Gulf Today

Protests erupt, shots fired at Moise funeral

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CAP-HAITIEN: A US delegation and other dignitarie­s were hurried to vehicles as reports emerged of shots fired and crowd control gas used on protesters outside the funeral of late Haitian president Jovenel Moise on Friday.

Reuters witnesses smelled the gas and heard detonation­s they believed to be shots.

There were no immediate reports of injuries among protesters or authoritie­s, and no indication­s any guests at the funeral were in danger.

A brass band and church choir opened Moise’s ceremony minutes earlier as his wife looked on, two weeks ater a still-unexplaine­d assassinat­ion at their home by foreign mercenarie­s.

The service was punctuated by angry shouts of protest by supporters accusing authoritie­s of responsibi­lity for Moise’s death, their words sometimes drowned out by loud swells of taped somber church music.

US President Joe Biden’s ambassador to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-greenfield, led the US delegation at Cap-haitien to pay respects to Moise, joining mourners who have taken part in a series of commemorat­ions in Haiti this week.

Haitian officials arriving at the event met with protesters’ verbal anger, with one man calling police chief Leon Charles “a criminal.”

“Why do you have all this security, where were the police on the day of the president’s assassinat­ion?” one protester said.

Inside the auditorium where the Roman Catholic funeral was held, four pallbearer­s in military atire solemnly stood by the closed wooden casket.

It was draped with a Haitian flag and set on a dais garlanded with white flowers.

Protests by supporters of Moise have convulsed the northern city of Cap-haitien, the slain leader’s hometown, for three days.

Amidst the protests, workers paved a brick road to Moise’s mausoleum on a dusty plot enclosed by high walls.

Set on land held by Moise’s family and where he lived as a boy, the partly built tomb stands in the shade of fruit trees, just a few steps from a mausoleum for Moise’s father, who died last year.

A former banana exporter, Moise failed to quell gang violence that surged under his watch and he faced waves of street protests over corruption allegation­s and his management of the economy. The demonstrat­ors in Cap-haitien were venting anger over the many questions that remain unanswered about the assassinat­ion, including who planned it and why.

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Supporters of Jovenel Moise protest outside the former leader’s family home in Cap-haitien on Friday.
Associated Press ↑ Supporters of Jovenel Moise protest outside the former leader’s family home in Cap-haitien on Friday.

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