a small number of independent companies Sogener E power and Haytrac 306 There is no national electricity grid 307 The most common source of energy is wood along with charcoal About 4 million metric tons of wood products are consumed yearly 308 Like charcoal and wood petroleum is also an important source of energy Since Haiti cannot produce its own fuel all fuel is imported Yearly around 691 000 tons of oil is imported into the country 307 In 2018 a 24 hour electricity project was announced for this purpose 236 MW needs to installed in Port au Prince alone with an additional 75 MW needed in all other regions Presently only 27 5 of the population has access to electricity moreover the national energy agency l Electricite d Haiti Ed H is only able to meet 62 of overall electricity demand 309 Personal income nbsp A market in Cap Haitien Haiti suffers from a shortage of skilled labor widespread unemployment and underemployment Most Haitians in the labor force have informal jobs Three quarters of the population lives on US 2 or less per day 310 Remittances from Haitians living abroad are the primary source of foreign exchange equaling one fifth 20 of GDP and more than five times the earnings from exports as of 2012 311 In 2004 80 or more of college graduates from Haiti were living abroad 312 Occasionally families who are unable to care for children may send them to live with a wealthier family as a restavek or house servant In return the family are supposed to ensure that the child is educated and provided with food and shelter however the system is open to abuse and has proved controversial with some likening it to child slavery 313 314 Real estate In rural areas people often live in wooden huts with corrugated iron roofs Outhouses are located in back of the huts In Port au Prince colorful shantytowns surround the central city and go up the mountainsides 315 The middle and upper classes live in suburbs or in the central part of the bigger cities in apartments where there is urban planning Many of the houses they live in are like miniature fortresses located behind walls embedded with metal spikes barbed wire broken glass and sometimes all three The houses have backup generators because the electrical grid is unreliable Some even have rooftop reservoirs for water 315 Agriculture Further information Agriculture in Haiti nbsp Rows of cabbage Haiti Haiti is the world s leading producer of vetiver a root plant used to make luxury perfumes essential oils and fragrances providing for half the world s supply 316 317 318 Roughly 40 50 of Haitians work in the agricultural sector 235 319 However according to soil surveys by the United States Department of Agriculture in the early 1980s only 11 3 percent of the land was highly suitable for crops Haiti relies upon imports for half its food needs and 80 of its rice 319 Haiti exports crops such as mangoes cacao coffee papayas mahogany nuts spinach and watercress 320 Agricultural products constitute 6 of all exports 303 In addition local agricultural products include maize beans cassava sweet potato peanuts pistachios bananas millet pigeon peas sugarcane rice sorghum and wood 320 321 Currency Main article Haitian gourde The Haitian gourde HTG is the national currency The Haitian dollar equates to 5 gourdes goud which is a fixed exchange rate that exists in concept only but are commonly used as informal prices citation needed The vast majority of the business sector and individuals will also accept US dollars though at the outdoor markets gourdes may be preferred Locals may refer to the USD as dollar americain dola ameriken or dollar US pronounced oo es 322 Tourism Main article Tourism in Haiti nbsp Labadee a cruise ship destination The tourism market in Haiti is undeveloped and the government is heavily promoting this sector Haiti has many of the features that attract tourists to other Caribbean destinations such as white sand beaches mountainous scenery and a year round warm climate However the country s poor image overseas at times exaggerated has hampered the development of this sector 49 In 2014 the country received 1 250 000 tourists mostly from cruise ships and the industry generated US 200 million in 2014 citation needed Several hotels were opened in 2014 including an upscale Best Western Premier 323 324 a five star Royal Oasis hotel by Occidental Hotel and Resorts in Petion Ville 325 326 327 a four star Marriott Hotel in the Turgeau area of Port au Prince 328 and other new hotel developments in Port au Prince Les Cayes Cap Haitien and Jacmel citation needed Caracol Industrial Park On 21 October 2012 Haitian President Michel Martelly US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Bill Clinton Richard Branson Ben Stiller and Sean Penn inaugurated the 240 hectare 600 acre Caracol industrial park the largest in the Caribbean 329 The project cost US 300 million and included a 10 megawatt power plant a water treatment plant and worker housing 329 The plan for the park pre dated the 2010 earthquake but was fast tracked as part of US foreign aid strategy to help Haiti recover 330 The park was part of a master plan for Haiti s North and North East departments including the expansion of the Cap Haitien International Airport to accommodate large international flights the construction of an international seaport in Fort Liberte and the opening of the 50 million Roi Henri Christophe Campus of a new university in Limonade near Cap Haitien on 12 January 2012 331 In 2012 USAID believed the park had the potential to create as many as 65 000 jobs once fully developed 332 333 South Korean clothing manufacturer Sae A Trading Co Ltd the park s only major tenant created 5 000 permanent jobs out of the 20 000 it had projected and promised to build 5 000 houses yet only 750 homes had been built near Caracol by 2014 330 Ten years later the park was considered to have failed to uphold its promise to deliver the transformation the Clintons had promised 334 The US invested tens of millions of dollars into the port project but eventually abandoned it 334 In order to establish the park hundreds of families of small farmers had to be removed from the land approximately 3 500 people overall 335 An audit by the United States Government Accountability Office uncovered that the port project lacked staff with technical expertise in planning construction and oversight of a port and revealed that USAid hadn t constructed a port anywhere since the 1970s 334 A USAid feasibility study in 2015 found that a new port was not viable for a variety of technical environmental and economic reasons that the US was short US 72m in funds to cover the majority of the projected costs and that private companies USAid had wanted to attract had no interest in supporting the construction of a new port in northern Haiti 334 InfrastructureTransportation Main article Transport in Haiti nbsp Rail map as of 1925 Haiti has two main highways that run from one end of the country to the other The northern highway Route Nationale No 1 National Highway One originates in Port au Prince winding through the coastal towns of Montrouis and Gonaives before reaching its terminus at the northern port Cap Haitien The southern highway Route Nationale No 2 links Port au Prince with Les Cayes via Leogane and Petit Goave The state of Haiti s roads are generally poor many being potholed and becoming impassable in rough weather 49 The port at Port au Prince Port international de Port au Prince has more registered shipping than any of the other dozen ports in the country The port s facilities include cranes large berths and warehouses but these facilities are not in good condition The port is underused possibly due to the substantially high port fees The port of Saint Marc is currently the preferred port of entry for consumer goods In the past Haiti used rail transport however the rail infrastructure was poorly maintained when in use and cost of rehabilitation is beyond the means of the Haitian economy In 2018 the Regional Development Council of the Dominican Republic proposed a trans Hispaniola railway between both countries 336 Airports nbsp Toussaint L Ouverture International Airport Main article List of airports in Haiti Toussaint Louverture International Airport located ten kilometers six miles north northeast of Port au Prince proper in the commune of Tabarre is the primary hub for entry and exit into the country It has Haiti s main jetway and along with Cap Haitien International Airport handles the vast majority of the country s international flights Cities such as Jacmel Jeremie Les Cayes and Port de Paix have smaller less accessible airports that are serviced by regional airlines and private aircraft In 2013 plans for the development of an international airport on Ile a Vache were introduced by the Prime Minister 337 Bus service nbsp A tap tap bus in Port Salut Tap tap buses are colorfully painted buses or pick up trucks that serve as shared taxis The tap tap name comes from the sound of passengers tapping on the metal bus body to indicate they want off 338 These vehicles for hire are often privately owned and extensively decorated They follow fixed routes do not leave until filled with passengers and riders can usually disembark at any point The decorations are a typically Haitian form of art 339 Communications Main articles Telecommunications in Haiti and Television in Haiti In Haiti communications include the radio television fixed and mobile telephones and the Internet Haiti ranked last among North American countries in the World Economic Forum s Network Readiness Index NRI an indicator for determining the development level of a country s information and communication technologies Haiti ranked number 143 out of 148 overall in the 2014 NRI ranking down from 141 in 2013 340 Water supply and sanitation Main article Water supply and sanitation in Haiti Haiti faces key challenges in the water supply and sanitation sector Notably access to public services is very low their quality is inadequate and public institutions remain very weak despite foreign aid and the government s declared intent to strengthen the sector s institutions Foreign and Haitian NGOs play an important role in the sector especially in rural and urban slum areas DemographicsMain article Demographics of Haiti nbsp Haiti s population 1800 2021 In 2018 Haiti s population was estimated to be about 10 788 000 235 In 2006 half of the population was younger than age 20 341 In 1950 the first formal census gave a total population of 3 1 million 342 Haiti averages approximately 350 people per square kilometer 910 people sq mi with its population concentrated most heavily in urban areas coastal plains and valleys nbsp People in Port au Prince Most Haitians are descendants of black Africans who were enslaved and trafficked from Africa during the Atlantic slave trade Many are also descendants of Mulattoes who are mixed race 235 The remainder are primarily of European or Arab descent 343 344 Millions of Haitian descent live abroad in the United States Dominican Republic Cuba Canada primarily Montreal the Bahamas France the French Antilles the Turks and Caicos Jamaica Puerto Rico Venezuela Brazil Suriname and French Guiana There were an estimated 881 500 people of Haitian ancestry in the United States in 2015 345 while in the Dominican Republic there were an estimated 800 000 in 2007 346 There were 300 000 in Cuba in 2013 347 100 000 in Canada in 2006 348 80 000 in Metropolitan France 2010 349 and up to 80 000 in the Bahamas 2009 350 In 2018 the life expectancy at birth was 63 66 years 351 Racial discrimination Main article Gens de couleur Under colonial rule Haitian mulattoes were generally privileged above the black majority though they possessed fewer rights than the white population Following the country s independence they became the nation s social elite Numerous leaders throughout Haiti s history have been mulattoes During this time the enslaved persons and the affranchis were given limited opportunities toward education income and occupations but even after gaining independence the social structure remains a legacy today as the disparity between the upper and lower classes have not been reformed significantly since the colonial days 352 Making up 5 of the nation s population mulattoes have retained their preeminence evident in the political economic social and cultural hierarchy in Haiti 353 As a result the elite class today consists of a small group of influential people who are generally light in color 354 Religion Main article Religion in Haiti Religion in Haiti according to the Pew Research Center 2010 355 Catholicism 56 8 Protestantism 29 6 Unaffiliated 10 6 Other 3 The 2018 CIA World Factbook reported that 55 of Haitians were Catholics and 29 were Protestants Baptist 15 4 Pentecostal 7 9 Seventh day Adventist 3 Methodist 1 5 other 0 7 Other sources put the Protestant population higher suggesting that it might have formed one third of the population in 2001 356 Like other countries in Latin America Haiti has witnessed a general Protestant expansion which is largely Evangelical and Pentecostal in nature 357 358 359 Haitian Cardinal Chibly Langlois is president of the National Bishops Conference of the Catholic Church Vodou a religion with West African roots similar to those of Cuba and Brazil is formally practiced by 2 1 of the population however it is estimated that 50 80 of Haitians incorporate some elements of Vodou belief or practices into their religion particularly with Catholicism This reflect Vodou s colonial origins when enslaved persons were obliged to disguise their traditional loa lwa or spirits as Catholic saints as part of a process called syncretism As such it is difficult to estimate the number of Vodouists in Haiti 360 361 especially given the legacy of historic persecution and misrepresentation in popular media and culture as well as modern stigmatization among segments of the growing Protestant population Nonetheless Vodou was officially recognized by the Haitian government in 2003 235 Reflecting the ubiquity of Vodou culture and beliefs while many Catholics and Protestants in Haiti denounce Vodou as devil worship they do not deny the power or existence of its spirits rather they are regarded as evil and satanic adversaries that require intervention through Christian prayer Protestants view Catholic veneration of saints as idol worship and some Protestants would often destroy statues and other Catholic paraphernalia 362 Minority religions in Haiti include Islam Baha i Faith Judaism and Buddhism 4 Languages The two official languages of Haiti are French and Haitian Creole French is the principal written and administratively authorized language as well as the main language of the press and is spoken by 42 of Haitians 363 364 It is spoken by all educated Haitians is the medium of instruction in most schools and is used in the business sector It is also used in ceremonial events such as weddings graduations and church Masses Haiti is one of two independent nations in the Americas along with Canada to designate French as an official language the other French speaking areas are all overseas departements or collectivites of France such as French Guiana Haitian Creole is spoken by nearly all of the Haitian population French the base language for Haitian Creole is popular among the Haitian elite and upper classes French is also popular in the business sector and to a far lesser degree English due to American influence Spanish is spoken by some Haitians who live along the Haitian Dominican border 365 English and Spanish may also be spoken by Haitian deportees from the United States and various Latin American countries Overall about 90 95 of Haitians only speak Haitian Creole French fluently with over half only knowing Creole 366 Haitian Creole 367 locally called Kreyol 368 has recently undergone standardization and is spoken by virtually the entire population 369 One of the French based creole languages Haitian Creole has a vocabulary overwhelmingly derived from French but its grammar resembles that of some West African languages It also has influences from Taino Spanish and Portuguese 370 Haitian Creole is related to the other French creoles and in particular to the Antillean and Louisiana Creole variants Emigration Main article Haitian diaspora There is a large Haitian diaspora community predominantly based in the US and Canada France and the wealthier Caribbean islands Emigrants from Haiti have constituted a segment of American and Canadian society since before the independence of Haiti from France in 1804 371 372 Many influential early American settlers and black freemen including Jean Baptiste Point du Sable and W E B Du Bois were of Haitian origin 373 374 375 376 Education Main article Education in Haiti nbsp The Universite Roi Henri Christophe in Limonade The educational system of Haiti is based on the French system Higher education under the responsibility of the Ministry of Education 377 is provided by universities and other public and private institutions 378 More than 80 of primary schools are privately managed by nongovernmental organizations churches communities and for profit operators with minimal government oversight 379 According to the 2013 Millennium Development Goals Report Haiti has steadily boosted net enrollment rate in primary education from 47 in 1993 to 88 in 2011 achieving equal participation of boys and girls in education 380 Charity organizations including Food for the Poor and Haitian Health Foundation are building schools for children and providing necessary school supplies According to the 2015 World Factbook Haiti s literacy rate is 60 7 Many reformers have advocated the creation of a free public and universal education system for all primary school age students in Haiti The Inter American Development Bank estimates that the government will need at least US 3 billion to create an adequately funded system 381 Upon successful graduation of secondary school students may continue into higher education The higher education schools in Haiti include the University of Haiti There are also medical schools and law schools offered at both the University of Haiti and abroad Brown University is cooperating with L Hopital Saint Damien in Haiti to coordinate a pediatric health care curriculum 382 Health Main article Health in Haiti As of 2012 update 60 of children in Haiti under the age of 10 were vaccinated 383 384 compared to 93 95 in other countries 385 Recently there have been mass vaccination campaigns claiming to vaccinate as many as 91 of a target population against specific diseases measles and rubella in this case 386 Most people have no transportation or access to Haitian hospitals 387 The World Health Organization cites diarrheal diseases HIV AIDS meningitis and respiratory infections as common causes of death in Haiti 388 Ninety percent of Haiti s children suffer from waterborne diseases and intestinal parasites 389 HIV infection is found in 1 71 of Haiti s population est 2015 390 The incidence of tuberculosis TB in Haiti is more than ten times as high as in the rest of Latin America citation needed Approximately 30 000 Haitians fall ill with malaria each year 391 Roughly 75 of Haitian households lack running water Unsafe water along with inadequate housing and unsanitary living conditions contributes to the high incidence of infectious diseases There is a chronic shortage of health care personnel and hospitals lack resources a situation that became readily apparent after the January 2010 earthquake 392 The infant mortality rate in Haiti in 2019 was 48 2 deaths per 1 000 live births compared to 5 6 per 1 000 in the United States 393 After the 2010 earthquake Partners In Health founded the Hopital Universitaire de Mirebalais the largest solar powered hospital in the world 394 395 Largest cities Further information List of cities in Haiti Largest cities or towns in Haiti geonames org Rank Name Department Pop nbsp Port au Prince nbsp Cap Haitien 1 Port au Prince Ouest 1 234 742 nbsp Carrefour in Metro P P nbsp Delmas in Metro P P 2 Cap Haitien Nord 534 815 3 Carrefour in Metro P P Ouest 442 156 4 Delmas in Metro P P Ouest 382 920 5 Petion Ville in Metro P P Ouest 283 052 6 Port de Paix Nord Ouest 250 000 7 Croix des Bouquets in Metro P P Ouest 229 127 8 Jacmel Sud Est 137 966 9 Leogane Ouest 134 190 10 Les Cayes Sud 125 799CultureMain article Culture of Haiti Haiti has a lasting and unique cultural identity blending traditional French and African customs mixed with sizable acquirements from the Spanish and indigenous Taino cultures 396 Art Main article Haitian art nbsp Swearing in ceremony of Haitian Diaspora GwetoDe Haitian art is distinctive particularly through its paintings and sculptures 396 397 398 Brilliant colors naive perspectives and sly humor characterize Haitian art Frequent subjects in Haitian art include big foods landscapes market activities jungle animals rituals dances and gods As a result of a deep history and strong African ties symbols take on great meaning within Haitian society Many artists cluster in schools of painting such as the Cap Haitien school which features depictions of daily life in the city the Jacmel School which reflects the steep mountains and bays of that coastal town or the Saint Soleil School which is characterized by abstracted human forms and is heavily influenced by Vodou symbolism citation needed In the 1920s the indigeniste movement gained international acclaim with its expressionist paintings inspired by Haiti s culture and African roots Notable painters of this movement include Hector Hyppolite Philome Oban and Prefete Duffaut 399 Some notable artists of more recent times include Edouard Duval Carrie Frantz Zephirin Leroy Exil Prosper Pierre Louis and Louisiane Saint Fleurant 399 Sculpture is also practiced in Haiti noted artists in this form include George Liautaud and Serge Jolimeau 400 Music and dance Further information Music of Haiti Haitian music combines a wide range of influences drawn from the many people who have settled here It reflects French African and Spanish elements and others who have inhabited the island of Hispaniola and minor native Taino influences Styles of music unique to the nation of Haiti include music derived from Vodou ceremonial traditions Rara parading music Twoubadou ballads mini jazz rock bands Rasin movement Hip hop kreyol meringue 401 and compas Youth attend parties at nightclubs called discos and attend Bal ball as in a formal dance Compas konpa 402 is a complex ever changing music that arose from African rhythms and European ballroom dancing mixed with Haiti s bourgeois culture It is a refined music with meringue as its basic rhythm Haiti had no recorded music until 1937 when Jazz Guignard was recorded non commercially 403 Literature Main article Haitian literature Haiti has always been a literary nation that has produced poetry novels and plays of international recognition The French colonial experience established the French language as the venue of culture and prestige and since then it has dominated the literary circles and the literary production However since the 18th century there has been a sustained effort to write in Haitian Creole The recognition of Creole as an official language has led to an expansion of novels poems and plays in Creole 404 In 1975 Franketienne was the first to break with the French tradition in fiction with the publication of Dezafi the first novel written entirely in Haitian Creole 405 Other well known Haitian authors include Jean Price Mars Jacques Roumain Jacques Stephen Alexis Marie Vieux Chauvet Pierre Clitandre Rene Depestre Edwidge Danticat Lyonel Trouillot and Dany Laferriere Cinema Haiti has a small though growing cinema industry Well known directors working primarily in documentary film making include Raoul Peck and Arnold Antonin Directors producing fictional films include Patricia Benoit Wilkenson Bruna and Richard Senecal Cuisine Main article Haitian cuisine Haiti is famous for its creole cuisine related to Cajun cuisine and its soup joumou 406 Architecture nbsp Sans Souci Palace National History Park Haiti See also List of World Heritage Sites in the Caribbean Monuments include the Sans Souci Palace and the Citadelle Laferriere inscribed as a World Heritage Site in 1982 407 Situated in the Northern Massif du Nord in the National History Park the structures date from the early 19th century 408 The buildings were among the first built after Haiti s independence from France The Citadelle Laferriere the largest fortress in the Americas is located in northern Haiti It was built between 1805 and 1820 and is today referred to by some Haitians as the eighth wonder of the world 107 The Institute for the Protection of National Heritage has preserved 33 historical monuments and the historic center of Cap Haitien 409 Jacmel a colonial city that was tentatively accepted as a World Heritage Site was extensively damaged by the 2010 earthquake 408 Museums nbsp Santa Maria s anchor on display The anchor of Christopher Columbus s largest ship the Santa Maria rests in the Musee du Pantheon National Haitien MUPANAH in Port au Prince 410 Folklore and mythology Main article Haitian mythology Haiti is known for its folklore traditions 411 Much of this is rooted in Haitian Vodou tradition Belief in zombies is also common 412 Other folkloric creatures include the lougarou 412 National holidays and festivals Further information Public holidays in Haiti The Haitian Carnival has been one of the most popular carnivals in the Caribbean In 2010 the government decided to stage the event in a different city outside Port au Prince every year 413 414 The National Carnival follows the popular Jacmel Carnival which takes place a week earlier in February or March 413 Rara is a festival celebrated before Easter The festival has generated a style of Carnival music 415 416 Sports Main article Culture of Haiti Sports nbsp Haiti national football team training in Port au Prince 2004 Football soccer is the most popular sport in Haiti with hundreds of small clubs competing at the local level Basketball and baseball are growing in popularity 417 418 Stade Sylvio Cator is the multi purpose stadium in Port au Prince currently used mostly for association football matches In 1974 the Haiti national football team were only the second Caribbean team to make the World Cup The national team won the 2007 Caribbean Nations Cup 419 Haiti has participated in the Olympic Games since the year 1900 and won a number of medals Haitian footballer Joe Gaetjens played for the United States national team in the 1950 FIFA World Cup scoring the winning goal in the 1 0 upset of England 420 See alsoIndex of Haiti related articles Outline of Haiti Portals nbsp Haiti nbsp Caribbean nbsp Latin America nbsp CaribbeanNotes a b c The National Assembly currently has zero members with all 30 seats in the Senate and all 119 seats in the Chamber of Deputies vacant since all previous members have served their terms as prescribed by the Haitian Constitution and no election has been held to fill those vacated seats ˈ h eɪ t i HAY tee French Haiti a iti Haitian Creole Ayiti ajiti French Republique d Haiti Haitian Creole Repiblik d Ayiti 12 a b The nation was officially founded as Hayti in its Declaration of Independence and early prints 13 14 constitutions 15 and imperial declarations 16 Published writings of 1802 1919 in the United States commonly used the name Hayti e g The Blue Book of Hayti 1919 a book with official standing in Haiti By 1873 Haiti was common among titles of US published books as well as in US congressional publications In all of Frederick Douglass publications after 1890 he used Haiti As late as 1949 the name Hayti continued to be used in books published in England e g Hayti 145 Years of Independence The Bi Centenary of Port au Prince published in London England in 1949 but by 1950 usage in England had shifted to Haiti 17 The Tainos may have used Bohio as another name for the island 41 42 43 References Konstitisyon Repiblik d Ayiti Article 4 of the Constitution Haiti reference com Retrieved 24 July 2013 After The Group Of G8 Now Come G30 Headed By Louko Desir Haiti Observer Retrieved 28 January 2018 a b c Haiti The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency 22 September 2021 Religious Composition by Country 2010 2050 Pew Research Center 21 December 2022 Retrieved 2 August 2020 Press DANICA COTO Associated 30 April 2024 Haiti s transitional council names a new prime minister in the hopes of quelling stifling violence ABC News Retrieved 30 April 2024 Country Summary Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 1 September 2023 via CIA gov Haiti The World Factbook 2024 ed Central Intelligence Agency Retrieved 22 June 2023 a b c d World Economic Outlook Database October 2023 Edition Haiti IMF org International Monetary Fund 10 October 2023 Retrieved 15 October 2023 Gini Index The World Bank Retrieved 21 November 2015 Human Development Report 2021 2022 PDF United Nations Development Programme 8 September 2022 Retrieved 8 September 2022 Konstitisyon Repiblik Ayiti 1987 Ufdc ufl edu Retrieved 24 July 2013 Catalogue description Haitian Declaration of Independence 1 January 1804 via National Archive of the UK National Archives Haiti PDF Retrieved 1 September 2023 La Constitution Imperiale du 20 mai 1805 permanent dead link Remember Haiti Revolution Royaume d Hayti Declaration du roi brown edu Corbett Bob ed 9 November 2003 17201 Corbett Hayti and Haiti in the English language Webster University Archived from the original on 9 March 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2017 a b Dardik Alan ed 2016 Vascular Surgery A Global Perspective Springer p 341 ISBN 978 3 319 33745 6 Retrieved 8 May 2017 a b Josh Jagran ed 2016 Current Affairs November 2016 eBook p 93 Retrieved 8 May 2017 World Population Prospects 2022 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XSLX Total Population as of 1 July thousands United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Retrieved 17 July 2022 a b Lawler Andrew 23 December 2020 Invaders nearly wiped out Caribbean s first people long before Spanish came DNA reveals National Geographic Archived from the original on 23 December 2020 a b NgCheong Lum Roseline 2005 Haiti Cultures of the World New York Times Editions p 19 ISBN 978 0 7614 1968 6 Retrieved 29 September 2014 Davies Arthur 1953 The Loss of the Santa Maria Christmas Day 1492 The American Historical Review 854 865 doi 10 1086 ahr 58 4 854 Maclean Frances January 2008 The Lost Fort of Columbus Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 24 January 2008 a b Haiti histoire 7 Bord de Mer de Limonade Nilstremmel com Retrieved 15 July 2014 En Bas Saline Florida Museum of Natural History 20 September 2017 Danticat Edwidge 2005 Anacaona Golden Flower Journal of Haitian Studies 11 2 New York Scholastic Inc 163 165 ISBN 978 0 439 49906 4 JSTOR 41715319 Matthewson Tim 1996 Jefferson and the Nonrecognition of Haiti Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 140 1 22 48 ISSN 0003 049X JSTOR 987274 Country profile Haiti BBC News 19 January 2010 Retrieved 23 January 2010 p 223 Benjamin Beede 1994 The War of 1898 and U S Interventions 1898 1934 An Encyclopedia May 1 1994 ed Routledge 1 edition pp 784 ISBN 0 8240 5624 8 The Haitian and U S governments reached a mutually satisfactory agreement in the Executive Accord of August 7 1933 and on August 15 the last marines departed Shellenberger Michael 22 September 2022 Haiti Riots Triggered By IMF Advice To Cut Fuel Subsidies Forbes Retrieved 18 October 2022 Taylor Luke 18 October 2022 Haiti on verge of collapse NGOs warn as UN talks on restoring order continue The Guardian Retrieved 24 October 2022 Taylor Luke 11 January 2023 Haiti left with no elected government officials as it spirals towards anarchy The Guardian Retrieved 10 February 2023 Charles Jacqueline 3 May 2023 As violence in Haiti worsens Canada bets on assistance to police Miami Herald Retrieved 3 May 2023 OAS 1 August 2009 OAS Member State Haiti oas org OAS Organization of American States Democracy for peace security and development Press ed 2014 Association of Caribbean States 1994 2014 PDF p 46 Retrieved 25 April 2016 International Monetary Fund List of Members imf org WTO World Trade Organization Members and Observers wto org Haydn Joseph Vincent Benjamin 1860 A Dictionary of Dates Relating to All Ages and Nations For Universal Reference Comprehending Remarkable Occurrences Ancient and Modern The Foundation Laws and Governments of Countries Their Progress In Civilization Industry Arts and Science Their Achievements In Arms And Their Civil Military And Religious Institutions And Particularly of the British Empire p 321 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Guitar Lynne Ferbel Azcarate Pedro Estevez Jorge 2006 iii Ocama Daca Taino Hear me I am Taino Indigenous Resurgence in the Contemporary Caribbean New York Peter Lang Publishing p 41 ISBN 978 0 8204 7488 5 LCCN 2005012816 Retrieved 10 July 2015 Edmond Louisket 2010 The Tears of Haiti Xlibris p 42 ISBN 978 1 4535 1770 3 LCCN 2010908468 Retrieved 10 July 2015 Senauth Frank 2011 The Making and Destruction of Haiti Bloomington Indiana US AuthorHouse p 1 ISBN 978 1 4567 5384 9 LCCN 2011907203 Martineau Harriet 2010 The Hour and the Man A Fictional Account of the Haitian Revolution and the life of Toussaint L Ouverture Aruba Heritage Foundation p 12 ISBN 978 99904 1 167 6 Retrieved 12 September 2015 Stein Gail 2003 The Complete Idiot s Guide to Learning French Alpha Books p 18 ISBN 978 1 59257 055 3 How to Say Haiti and Port au Prince BBC Archived from the original on 19 November 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2014 Eldin F 1878 Haiti 13 ans de sejour aux Antilles Haiti 13 years of stay in the Antilles in French p 33 Retrieved 21 July 2015 Voyage a Saint Domingue pendant les annees 1788 1789 et 1790 Travel to Santo Domingo during the years 1788 1789 and 1790 in French 1797 Retrieved 31 March 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be Haiti LALUEZA FOX C CALDERoN F LUNA 2001 MtDNA from extinct Tainos and the peopling of the Caribbean Annals of Human Genetics 2001 65 137 151 doi 10 1046 j 1469 1809 2001 6520137 x S2CID 221450280 Clammer Paul 2016 Bradt Travel Guide Haiti p 9 Cassa Roberto 1992 Los Indios de Las Antillas Editorial Abya Yala pp 126 ISBN 978 84 7100 375 1 Wilson Samuel M 1990 Hispaniola Caribbean Chiefdoms in the Age of Columbus University of Alabama Press p 110 ISBN 978 0 8173 0462 1 Royal Robert Spring 1992 1492 and Multiculturalism The Intercollegiate Review 27 2 3 10 Archived from the original on 16 February 2009 Ober Frederick Albion ed 1906 Columbus the Discoverer Harper amp Brothers Publishers New York and London p 96 Retrieved 2 December 2015 a b c Clammer Paul 2016 Bradt Travel Guide Haiti p 10 What Became of the Taino Smithsonian October 2011 Archived from the original on 7 December 2013 Retrieved 16 October 2013 Koplow David A 2004 Smallpox The Fight to Eradicate a Global Scourge University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 24220 3 History of Smallpox Smallpox Through the Ages Texas Department of State Health Services Archived from the original on 24 September 2019 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Graves Kerry A 2002 Haiti Capstone p 22 ISBN 978 0 7368 1078 4 Laws of Burgos 1512 1513 Faculty smu edu Archived from the original on 6 June 2019 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Encomienda Spanish policy Britannica com Retrieved 24 July 2013 Knight Franklin The Caribbean The Genesis of a Fragmented Nationalism 3rd edn p 54 New York Oxford University Press 1990 Ducoin Jacques 2013 Bertrand d Ogeron 1613 1676 fondateur de la colonie de Saint Domingue et gouverneur des flibustiers Brest ISBN 978 2 84833 294 9 OCLC 849870919 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c d e f g h Clammer Paul 2016 Bradt Travel Guide Haiti p 11 Dominican Republic The first colony Country Studies Library of Congress Federal Research Division Retrieved 19 June 2006 Walter E Kretchik 2016 1 Haitian Culture and Military Power Eyewitness to Chaos Personal Accounts of the Intervention in Haiti 1994 University of Nebraska Press p 6 the French colony s seven thousand plantations to produce 40 percent of France s foreign trade nearly double the production of all British colonies combined Coupeau Steeve 2008 The History of Haiti Greenwood Publishing Group p 18 ISBN 978 0 313 34089 5 Immigration History of Canada Faculty marianopolis edu Retrieved 24 July 2013 a b c Clammer Paul 2016 Bradt Travel Guide Haiti p 12 a b Farmer Paul 15 April 2004 Who removed Aristide Archived from the original on 8 June 2008 Retrieved 19 February 2010 Kiple Kenneth F 2002 The Caribbean Slave A Biological History Cambridge University Press p 145 ISBN 978 0 521 52470 4 Stinchcombe Arthur L 11 December 1995 Sugar Island Slavery in the Age of Enlightenment The Political Economy of the Caribbean World Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 2200 3 Journal of Haitian Studies Haitian Studies Association 2001 p 67 Decree of the National Convention of 4 February 1794 Abolishing Slavery in all the Colonies Chnm gmu edu Archived from the original on 3 June 2011 Retrieved 24 July 2013 1784 1800 The United States and the Haitian Revolution History state gov Archived from the original on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Joseph Raymond A 22 March 1987 Poles in Haiti The New York Times Retrieved 24 July 2013 John Adams Supports Toussaint Louverture Horrifies Jefferson 29 March 2017 a b Scheina Robert L 2003 Latin America s Wars Volume 1 Potomac Books Avengers of the New World The Story of the Haitian Revolution Harvard University Press 2009 p 182 Corbett Bob The Haitian Revolution of 1791 1803 Webster University Smucker Glenn R December 1989 Richard A Haggerty ed A Country Study Haiti Library of Congress Federal Research Division Toussaint Louverture a b Haitian Revolution A YPT Guide Young Pioneer Tours 7 March 2020 Magazine Smithsonian The History of the United States First Refugee Crisis Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved 10 June 2022 In spite of all this paranoia however South Carolina actually lifted its ban on foreign slaves in 1804 and all those who arrived from Saint Domingue eventually settled there According to Dessens many were even welcomed quite warmly This was especially true for the 8 000 or so of the 25 000 refugees who shared both skin color and a common religion with their American counterparts Frasier Flora 2009 Venus of Empire The Life of Pauline Bonaparte John Murray The Haitian Debacle Yellow Fever and the Fate of the French Montana State University Archived from the original on 7 December 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Adam Hochschild 30 May 2004 Birth of a Nation Has the bloody 200 year history of Haiti doomed it to more violence San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved 24 July 2013 a b c d e f g h Clammer Paul 2016 Bradt Travel Guide Haiti p 13 Jackson Maurice Bacon Jacqueline 2010 Fever and Fret The Haitian Revolution and African American Responses In Jackson Maurice Bacon Jacqueline eds African Americans and the Haitian Revolution Selected Essays and Historical Documents Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 72613 4 Retrieved 10 October 2018 the momentous struggle that began in 1791 and yielded the first post colonial independent black nation and the only nation to gain independence through slave rebellion C L R James Black Jacobins London Seckur amp Warburg 1938 The Haitian Revolution and the Louisiana Purchase The Gazette Clodfelter Micheal 23 May 2017 Warfare and Armed Conflicts A Statistical Encyclopedia of Casualty and Other Figures 1492 2015 4th ed McFarland ISBN 9780786474707 French losses from 1830 51 were 3 336 killed in battle and 92 329 died of wounds or from all other causes Between 1830 and 1870 411 French officers were killed and 1 360 were wounded The toll for the ranks was an estimated 10 000 killed and 35 000 wounded in all French colonial campaigns A few thousand from this number died in Mexico or Indochina but the great bulk met their deaths in Algeria Disease took an even greater toll One estimate puts total French and Foreign Legion deaths from battle and disease for the entire century at 110 000 Wilson Colin Wilson Damon 2015 An End To Murder Human beings have always been cruel savage and murderous Is all that about to change Christer Petley White Fury A Jamaican Slaveholder and the Age of REvolution Oxford Oxford University Press 2018 p 182 A Brief History of Dessalines 1825 Missionary Journal Webster University Archived from the original on 28 December 2005 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Clammer Paul 2016 Bradt Travel Guide Haiti p 209 Constitution of Haiti sic New York Evening Post 15 July 1805 Monthly Magazine and British Register Vol XLVIII R Phillips 1819 p 335 Boyce Davies Carole 2008 Encyclopedia of the African Diaspora Origins Experiences and Culture A C Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 380 ISBN 978 1 85109 700 5 Popkin Jeremy D 15 February 2010 Facing Racial Revolution Eyewitness Accounts of the Haitian Insurrection University of Chicago Press p 137 ISBN 978 0 226 67585 5 Retrieved 20 June 2017 Popkin Jeremy D 11 February 2011 The Slaves Who Defeated Napoleon Toussaint Louverture and the Haitian War of Independence 1801 1804 University of Alabama Press p 322 ISBN 978 0 8173 1732 4 Retrieved 20 June 2017 The United States and the Haitian Revolution 1791 1804 history state gov Retrieved 7 February 2017 From Saint Domingue to Louisiana The African American Migration Experience Inmotionaame org Archived from the original on 25 February 2021 Retrieved 24 July 2013 In Congo Square Colonial New Orleans Thenation com 10 December 2008 Archived from the original on 14 September 2018 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Haitians Center for Cultural amp Eco Tourism University of Louisiana Retrieved 24 July 2013 Sontag Deborah News about Haiti including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times The New York Times Retrieved 24 July 2015 a b United Press International ed 29 January 1978 Haiti s Citadelle Described As 8th Wonder of the World Reading Eagle p 40 Retrieved 21 October 2014 Bell Madison Smartt 10 June 2009 Toussaint L Ouverture A Biography New York Pantheon 2007 Vintage Books 2008 ISBN 978 1 4000 7935 3 Sutherland Claudia E 16 July 2007 Haitian Revolution 1791 1804 Retrieved 29 September 2014 Peguero Valentina November 1998 Teaching the Haitian Revolution Its Place in Western and Modern World History The History Teacher 32 1 33 41 doi 10 2307 494418 JSTOR 494418 S2CID 141205471 Thompson Krista A Fall 2007 Preoccupied with Haiti The Dream of Diaspora in African American Art 1915 1942 American Art 21 3 74 97 doi 10 1086 526481 JSTOR 10 1086 526481 S2CID 161805052 Henri Christophe Biography Answers com Archived from the original on 15 September 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Bushnell David Lester Langley eds 2008 Simon Bolivar essays on the life and legacy of the liberator Rowman amp Littlefield p 5 ISBN 978 0 7425 5619 5 La Reconquista Batalla de Palo Hincado La Reconquista Battle of Palo Hincado In Spanish Mi pais Historia My Country 29 July 2010 Archived from the original on 30 June 2018 Retrieved 11 September 2010 Sagas Ernesto 14 October 1994 An apparent contradiction Popular perceptions of Haiti and the foreign policy of the Dominican Republic Sixth Annual Conference of the Haitian Studies Association Retrieved 19 August 2007 Dominican Republic History Britannica com Retrieved 24 July 2013 Jean Pierre Boyer President of Haiti Britannica com Retrieved 24 July 2013 Corbett Bob July 1995 1820 1843 The rule of Jean Pierre Boyer Webster University Archived from the original on 21 December 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2013 Firire Girard Alphonse 27 August 1999 Haiti And Its Diaspora New Historical Cultural And Economic Frontiers reprint from US Gazette Philadelphia 1824 Webster edu Archived from the original on 10 September 2013 Retrieved 24 July 2013 La premiere ambassade francaise en Haiti Menu Contenu Plan du siteAmbassade de France a Port au Prince in French Government of France Retrieved 27 October 2017 M Degros Creation des postes diplomatiques et consulaires Revue d histoire diplomatique 1986 in French J F Briere Haiti et la France 1804 1848 le reve brise Paris Karthala 2008 in French Henley Jon 14 January 2010 Haiti a long descent to hell The Guardian Retrieved 15 October 2018 a b c d e f g h Bethell Leslie 1984 The Cambridge History of Latin America Volume 3 Cambridge University Press pp 267 69 a b c nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Leger Jacques Nicolas 1907 Haiti Her History and Her Detractors Neale Publishing Company pp 197 198 a b c d nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Leger Jacques Nicolas 1907 Haiti Her History and Her Detractors Neale Publishing Company pp 202 204 Rogozinski Jan 1999 A Brief History of the Caribbean Revised ed New York Facts on File Inc p 220 ISBN 0 8160 3811 2 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Leger Jacques Nicolas 1907 Chapter XVI Haiti Her History and Her Detractors Neale Publishing Company pp 211 216 Haiti Her History and Her Detractors by Jacques Nicolas Leger University of Michigan 2006 235 236 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Leger Jacques Nicolas 1907 Chapter XXII Haiti Her History and Her Detractors New York Washington Neale Publishing Company pp 245 247 Jacques Nicolas Leger 1907 Haiti Her History and Her Detractors New York Neale Publishing Company p 249 Hurry Election Of Simon In Haiti Followers Fear Delay May Cause Disorders And Invite Intervention From United States New York Times 8 December 1908 Simon Elected President Following Action by Haitian Congress He Is Recognized By The United States The New York Times 18 December 1908 Leconte in Haiti s Capital Revolutionary Leader Takes Possession of National Palace PDF The New York 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down amid power struggle after president s assassination CNN Retrieved 19 July 2021 Haiti struck by deadly 7 2 magnitude earthquake BBC News 14 August 2021 Retrieved 15 August 2021 Cavallo Eduardo Laura Giles Alvarez Andrew Powell 28 September 2021 Estimating the Potential Economic Impact of Haiti s 2021 Earthquake IDB Haiti facing stalled elections kidnapping surge rampant insecurity UN News United Nations 4 October 2021 Haiti suffers deadly demonstrations against rise in fuel prices Le Monde 17 September 2022 Haiti reaches a breaking point as the economy tanks and violence soars PBS 4 October 2022 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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