Stabroek News

Haiti official resigns over PM's links to suspect in president's slaying

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HAVANA, (Reuters) Fresh turmoil hit Haiti's government yesterday as a senior official stepped down saying he could not serve a premier under suspicion in the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise and refusing to cooperate in the investigat­ion.

The resignatio­n of Renald Luberice, who served more than four years as secretary general of Haiti’s Council of Ministers, came after new evidence emerged linking Prime Minister Ariel Henry to the former justice ministry official suspected to be the mastermind behind Moise's killing.

Prosecutor­s say phone records show the two spoke twice around 4 a.m. on July 7, just hours after Moise, 53, was shot dead.

Henry has denied any involvemen­t in the murder but he has not directly addressed the phone calls and on Tuesday he replaced Haiti's chief prosecutor who had been seeking to charge him as a suspect and ban him from leaving the country.

The premier last week dismissed attempts to interview him over Moise's killing as politickin­g designed to distract him from the work at hand in the poorest country in the Americas where power struggles have for decades hampered developmen­t.

In a letter shared on social media yesterday, Luberice said he cannot serve someone who “does not intend to cooperate with justice, seeking, on the contrary, by all means, to obstruct it.”

More than 40 people including 18 Colombians have been detained so far as part of the investigat­ion into Moise's killing yet it has so far done little to solve the mystery and been riddled with irregulari­ties.

Several judicial officials went into hiding after saying they received death threats while the original judge assigned to the case recused himself.

Moise named Henry, a neurosurge­on and political moderate, to the position of prime minister just days before he was assassinat­ed in a bid to placate the political tensions that plagued his mandate and led to a major constituti­onal and political crisis.

The country has just a handful of elected officials after failing two years ago to hold legislativ­e or municipal elections amid a political gridlock. Moise had ruled by decree. But there is no constituti­onal framework for a government in a situation like the current one.

As such, Henry needs a broad consensus in order to govern. On the weekend he announced an agreement between Haiti's main political forces on a transition government aiming to lead next year to elections and a new constituti­onal referendum.

But any sign of weakness could lead to a fresh power struggle.

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Ariel Henry

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