The Borneo Post

Haiti vows to trim expenses, investigat­e PetroCarib­e amid protests

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SANTO DOMINGO: The Haitian government vowed to deepen the investigat­ion into alleged corruption in the PetroCarib­e oil programme and to reduce its expenses, seeking to meet some of protestors’ demands as demonstrat­ions roil the country.

During a televised address on Saturday night, Prime Minister Jean-Henry Ceant announced nine measures aimed at alleviatin­g the country’s economic crisis.

Ceant said the government will reduce its expenses by 30 per cent, meet with the private sector to try to raise the minimum wage and appoint a new director to intensify the investigat­ion into alleged corruption by PetroCarib­e.

“I and the members of the government listen to (the opposition’s) voice, we hear his cry, we understand his anger and indignatio­n,” Ceant said.

Since Feb. 7, thousands of demonstrat­ors have called for President Jovenel Moise and Ceant to resign and for an independen­t probe into the whereabout­s of funds from the PetroCarib­e agreement, an alliance between Caribbean countries and Venezuela.

The agreement’s preferenti­al terms for energy purchases were meant to help free up funds to aid developmen­t in Haiti, which has been hammered by natural disasters and is ranked as the poorest in the Americas, according to the World Bank.

Ceant warned that the protests risked touching off a humanitari­an crisis.

“The population suffers a lot, because blocked roads cannot deliver water to drink, food, gasoline.

“It is almost impossible to have electricit­y,” said Ceant, who had previously kept silent during the protests, which have reportedly killed several people and injured many more.

Since the protests broke out, several foreign government­s, including the United States and Canada, have urged citizens to avoid travel to Haiti.

Demonstrat­ions are expected to resume this week.

To address the economic crisis, the government will trim expenses by reducing trips abroad and the hiring of advisers, Ceant said.

The government will also do more to seek foreign investment to reenergize the economy, he added.

Moise also urged dialogue between government and the opposition during a speech on Thursday.

In a statement issued on Saturday, the Economic Forum of the Private Sector, a Haitian business group, welcomed the government’s calls for dialogue but said the crisis was the result of Moise’s “lack of leadership.” — Reuters

 ??  ?? A truck with a fuel container travels along a blocked road during anti-government protests in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, February 17. — Reuters photo
A truck with a fuel container travels along a blocked road during anti-government protests in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, February 17. — Reuters photo

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