Haiti’s Moise plans to use new powers to overhaul constitution
HAVANA, (Reuters) - Haiti’s President Jovenel Moise, who began ruling by decree this week, wants to use his new power to overhaul the constitution in an attempt to break a “decades-long cycle of political crises,” a planned presidential statement seen by Reuters shows.
“We will work with all political actors and our international partners to draft constitutional reforms to ensure a widely acceptable, workable, democratic balance of power which will then be put to the Haitian people in a referendum,” reads the statement, due to be released early on Friday according to a source close to Moise.
The statement does not specify the precise changes sought but Moise is likely aiming to strengthen the presidency which was weakened in Haiti’s 1987 Magna Carta due to a mistrust of strong figureheads in the wake of the Duvalier family dictatorship.
Critics say the changes went too far, delivering too much power to parliament and have made it hard to govern. Haiti has had 15 presidents in the past 33 years.
In the statement, Moise calls for the formation of a unity government to propose constitutional changes “to address flaws in the 1987 text”. These have fostered political instability that has prevented development in the poorest country in the Americas, he says.
The president aims to get the new constitution drafted within three months of being started, the source said, and voted on in a referendum by year-end.
The presidency’s office confirmed the veracity of the statement.
Moise has flagged his desire to amend the constitution before but until this week has not had the power to do so. It is the first time a timetable for reform has been laid out.
NO SILVER BULLET
There is wide agreement among politicians and analysts in Haiti on the need for constitutional reform, even if they do not depict it as a “silver bullet” for the country’s problems.
“The constitution has been amended a few times already but the structure simply does not give the needed results, it is one of the causes of the political instability in this country,” said one Haiti-based western diplomat.
“This is a historic opportunity where all the political class agrees on the need for change.”
The diplomat said one necessary change to foster greater political stability and save money was to institute elections every five years rather than every two years.
Yet many opposition politicians do not think Moise, who has faced fierce anti-government protests over graft allegations, galloping inflation and crime over the past year, is the right person to lead constitutional reform and are unlikely to join a unity government.
“It is illusory to believe a president who is rejected by the people could change the constitution,” said Andre Michel, a politician with the opposition Democratic and Popular Sector.
“We are all for a new constitution but it is up to a transition government to do it.”