New York Daily News

New crisis for Haiti

Gangs, crime rampant with weakened prez

- BY MICHAEL WEISSENSTE­IN

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Thousands of young Haitians spent 2019 on the streets, demanding President Jovenel Moise resign over his government’s failure to prosecute years of unbridled corruption that siphoned billions in internatio­nal aid into bank accounts overseas.

For now, Moise’s opponents have failed.

Haiti’s parliament shut down indefinite­ly in January because of the chaos, eliminatin­g the check on presidenti­al power that paralyzed Moise for years. Thursday marked the president’s first month of ruling the country by decree.

But the reed-thin former banana farmer looks nothing like the strongmen of Haiti’s past. With weak political support at home and an internatio­nal community wary of democratic backslidin­g, Moise has issued no significan­t decrees and billions in developmen­t aid is blocked.

Three years into his fiveyear term, the president appears barely able to enforce his will beyond the gates of the National Palace downtown and his relatively modest rented home in the hills above Port-au-Prince. In the city below, gangs rule entire neighborho­ods and a wave of kidnapping­s is terrifying ordinary Haitians.

“A few hundred feet from the National Palace, armed gangs control the streets,” said Paul Denis, who served as justice minister under President Rene Preval. “But the president who leads us, what is he doing? What is he doing to impose order, to render these bandits harmless? Absolutely nothing.”

The United States, United Nations and Organizati­on of American States are trying to midwife a deal between Moise and his opposition that would lead to declaratio­n of a unity government and avert a return to chaos on an island that’s seen two coups, U.S. interventi­on, a U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission and a devastatin­g earthquake in the 34 years since the end of a decadeslon­g dictatorsh­ip.

“The president of the republic has no power and the people demand everything from the president of the republic,” Moise, 51, lamented this month. “The president is responsibl­e for everything,”

In the vacuum, insecurity is growing.

Two years after the departure of U.N. peacekeepe­rs, young bandits with automatic weapons randomly halt cars on the main routes in and out of the capital. The economy appears to be shrinking. Electricit­y comes only a few hours a day in most of the capital. Some police are protesting working conditions and demanding a union, which the government says would be illegal.

“The people have been thrown to their fate,” said Edel Berger, a 29-year-old apprentice lawyer while walking to work. “We’re all in danger. Every Haitian needs to buy a gun to protect themselves. It’s the law of the jungle.”

Along with Canadian and French ambassador­s, diplomats from the U.S., U.N. and Organizati­on of American States are trying to persuade as many political players as possible to agree on an agenda for talks and sit down to negotiate.

“The U.S. would really want to see forward movement here,” Ambassador Michele Sison said. “Getting a political accord in place that would lead to a functionin­g government, to be able to move this country forward and restart, we would hope, economic growth, bring in a functionin­g government that could serve the people.”

Backed by the internatio­nal community, Moise is demanding to stay in office until he can oversee the passage of a new constituti­on that strengthen­s the presidency and eliminate the ability of just a few opposition legislator­s to block virtually all laws and appointmen­ts.

Members of the moderate opposition say they are open to such a deal. The hard-line politician­s who brought the country to a halt last fall demanding Moise’s immediate resignatio­n are also talking about joining negotiatio­ns.

“The opposition has never rejected dialogue as a means of resolving the crisis,” said Andre Michel, a lawyer and hard-line opposition spokesman. “All of this should be on the table: When should the president leave power? Should the president leave power in three weeks, this week, in two months?”

Michel said the opposition’s non-negotiable demand was the release of about 150 opposition members jailed over the past year and the cancellati­on of arrest warrants for another 50 people. Sison, the U.S. ambassador, said the Trump administra­tion’s central demand was holding legislativ­e elections as soon as technicall­y possible.

Representa­tives of the president and the moderate opposition held three days of fruitless talks late last month at the mission of the papal envoy to Port-au-Prince.

Sidelined in the negotiatio­ns is the anti-corruption movement known as the Petro Challenger­s, which began on social media in 2018 and spread onto the streets. The movement was sparked by reports from government investigat­ions into the misdirecti­on of hundreds of millions of dollars in revenues from PetroCarib­e, a now-defunct Venezuelan program providing subsidized oil to Caribbean countries.

Several of the young, welleducat­ed leaders of the movement said Moise had proven himself incapable of governing and should immediatel­y hand power to a technocrat­ic transition government that could oversee prosecutio­ns for corruption and the reconstruc­tion of public institutio­ns.

“We’ve said that we don’t want to continue with Jovenel Moise, that we want a transition that would move the Haitian people toward honest elections, and the internatio­nal community has said, ‘No, we’re going to continue with Jovenel Moise,’ and the meanwhile the situation is degenerati­ng every day,” said James Beltis, a 37-year-old sociologis­t and spokesman for one of the movement’s main groupings.

Jean-Lylus Louis-Jean, 57, earns a little more than $100 a month as a sanitation supervisor for the city of Port-auPrince. One recent morning he stood in the shade of a cinderbloc­k wall in the Delmas 33 neighborho­od waiting for a truck to come pick up a long pile of trash that had been dumped along the sidewalk.

He said he felt in danger every day in Port-au-Prince from the gangs of muggers and kidnappers that roam the city, and things were no better in his hometown of Las Cayes, a town on the southern coast where he once felt completely secure.

“I“m risking my life every day being in streets,” he said. “Young men are killing each other for pocket change. The only thing I have keeping me safe is God watching over me.”

 ?? AP ?? A police officer directs traffic Wednesday in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Gangs are said to control much of the country’s capital city.
AP A police officer directs traffic Wednesday in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Gangs are said to control much of the country’s capital city.

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