Jean-Claude Duvalier(1951-2014)
Jean-Claude Duvalier was born on July 3, 1951, in Port-au-Prince,
Haiti, the son of Haitian president Francois Duvalier. When he was 19 years old
his father died, and he took over as president, making him the youngest
president in the world. Haiti, which was the poorest country in the
Western Hemisphere and one of the poorest countries on the planet, had
been ruled by the corrupt and murderous Francois since 1957. While
Jean-Claude wasn't as brutal as his father, he was just as
corrupt--it's been estimated that he stole between $300 million and
$800 million from the country during his reign as president, and at one
point the US Commerce Department reported that almost 65% of the
country's revenues had "disappeared". Shortly after taking office
Jean-Claude loosened the vise-like grip on the country that his father
had exercised; he freed some political prisoners, eased government
censorship of newspapers, TV and magazines and introduced some economic
reforms. However, he did not liberalize the country's political
situation, and no opposition to or disagreement with his rule was
allowed. The country struggled along until 1985, when discontent with
economic mismanagement, corruption and lack of political freedom
erupted into demonstrations across much of the country. When government
troops chasing protesters invaded a schoolyard and shot and killed
three schoolchildren, the demonstrations across the country increased
and many of them turned into riots. Duvalier's security forces,
including the dreaded Tonton Macoutes secret police, were unable to
quell the mounting unrest and in 1986, when the army demanded his
abdication, he and his family fled to France. He left behind him a
country with an 80% illiteracy rate, where almost nine out of ten
people are unemployed, an infant mortality rate of more than 33%, a
per-capita income of less than $300, a life expectancy of 53 years--the
lowest in the Western Hemisphere--and a population racked by diseases
that have been eradicated in most other countries. Things unfortunately
haven't changed much since then.