China Daily (Hong Kong)

Haiti’s prime minister resigns amid fuel subsidies row

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Haitian Prime Minister Jack Guy Lafontant resigned on Saturday as he faced a noconfiden­ce vote after a move to lower fuel subsidies prompted days of violent protests in the impoverish­ed Caribbean nation.

Lafontant told Haiti’s Chamber of Deputies that he sent President Jovenel Moise his resignatio­n letter. Moise confirmed via Twitter that he had accepted Lafontant’s resignatio­n along with those of other Cabinet members.

The prime minister’s abrupt resignatio­n came ahead of a vote on a motion of censure for Lafontant, a first step toward asking that Moise name a new prime minister to form a Cabinet to handle the crisis. The prime minister is the second highest official in Haiti after the president.

Lafontant was to answer questions about the July 6-8 riots that followed the government’s attempt to raise fuel prices by up to 51 percent as part of an agreement with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

At least seven people were killed and dozens of businesses were looted during the unrest.

Instead, Lafontant used the opportunit­y to announce his resignatio­n, while in various parts of Haiti small protests were held demanding the head of state step down.

As the session began, chamber president Gary Bodaeu wrote on his Twitter account that the legislatur­e “is at a crossroads in history; it must assume its responsibi­lities”. He had earlier called the price hikes “untimely” and “inoperativ­e”.

Lafontant suspended the fuel price increases after protests erupted last week but the disturbanc­es continued and calls for the prime minister to resign grew, including from the opposition and some business groups.

Lafontant, a 57-year-old doctor who took office in March 2017, had said the price hikes of 38 percent to 51 percent for gasoline, diesel and kerosene were needed for Haiti to balance its budget.

Government officials agreed to reduce subsidies for fuel in February as part of an assistance package with the IMF. The agreement also included increased spending on social services and infrastruc­ture and improved tax collection in an effort to modernize the economy of one of the poorest nations in the Western Hemisphere.

Lafontant’s replacemen­t will be nominated by Moise and confirmed by the Senate.

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