Jamaica Gleaner

PM urges calm as violent protests seek his ouster

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HAITIAN PRIME Minister Ariel Henry urged calm in a public address early Thursday following three days of violent protests that have paralysed the country demanding his resignatio­n.

The brief speech did little to appease thousands of people angry and frustrated over unrelentin­g gang violence, deepening poverty and no general elections in sight.

“I think the time has arrived for all to put our heads together to save Haiti, to do things another way in our country,” Henry said without offering specifics.

He urged Haitians not to look at the government or at Haiti’s National Police as their adversarie­s. Those who choose violence, destructio­n and killing people to take power are“not working in the interests of the Haitian people”, he said.

His comments come as thousands of Haitians gathered daily this week in cities and towns across the country to demand that Henry step down, saying they will keep protesting until he leaves.

Haiti’s legislatur­e is currently empty, after the terms of its last 10 senators expired in January 2023. The country failed to hold planned elections in 2019 and 2023, and Henry assumed power with the support of the i nternation­al community following the July 2021 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

On Wednesday, police killed five armed environmen­tal protection agents in the capital of Port-au-Prince in a shooting some worry could worsen Haiti’s crisis.

Lionel Lazarre, head of a police union known as Synapoha, told The Associated Press that the shooting between police and agents with Haiti’s Security Brigade for Protected Areas occurred in the Laboule community. He claimed that the environmen­tal agents opened fire after police asked them to drop their weapons, prompting officers to shoot.

The environmen­tal division has recently come under scrutiny after its agents in northern Haiti clashed with police.

Henry said Haitians need peace, security, work and the ability to move freely around the country.

“Haitian people need for their children to go to school without fear, because that’s what’s going to guarantee them a future,” he said.

Henry once again pledged to hold general elections as soon as Haiti’s insecurity issues are resolved, saying he would continue to reach out and work with all those who want the country to move forward, “to take decisions together that are going to help us emerge from the crisis.”

He also congratula­ted police for their efforts in fighting gangs and promised he would keep pushing for the U.N.-backed deployment of a Kenyan police force that is currently blocked by a court order.

“I want to reassure everyone the government will do whatever it can for the mission to come as fast as possible,” he said.

Henry also extended his sympathies for all those who have died in the violent protests this week.

“I give you assurance that the Haitian people will have peace and developmen­t with prosperity,” Henry said, without providing details. “Together, hand-in-hand, we will change our destiny.”

Haitians said they wanted Henry to step down by February 7, the date Haitian leaders are typically sworn into office. The date also carries deep historical significan­ce in Haiti: On that date in 1986, former dictator Jean-Claude Duvalier fled for France, and in 1991, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haiti’s first democratic­ally-elected president, was sworn in.

 ?? AP ?? A protester adds tyres to a burning barricade during a demonstrat­ion demanding the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Ariel Henry, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on Wednesday.
AP A protester adds tyres to a burning barricade during a demonstrat­ion demanding the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Ariel Henry, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on Wednesday.

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