Stabroek News

After prime minister pledges to step down, uneasy quiet in Haiti capital

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) - Uncertaint­y hung over Haiti's political future yesterday after its prime minister said he would step down, a move welcomed by many Haitians exhausted by months of escalating gang violence, but with questions over security still to be settled.

Prime Minister Ariel Henry, stranded in Puerto Rico, released a recorded video late on Monday night pledging to resign as soon as a transition council and temporary leader could be chosen.

U.S. officials said on Tuesday that members of the council should be appointed by today or tomorrow, following talks this week in Jamaica between Caribbean leaders and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who flew in to attend while also pledging an additional $133 million in Haitian security and humanitari­an aid.

There were signs in the capital Port-auPrince of an improvemen­t in the security situation on Tuesday, with the streets quiet and no attacks on government offices or police stations reported.

The main CPS cargo port had reopened, local news outlet Nouvellist­e reported. The capital's airport has yet to resume operations, but armed men who had taken control of it were no longer present. Meanwhile, some fuel from the Varreux facility near the port had been allowed out.

But in a potential setback, a senior Kenyan diplomatic official told Reuters that plans to deploy its police officers to Haiti to lead a U.N.-backed security mission were on pause pending "a clear indication" that a new interim government was in place.

The long-delayed mission is intended to boost outgunned local police and restore order in Haiti, the Western Hemisphere's poorest nation.

Earlier on Tuesday, helicopter­s landed at the Karibe Hotel, which is used by internatio­nal visitors, including from the United Nations, and from where a source told Reuters that people were being evacuated. The identity of those being evacuated could not immediatel­y be establishe­d.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said the internatio­nal body was "considerin­g reducing the footprint of non-essential personnel" but that it was not exiting Haiti. A prominent neurosurge­on, the bearded and bespectacl­ed Henry had led the Caribbean country since the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise in 2021. In late February, he traveled to Kenya to secure its support for the security mission.

Henry, 74, was appointed prime minister by Moise just before the late president was gunned down in his Port-au-Prince residence. But Henry was never elected and had repeatedly postponed elections, arguing that security should first be restored.

Many Haitians angrily protested his continued rule and Washington had called on Henry to accelerate plans for free and fair elections.

"The government that I'm leading will resign immediatel­y after the installati­on of (a transition) council," said Henry in the late night video. "I'm asking all Haitians to remain calm and do everything they can for peace and stability to come back as fast as possible."

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Ariel Henry

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