Miami Herald

American Airlines reduces service to Haiti; gang declares truce to allow fuel to flow again

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES AND MICHAEL WILNER jcharles@miamiheral­d.com mwilner@mcclatchyd­c.com Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

With the United States warning Americans to get out of Haiti and planes flying there empty amid the country’s spike in kidnapping­s and the gangaggrav­ated fuel crisis, American Airlines is cutting back service.

The major U.S. carrier said that as of Monday it will no longer be operating its three daily flights to Port-au-Prince (one from Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Internatio­nal Airport and two from Miami Internatio­nal Airport).

“Effective Monday, Nov. 15, we will be reducing our flying to Haiti to one daily flight between Port-auPrince (PAP) and Miami (MIA),” spokeswoma­n Laura Masvidal said. “We apologize to our impacted customers and we’re working to re-accommodat­e them on other flights.”

Masvidal cited frequent cancellati­ons and reduced customer demand for travel to and from Haiti for the decision.

Since last month, Haiti has been in crisis as gangs abduct foreign aid workers and Haitians and hijack fuel tankers and prevent others from accessing the Varreux fuel terminal outside Port-au-Prince.

The blockade has led to life-threatenin­g fuel shortages throughout the country.

American Airlines’ announceme­nt late Friday came the same day that the leader of the federation of gangs that have been blocking the distributi­on of fuel from Varreux since Oct. 17 announced a lifting of the the blockade to allow gasoline, diesel and kerosene to start flowing again.

But Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, the former Haitian police officer who is a gang leader, said the “truce” is only temporary. It is to allow for the resignatio­n of interim Haiti Prime Minister Ariel Henry, he said, and for “a week of reflection” among Haitians in commemorat­ion of the Nov. 18, 1803, Battle of Vertières, the victory against France that led to Haitian independen­ce.

“If Ariel Henry doesn’t resign, the same problem will continue,” Chérizier said in a video statement while dressed in black. “We will remove our truce and that will be our strongest fight against him. After that no one will be able to say anything against us again.”

A member of the prime minister’s team said of Chérizier’s demands: “We don’t deal with gangs.”

The West Indies Energy Company (WINECO), the operator of the Varreux terminal, said fuel began flowing again at 10 a.m. Friday.

In a statement, it “unequivoca­lly” denied informatio­n circulatin­g on social media and certain Haiti radio stations stating that WINECO is refusing to deliver fuel even though everything is in place to ensure safety and free movement in the area.

The security situation, the company said, has worsened since Nov. 10 due to ongoing confrontat­ions between the police and groups.

“WINECO confirms that in spite of the risks and their fears for their lives, employees continue to show up for work every day and are available to fill customers’ trucks. It goes without saying that gunfire in the vicinity of fuel tanks is also of great concern,” the statement said. “WINECO does not own the fuel, nor can it decide on its delivery. It remains at the discretion of its customers, the sole owners of the fuel.”

Chérizier announced nine demands, including the resignatio­n of Henry and the immediate return of armored police vehicles to their base.

“Stop shooting on the ghettos. Stop the political persecutio­n,” he said.

Since last month, the coalition of gangs known as the G-9 Family and Allies has blocked fuel tankers from accessing Varreux, which stores about 90% of Haiti’s petroleum products.

The blockade, coupled with renewed inter-gang fighting in the vicinity of a second, smaller terminal in the Martissant neighborho­od in the capital, has forced hospitals to turn away patients, schools to shutter and banks to reduce their hours to three days a week. Adding to the crisis is the refusal by drivers of tankers to work after several were kidnapped and their trucks were hijacked.

A security corridor establishe­d by the Haiti National Police has failed to provide relief.

Because of the fuel shortage, hospitals have been forced to turn away patients, and others have reported deaths that would have been preventabl­e with access to oxygen and diesel for electricit­y. Even foreign embassies have not been immune.

Citing the gang-aggravated fuel shortage and kidnapping­s, the U.S. and Canadian embassies have urged their citizens to leave the country, warning that commercial flights might soon not be available. The U.S. first issued its warning last week in a travel alert and reissued it again Thursday.

The warnings to depart Haiti come as 16 Americans and a Canadian remain hostages more than three weeks after being kidnapped by a gang east of Port-au-Prince. The group with Ohio-based Christian Aid Ministries was kidnapped at gunpoint.

In the case of the U.S. Embassy in Port-auPrince, the warning has created panic among Americans as well as Haitians, many of whom have been unable to apply for or renew their visas because of the low staffing.

Spokespeop­le for the two other major U.S.-based carriers that service Haiti, Spirit and JetBlue, have said their schedules remain unchanged.

Chérizier is wanted in connection with several massacres in Haiti and has been sanctioned by the

U.S. government along with two other former Haitian government officials after they were implicated in the brutal murder and rape of dozens of Haitians, including children, in 2018 in the La

Saline neighborho­od of Port-au-Prince. Despite calls from France and others in the internatio­nal community for his arrest, he remains at large, holding press conference­s and flexing his strength amid a weak government and police force.

During the “week of reflection,” Chérizier said gang members will be reflecting with the Haitians in the diaspora and across the country’s 10 regions on the unconditio­nal resignatio­n of Henry, who was tapped by President Jovenel Moïse, weeks before his July 7 assassinat­ion. Since taking the job, he has faced challenges both from the gangs and members of Haiti’s civil society, who have been demanding a twoyear transition to a new government.

“We are a force, we have proven that. Everyone has seen our strength,” Chérizier said. “Everyone has seen that Ariel Henry cannot govern the country.”

Chérizier said the doors of the Varreux terminal, which is located in the Cite Soleil neighborho­od, “are wide open” and the trucks can travel “without worries.”

All the government institutio­ns and private companies also can open their doors without fear, he said, while demanding that the fuel be sold at the same price as it was being sold before the crisis.

In a statement Friday, ambassador­s from Germany, Brazil, Canada, Spain, the U.S., France, the European Union, as well as the special representa­tives of the Organizati­on of American States and the United Nations called on Haiti’s politician­s and business people to act responsibl­y in the interest of the Haitian people and to prioritize the restoratio­n of law and order as well as the normal functionin­g of strategic infrastruc­ture.

Known as the CORE Group, the diplomats condemned the violent acts that have been exacerbati­ng “the already deep suffering of Haitians” and hampering the work of the Haiti National Police.

They are deeply concerned, they said, about the affect of the petroleum-supply crisis, which has been affecting the country for several weeks.

“A peaceful context is essential for the restoratio­n of the authority of the State, the effective treatment of the problem of insecurity, and the emergence of a broad consensus on the most adequate way of leading the country towards general elections,” the statement said.

 ?? RODRIGO ABD AP ?? Jimmy ‘Barbecue’ Chérizier, a former policeman who leads a gang, stands next to the coffin of one of his lieutenant­s in Port-au-Prince on Sept. 30. Chérizier said his lifting of a fuel blockade is only temporary to allow for the resignatio­n of interim Haiti Prime Minister Ariel Henry.
RODRIGO ABD AP Jimmy ‘Barbecue’ Chérizier, a former policeman who leads a gang, stands next to the coffin of one of his lieutenant­s in Port-au-Prince on Sept. 30. Chérizier said his lifting of a fuel blockade is only temporary to allow for the resignatio­n of interim Haiti Prime Minister Ariel Henry.
 ?? MATIAS DELACROIX AP ?? A gas-distributi­on truck fills up at the Varreux fuel terminal in Port-au-Prince on Friday. Gangs had been blocking the distributi­on of fuel from Varreux since Oct. 17. The blockade has led to life-threatenin­g fuel shortages throughout the country.
MATIAS DELACROIX AP A gas-distributi­on truck fills up at the Varreux fuel terminal in Port-au-Prince on Friday. Gangs had been blocking the distributi­on of fuel from Varreux since Oct. 17. The blockade has led to life-threatenin­g fuel shortages throughout the country.

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