Business Day

Haiti transition council ‘is largely named’

- Humeyra Pamuk and Daphne Psaledakis

Most of the nine people who will sit on Haiti’s political transition council have been named by the groups they represent, though a few are still pending, US secretary of state Antony Blinken says.

Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry last Monday announced he would step down once the council, made up of seven voting members and two observers from different political coalitions and sectors of society, was in place.

The state department said on Tuesday it expected that members of the transition council would be appointed in the next 24-48 hours, but the process has lagged.

“This is never going to be smooth and never going to be linear,” Blinken told reporters during a visit to Austria. “So that’s a work in progress, but we’ve seen that move forward.”

The Miami Herald on Thursday reported that five groups had put forward names, but that disagreeme­nts remained, with one group presenting multiple candidates.

PULLING OUT

Political party Platform Pitit Desalin said last week it was pulling out of the agreement. It plans to install its own council and wants it to include Guy Philippe, who was deported from the US in November after serving six years in prison and is seeking an amnesty for gang leaders.

Blinken participat­ed in talks on Monday held by a regional Caribbean bloc, with representa­tives from Haiti’s government and opposition, on tackling the crisis in Haiti. Spiralling gang violence has fuelled a humanitari­an disaster, cutting off food supplies and forcing hundreds of thousands from their homes.

After Henry announced later on Monday that he would step aside, Port-au-Prince was initially quieter, but violence flared up again late last week.

On Friday, a plume of thick, black smoke billowed out of the Port-au-Prince city centre. Local media reported that businesses in the affluent suburb of Petion-Ville had shuttered and that burning tyres blocked streets in nearby Delmas.

YEAR ZERO

“It’s starting off very badly,” Frederic Boisrond, a sociologis­t at McGill University, told RadioCanad­a, pointing to the dissent within the groups proposed for the transition council by leaders in Jamaica.

“Elections are a very longterm prospect,” he added, pointing to the need, after restoring security, to recreate an electoral roll and reappoint mayors, senators and deputies.

“This is a huge machine to reinstall. Haiti is in year zero of democracy,” Boisrond said.

Haiti’s most recent elections took place in 2016 and turnout was reported at about 20%.

Heavily armed gangs have meanwhile taken over much of the capital, and rights groups have reported widespread killings, kidnapping­s and sexual violence. More than 360,000 people are internally displaced in Haiti, UN estimates show.

US aid chief Samantha Power announced $25m in humanitari­an assistance for Haiti on Friday to cover food, essential relief supplies, relocation support and emergency healthcare. That was on top of the $33m announced earlier in the week. A humanitari­an air bridge announced by the UN was set to operate from the Dominican Republic, but has faced setbacks.

Dominican authoritie­s said they had agreed on an evacuation route with Haiti “exclusivel­y for preventive or emergency exits of Dominicans and staff from missions, diplomatic and internatio­nal organisati­ons”. This route would be operated by the organisati­ons’ own aircraft, they said.

IT’S STARTING OFF BADLY. ELECTIONS ARE A VERY LONG-TERM PROSPECT. THIS IS A HUGE MACHINE TO REINSTALL

Frederic Boisrond Sociologis­t at McGill University

Blinken also said an internatio­nal force intended to restore security to Haiti was moving forward, but that challenges remained.

The force, set to be led by Kenya, has faced stumbling blocks over funding and concerns within Kenya as the security situation in Haiti has deteriorat­ed. Nairobi announced earlier this week it was pausing the deployment and would reevaluate once a new Haitian government was in place.

“Once the new council is fully stood up — and I would anticipate that happens in the coming days — that process with the force will be able to move forward and then we have a trajectory that has at least the chance of putting Haiti in a more stable place,” Blinken said.

“Every day there are challenges to that process. There are political challenges, there are security challenges, and we’re working to address them.”

 ?? /Reuters ?? Guarding the jail: Police officers keep watch at the entrance to the Haiti’s National Penitentia­ry in Port-au-Prince after a fire. A powerful gang leader has issued a threatenin­g message aimed at political leaders who would take part in a still-unformed transition council for the country.
/Reuters Guarding the jail: Police officers keep watch at the entrance to the Haiti’s National Penitentia­ry in Port-au-Prince after a fire. A powerful gang leader has issued a threatenin­g message aimed at political leaders who would take part in a still-unformed transition council for the country.
 ?? /Reuters ?? Work in progress: US secretary of state Antony Blinken says a plan for an internatio­nal force to restore security to Haiti is moving forward.
/Reuters Work in progress: US secretary of state Antony Blinken says a plan for an internatio­nal force to restore security to Haiti is moving forward.

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