The Borneo Post

Violence erupts in Haiti over national budget

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PORT-AU- PRINCE: Protesters brought parts of the Haitian capital Port- au- Prince to a standstill Tuesday, setting vehicles alight and damaging local businesses in violent demonstrat­ions against the government’s budget plans.

“These little thieves in Parliament voted for this budget to help the government exploit the people,” said protester Marco Paul Delva, standing by a barricade of flaming tires near the legislatur­e.

Traffic in the center of Port-auPrince and on key routes around the city ground to a halt after protesters threw stones and tires across roads.

Although demonstrat­ors gathered in relatively small groups, the protest took police by surprise – and they were unable to intervene in some blocked- off areas.

Protesters set at least two cars on fire and threw stones that smashed several shop windows.

Protesters directed their anger toward senators who voted for the 2017-2018 budget last week, and the deputies who approved it Saturday – but some expressed grievances based on false informatio­n.

“To renew your driving licence, you must now show a receipt confirming you have paid 10,000 gourdes ( US$158), no matter if you are a poor taxi driver or a street vendor,” claimed Jean Claude Reimbold.

“But the bourgeois pay nothing: thanks to their corruption, they don’t pay for water, electricit­y or income tax.

“They make us pay 1,000 gourdes for a voter ID card – they want to deprive us of our rights.”

The National Identity Office, which produces the cards, denied Monday the free document would cost 1,000 gourdes once the new budget comes into effect.

Meanwhile, if providing an income tax certificat­e is needed for administra­tive tasks such as renewing a licence, a 10,000-gourde payment will only be required from those earning more than 60,000 gourdes a year.

Officials hope the move will encourage more Haitians to declare their income.

Beyond the violent street protests, judges and magistrate­s are also set to strike as they say funds allocated to the sector are not enough to even cover officials’ salaries. — AFP

 ??  ?? People walk and drive past burning tyres during anti-government protests in the centre of the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince. — AFP photo
People walk and drive past burning tyres during anti-government protests in the centre of the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince. — AFP photo

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