Taipei Times

Council vows to restore order in Haiti

The council said the new government would ‘put Haiti back on the road to democratic legitimacy, stability and dignity’ with a clear plan

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The governing council that aims to oversee a political transition in Haiti on Wednesday vowed to restore “public and democratic order” in its first statement to the Caribbean nation wracked by a security crisis.

Haiti, which has long grappled with spiraling violence, has been rocked by an uptick in clashes since late last month, when gangs launched a coordinate­d offensive and demanded that Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry resign.

“We are determined to alleviate the suffering of the Haitian people, trapped for too long between bad governance, multifacet­ed violence, and disregard for their perspectiv­es and needs,” said the statement from the Presidenti­al Council, which has yet to be officially installed.

Signed by eight of the nine members of the council, it said that — once in place — the body would appoint a prime minister who would assist in forming a government to “put Haiti back on the road to democratic legitimacy, stability and dignity.”

The statement ended with a plea for unity, warning that Haiti is at a “crucial turning point.”

“Together, we will implement a clear plan of action aimed at restoring public and democratic order” by improving security and holding free elections, the statement said. “The Presidenti­al Council is currently finalizing a document on its organizati­on and mode of operation, including a transparen­t political agreement between the sectors involved in the process.”

Henry, who has led Haiti since the 2021 assassinat­ion of thenHaitia­n president Jovenel Moise, promised more than two weeks ago to step down after a transition­al council is stood up, although reaching that stage has proved exceedingl­y difficult due to squabbles among party leaders.

The presidenti­al transition council — to be composed of seven voting members and two non-voting members — was first announced on March 11 after emergency meetings between Haitian leaders, and several countries and organizati­ons, including regional bloc CARICOM.

It is set to draw its members from Haitian political parties, the private sector and elsewhere, and is to name an interim prime minister and government to set the stage for fresh elections.

In the meantime, Haiti is facing an ongoing humanitari­an crisis, with UNICEF warning that “countless children” could die due to malnutriti­on and a lack of healthcare.

Nearly 5 million people — almost half of the country’s population — have been driven into “high levels of acute food insecurity” since a surge in gang-linked violence, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classifica­tion said in a report published last month.

UNICEF executive director Catherine Russell on Tuesday called for a return of law and order to Haiti’s streets to protect the nation’s schools, hospitals and “humanitari­an spaces.”

Kenya, which agreed to lead a UN-approved mission to Haiti to back its security forces as they grapple with the well-armed gangs, has put its plans on hold until the transition­al council is in place.

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