What is happening in Haiti today is a sobering reflection of what the West wants for the entire African continent. When we examine the current state of affairs in Haiti—how over 90% of the capital, Port-au-Prince, is under the control of armed gangs who oppress the people, kill with impunity, rape women and girls, and terrorize entire communities—we must understand that this is not a random tragedy. It is a carefully orchestrated scenario, a blueprint of chaos designed by colonial forces who have never truly released their grip. It’s a frightening image of the future they desire for Africa and for the global Black population: a future ruled by violence, confusion, and internal destruction.
They don’t want us to flourish. They don’t want us united, peaceful, or strong. Instead, they aim to raise gangsters among us—tools of destruction planted within—so they can stand back and say, “It’s not our problem. They are the ones destroying themselves.” Yet, behind the scenes, these same demons are the engineers of the very destruction they feign ignorance of.
To understand how Haiti reached this point, we must revisit its painful history. Haiti was the first Black nation to fight and win its freedom from colonial rule. It overthrew the belligerent French Empire—led then by Napoleon Bonaparte—and claimed independence without the colonizers’ release. This act of defiance enraged Napoleon. He swore vengeance, declaring that Haiti would never know peace. And indeed, from that moment, Haiti was strategically isolated.
France, seething with humiliation, conspired with other colonial powers—chiefly the United States and various Western allies—to cut Haiti off from the rest of the world. But the worst was yet to come. As a final blow, France demanded that Haiti pay reparations—yes, the enslaved were forced to compensate their former oppressors. The cost of their freedom, calculated in today’s terms, ran into hundreds of billions of dollars. Haiti spent over a century repaying this unjust debt, plunging the nation into enduring economic servitude.
That was just the beginning. Alongside financial exploitation came political sabotage. The United States, acting as a global colonial force, played a significant role in crippling Haiti’s political leadership and institutional systems. With the country isolated and starved of external support, economic development became impossible. Youth unemployment soared. And in that vacuum, the poison flowed in—first drugs, then weapons, then money.
With no jobs and no hope, Haiti’s youth became vulnerable. Drugs dulled their pain; guns gave them power; money gave them motive. Before long, these young people were lured into gang life, not by ideology, but by survival. The streets of Haiti became battlegrounds—not just of crime, but of foreign agendas playing out through internal bloodshed.
Even when Haiti had a government, it was weak—undermined by decades of economic sabotage and global neglect. The gangs, on the other hand, became increasingly powerful, better armed and more organized. The imbalance was so severe that in 2021, the unthinkable happened: a sitting president was assassinated—murdered by gangsters in his own nation. And the world did nothing.
This is not just a Haitian story. It is a warning. A warning to Africa. A warning to Black people everywhere. The chaos in Haiti did not arise on its own. It was engineered. And unless we wake up, organize ourselves, and guard against the same tactics of destabilization, Africa may find itself walking down that same dark road.
But here’s the deeper question no one dares to ask out loud:
If they could do this to Haiti—the symbol of Black resistance and liberation—what makes us think they haven’t already started doing it to us?
And if that’s true…
Then what happens next? Read Part 2 here
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