The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Haiti officials to lose perks in PM’s response to violent unrest

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PORT-AU-PRINCE: Government officials in Haiti, one of the world’s poorest countries, will lose their perks under emergency economic and anti-corruption measures announced Saturday by Prime Minister Jean-Henry Ceant after days of deadly protests.

The unrest is the latest upsurge of discontent over corruption and poverty in the Caribbean halfisland, where protesters want the ouster of President Jovenel Moise.

At least seven people have died in Haiti since Feb 7 when the latest protests began.

“The first decision is to cut the prime minister’s budget by 30 per cent,” Ceant said in a 20minute address which suggested the presidency and parliament take similar measures.

“We also need to withdraw all unnecessar­y privileges for highlevel government officials, like allowances for gas and telephones, needless trips abroad, and the amount of consultant­s,” he said on state television.

Three-fifths of Haiti’s population of nearly 11 million live below the poverty line of US$2 a day.

Ceant said there will be a focus on the fight against corruption and cross-border smuggling, while meetings with the private sector will be held to consider raising the minimum wage.

Protests have grown since a sporadic movement began last summer over a scandal linked to a Venezuelan aid program known as Petrocarib­e.

Through Petrocarib­e, Venezuela for years supplied Haiti and other countries with oil at cut-rate prices and on easy credit terms.

Investigat­ions by the Haitian Senate in 2016 and 2017 concluded that nearly US$2 billion from the program was misused.

After at least three people were killed by gunfire during protests in late November, Ceant promised a crash program to create jobs in poor neighborho­ods, and assured that he was hearing the complaints of young Haitians.

His comments Saturday came after Moise on Thursday broke his silence during the latest unrest, by saying he “will not leave the country in the hands of armed gangs and drug trafficker­s.”

Canada, one of Haiti’s largest internatio­nal donors, on Thursday temporaril­y closed its embassy because of ‘the current volatility,’ while the State Department in Washington ordered the departure of all “non-emergency US personnel.” — AFP

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? People wait to buy gas in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
— Reuters photo People wait to buy gas in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

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