The Borneo Post

Haiti between anarchy, normalcy after deadly fuel-price violence

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PORT-AU- PRINCE: Scenes of anarchy alternated with tentative signs of a return to normal life in Haiti’s capital, with calls for a general strike yesterday after two days of deadly looting and arson triggered by a quickly- aborted government attempt to raise fuel prices.

With the death toll rising to four, protesters in the impoverish­ed Caribbean country called for a two- day general strike, despite the government’s climbdown over the price increases.

Many Haitians are now demanding the immediate departure of President Jovenel Moise.

“If the president stays one more day, the game will take on a new appearance: we will cut off the roads and burn everything, because we have nothing else to lose,” said one masked protester.

Groups of young men trying to extort money from motorists as well as pedestrian­s controlled various intersecti­ons and roads in Port-au-Prince on Sunday.

Local radio reported that groups of armed people in civilian clothes had been seen in some downtown districts.

In the heart of the capital, AFP journalist­s saw shops ransacked as protesters demanded Moise’s exit. Some aggressive young men carried knives, and special police crowd control units fired their guns into the air and detonated tear gas.

Alongside these chaotic and violent scenes, a partial return to normal life occurred in parts of the capital.

After mass, many fruit and vegetable merchants had taken up their places again on the sidewalks, and motorcycle taxis were back at their usual intersecti­ons – even if customers were scarce.

Automobile traffic timidly returned to several roads where police had removed barricades.

Some flights returned, too, with three aircraft landing from the United States after all airlines cancelled service on Saturday.

But uncertaint­y remained, and the embassies of France and Canada said they would remain closed on Monday.

Moise had urged demonstrat­ors late Saturday to “go home,” saying the price hike suspension had “corrected what had to be corrected.”

His televised speech disappoint­ed much of the population and the political class: “We were expecting another speech, a serene analysis of the situation that has prevailed in the country in the last two days and caused so much loss of life and materials,” lawmaker Jerry Tardieu told AFP.

The unrest followed a government announceme­nt on Friday that gasoline prices would rise by 38 per cent, diesel by 47 per cent and kerosene by 51 per cent starting this weekend.

In suspending the price hikes, Prime Minister Jack Guy Lafontant on Saturday emphasised that “violence and democracy are fundamenta­lly incompatib­le.” — AFP

 ??  ?? People loot shops in Delmas, a commune near Port-au-Prince, during protests against the rising price of fuel. — AFP photo
People loot shops in Delmas, a commune near Port-au-Prince, during protests against the rising price of fuel. — AFP photo

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