He managed to force the regime to open up,” Montas said.īut when they broadcast Carter’s reelection loss to Ronald Reagan in November 1980, Duvalier’s dreaded enforcers, the TonTon Macoutes, fired weapons and shouted, “Human rights are over, the cowboys are back in the White House!” “So much was done in Haiti because of him. aid would depend on the growth of a civil society. Michèle Montas witnessed the impact from the control room of Radio Haiti-Inter, which carefully began challenging the dictatorship of Jean Claude “Baby Doc” Duvalier after Carter said U.S. had such a long history of supporting crackdowns on popular movements - was his insistence on restoring moral principles for real?Īfter Carter, now 98, entered hospice care at his home in Georgia, The Associated Press reached out to several former political prisoners, asking what it was like to see his influence take hold in countries oppressed by military rule. It was a turnabout dictators and dissidents alike found hard to believe as he took office in 1977. Jimmy Carter tried like no president ever had to put human rights at the center of American foreign policy.
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