The Phnom Penh Post

Haiti suspends fuel hike after death and looting

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HAITI’S Prime Minister Jack Guy Lafontant on Saturday announced the suspension “until further notice” of a fuel price hike that triggered violent protests and left one dead in the Caribbean nation.

The about-face came hours after Lafontant made an impassione­d televised appeal for patience, and tried to convince people of the need to raise prices.

The capital Port-au-Prince and its environs has stood paralysed since Friday afternoon, with major routes blocked by barricades, some made of burning tyres, and some protesters even calling for a revolution in the impoverish­ed country.

Just before the suspension was announced, the leader of Haiti’s lower house of parliament had threatened a government takeover if the fuel price increases were not reversed.

They had only been announced on Friday, while many Haitians were engrossed in a World Cup football match.

“If there is no response within two hours, the government will be considered as having resigned” and the legislatur­e will take charge, Gary Bodeau, the president of the Chamber of Deputies, told AFP.

Lafontant then announced on Twitter suspension of the price increases, writing that “violence and democracy are fundamenta­lly incompatib­le”.

Even before the fuel price controvers­y, deputies had already begun a debate on his future, and Saturday’s about-face could lead to the government’s fall.

At least one person died in violence overnight Friday, and an AFP reporter heard sporadic gunfire in the capital.

A supermarke­t and other businesses were looted and vehicles burned.

Similar angry protests broke out in Cap-Haitien, the second-largest city, as well as in the communes of Les Cayes, Jacmel and Petit-Goave.

Internet service suffered difficulti­es, although it was unclear whether there was a link to the unrest.

“We’re seeing a little bit more calm right now,” an American, Stacy Librandi Bourne, told CNN from Port-au-Prince where, the news network said, she was among 50 American tourists, children and missionari­es unable to leave the Oasis Hotel because of the unrest.

The troubles were sparked by a government announceme­nt that gasoline prices would rise by 38 percent, diesel by 47 percent and kerosene by 51 percent starting this weekend.

Protests prompted several major airlines, including American, Air France, Delta, Jet Blue and Copa, to cancel flights to Port-au-Prince, at least through midday Saturday.

“I ask your patience because our administra­tion has a vision, a clear program,” said Lafontant, a political novice who came to office early last year. “Do not destroy, because every time it’s Haiti that becomes poorer.”

Haiti is still recovering from Hurricane Matthew which struck in 2016. Almost 40,000 people remain in makeshift camps after an earthquake killed more than 200,000 people eight years ago, and thousands of others have died from a years-long cholera epidemic.

On Friday, the bodyguard of an opposition-party politician died in an altercatio­n with demonstrat­ors in Port-au-Prince as he attempted to get through a roadblock.

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