Chattanooga Times Free Press

Haiti verges on anarchy amid fuel hike, power grab

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES AND MICHAEL WILNER MCCLATCHY WASHINGTON BUREAU (TNS)

Charities are being looted. Foreign embassies are being pelted with rocks, and the homes of government supporters and the wealthy targeted — some going up in smoke.

But as a crisis-stricken Haiti descends into anarchy almost unparallel­ed since the fall of the Duvalier dictatorsh­ip in 1986, the world appears to be keeping its arms folded.

The ad hoc group of ambassador­s and foreign envoys known as the “Core Group” that represent Western nations and the United Nations and Organizati­on of American States has been silent, seemingly unable to come to an agreement on what to say and fearful their words can make matters worse.

“They want us to hit rock bottom,” said a Port-au-Prince-based political analyst, who has been unable to leave his home for the past five days and worries about the coming days as Tropical Storm Fiona zones in on the flood- and disasterpr­one country.

President Joe Biden is being briefed regularly on the crisis. But the only public comments originatin­g in Washington have come from the president of the Dominican Republic. During a visit to the OAS on Thursday, Dominican President Luis Abinader called on the hemispheri­c body to do more to help and to privately press the Biden administra­tion to take bolder action. But given the animosity between the neighborin­g countries, which share the island of Hispaniola, even some diplomats and analysts fear the Dominican leader’s outspokenn­ess could be counterpro­ductive.

On Friday, United Nations Secretary General António Guterres asked for a deescalati­on of the violence, warning that if the current situation continues, the already dire humanitari­an situation faced by Haiti’s most vulnerable people will deteriorat­e even further.

Guterres, who will welcome world leaders this coming week in New York during the United Nations General Assembly, did not offer a solution to ending the crisis.

His comments came after looters attacked several charity warehouses in the city of Gonaives, including a United Nations World Food Program facility with 1,400 metric tons of food intended for school canteens, families and children. They also burned its adjacent offices.

“Haitians want a Haitian solution to Haiti’s problems, but they are incapable of reaching a compromise,” said Robert Fatton, a Haiti expert at the University of Virginia who has written extensivel­y about his homeland’s political troubles since its transition to democracy 36 years ago. “We are stuck in a dangerous, chaotic spiral, and all actors seem impotent and mute. Morbid symptoms are everywhere, but no obvious solutions. And now we may be battered by another storm.”

Late Friday, gangs had joined the mayhem, including members of the G9 gang coalition, whose members left Cité Soleil with an excavator, heading for Shodecosa Industrial and Commercial Park, apparently intending to tear down its perimeter wall.

By Saturday morning, members of the well-armed gang were circling the park, which employs 13,000 workers, preparing to attack by using containers to block access. Less than a quarter of a mile away, they were also attempting to block all access to the country’s main oil terminal, Varreux, and its fuel depot to prevent the delivery of tens of thousands of barrels of diesel, gasoline and propane to fueling stations out into the city. Gang members were placing trailers and barricades along the access road, and using an excavator to dig and cut the road to build trenches in order to ensure no possible access.

Though the latest crisis was ignited by a government hike in fuel prices, it had been brewing for weeks. Across the country, anti-government protest organizers and backers called on crowds to attack commercial banks and money-transfer houses, and in Port-au-Prince, distribute­d Russian flags in defiance of the United States.

Then came the announceme­nt on Sunday by interim Prime Minister Ariel Henry about the fuel-price increase. Fury, fiery barricades, blocked roads and overall paralysis soon followed. That escalated into even more violence and transition­ed into a power grab as mobs targeted the homes of politician­s close to Henry, attacked foreign embassies, and looted businesses and more than a dozen beachfront homes in the coastal town of Montrouis, north of Port-au-Prince.

In a tweet, one of the few Haitian leaders to speak out, Eric Jean-Baptiste called on Haitians to stop burning the property of the state and for the “actors of the crisis” to agree to avoid the worst.

“The property of the state is ours,” said Jean-Baptiste, secretary general of the Rally of Progressiv­e National Democrats and a former presidenti­al candidate. “Do not destroy private investment because we cannot lose more jobs.”

In a statement, the civil society-backed coalition known as the Montana Accord said the increase in fuel prices of between 97% and 100%, “is an absolute provocatio­n” by the interim government. The coalition accused the Henry government of trying to maintain power and said “it is another proof of the state authoritie­s’ inability to lead the country.”

“Montana is telling the Haitian people that the anger it is expressing in the streets is legitimate,” the statement said. “Montana also urges the population to continue to fight to defend its true interests with firmness and conviction but also with great vigilance to avoid the infiltrati­on of opportunis­ts, agitators and troublemak­ers in its midst.”

The price hike, which the government argues is needed to save $400 million in fuel subsidies the nation cannot afford, couldn’t have come at a worse time, say some critics. Inflation is hovering around 30%, dollars are scarce, the local currency is rapidly depreciati­ng and gas, diesel and propane have all been in short supply. Meanwhile, if Haitians manage to escape kidnapping­s, then they are held hostage by an unpreceden­ted gang crisis that has blocked highways to major cities and left hundreds dead in at least two massacres this year.

Those who can, are escaping to the neighborin­g Dominican Republic and the United States. Those without visas and passports are taking their chances on rickety sailboats only to be returned by the U.S. Coast Guard in the largest Haitian seaborne refugee crisis in 18 years.

But that misery is also being used for political gain in the face of a weak interim government and paralyzing political, social and economic crises that have worsened since July 2021’s assassinat­ion of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.

Last month, the interim government began cracking down on illegal arms and ammunition, and contraband at its seaports in hopes of recouping millions in lost revenue and hampering deadly gangs. At the same time, 20 members of the country’s private sector who own some of the largest companies in Haiti, publicly committed to paying their taxes. They also, in a signed statement, called on the country’s revenue authoritie­s to fight corruption by exercising their responsibi­lity to collect customs duties and taxes.

 ?? PHOTOS BY ODELYN JOSEPH VIA AP ?? Right: Police secures a gas station Friday during a protest in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
PHOTOS BY ODELYN JOSEPH VIA AP Right: Police secures a gas station Friday during a protest in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Left: Police chase looters during a protest Thursday against fuel price hikes and to demand that Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry step down, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Left: Police chase looters during a protest Thursday against fuel price hikes and to demand that Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry step down, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States