The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Assassinat­ed president laid to rest

- DAVE GRAHAM ANDRE PAULTRE

CAP-HAITIEN, Haiti — Pallbearer­s in military attire carried late Haitian president Jovenel Moise’s body in a closed wooden coffin as his funeral got underway on Friday, two weeks after he was shot dead at home in an assassinat­ion still shrouded in mystery.

The bearers placed the polished casket on a dais garlanded with flowers in an auditorium. Four stood guard as a Roman Catholic priest blessed the coffin and a Haitian flag was unfurled.

Foreign dignitarie­s including U.S. President Joe Biden’s top advisor for the Western Hemisphere flew to Cap-haitien to pay their respects to Moise, joining mourners who have taken part in a series of commemorat­ions in Haiti this week.

Moise was gunned down in his home in Port-au-prince before dawn on July 7, setting off a new political crisis in the Caribbean country that has struggled with poverty, lawlessnes­s and instabilit­y.

Protests by angry supporters of Moise convulsed the slain leader’s hometown, the northern city of Cap-haitien, for a second successive day on Thursday as workers prepared for the funeral.

The protesters set tires on fire to block roads, while workers paved a brick road to Moise’s mausoleum on a dusty plot of several acres enclosed by high walls.

Set on land held by Moise’s family and where he lived as a boy, the partly built tomb stood in the shade of fruit trees, just a few steps from a mausoleum for Moise’s father, who died last year. Police controlled access to the compound through a single gate.

The assassinat­ion was a reminder of the ongoing influence foreign actors have in the poorest country in the Western Hemisphere despite it becoming Latin America and the Caribbean’s first independen­t state at the start of the 19th century.

The attack was carried out by a group that included 26 Colombian former soldiers, at least six of whom had previously received U.S. military training. Haitian-americans were also among the accused.

The attack’s plotters disguised the mercenarie­s as U.S. Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion agents, a ruse that helped them enter Moise’s home with no resistance from his security detail, authoritie­s have said. At least one of the arrested men, a Haitian-american, had previously worked as an informant for the DEA.

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