The Borneo Post

Haiti asks US to send troops after assassinat­ion

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PORT-AU-PRINCE: Haiti has asked Washington and the UN for troops to secure its ports, airport and other strategic sites after the assassinat­ion of president Jovenel Moise opened a power vacuum in the crisishit Caribbean nation, an official said Friday.

The United States has already said it will send FBI and other agents to Port-au-Prince, two days after Moise was shot dead in his home.

In the wake of the slaying “we thought that mercenarie­s could destroy some infrastruc­ture to create chaos ... During a conversati­on with the US secretary of state and the UN we made this request,” elections minister Mathias Pierre told AFP.

The US State Department and Pentagon both confirmed receiving a request for “security and investigat­ive assistance” and said officials remain in contact with Port-au-Prince, but did not specify whether military troops would be deployed.

The UN did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. A UN diplomatic source had earlier indicated that a Security Council resolution was needed to do as the Haitians had asked.

Washington had already signaled its willingnes­s to help the Haitian investigat­ion, and White House spokeswoma­n Jen Psaki added Friday that senior FBI and other officials would be heading to the Caribbean as soon as possible.

The developmen­t came as questions swirled about who could have mastermind­ed the audacious assassinat­ion, with most members of a hit squad of Colombians and Americans either dead or in custody, and no clear motive made public.

Amid the uncertaint­y, three men are being touted as potential leaders of the nation of 11 million people, more than half of whom are under the age of 20. There is no working parliament.

After days of paralysis in the capital, Port-au-Prince saw the timid return of people to the

Foreigners came to the country to perpetrate this crime. We, Haitians, are appalled. We need to know who is behind this. — Resident

streets, shops opening and the resumption of public transport on Friday morning -- but under a pall of apprehensi­on.

People scrambled to stockpile basic necessitie­s at supermarke­ts and queued to buy propane for cooking in anticipati­on of more instabilit­y.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow or the day after ... I am preparing for bad days ahead,” Port-au-Prince resident Marjory told AFP, as she and her husband stocked up on supplies at a store.

Gang violence, rife in the former French colony, also picked up again Friday, with clashes between groups paralysing a major highway.

The city’s airport, shuttered after the attack, appeared to have reopened, according to Flightrada­r data.

As the shock of the killing wore off, many in the poorest country in the Americas were demanding answers.

“Foreigners came to the country to perpetrate this crime. We, Haitians, are appalled,” a resident of the capital told AFP.

“We need to know who is behind this,” he added.

Police have said a 28-member hit squad of Colombians and Americans had carried out the attack, but that they were still seeking its mastermind­s.

Moise’s security team are in the hot seat and have been summoned to appear before the courts.

Others have speculated on the possible involvemen­t of security agents in the killing, adding to the confusion.

“The president of the Republic, Jovenel Moise, was assassinat­ed by his security agents,” former Haitian senator Steven Benoit said on Magik9 radio Friday. “It is not Colombians who killed him. They were contracted by the Haitian state.”

One of Moise’s last acts as president on Monday was to appoint a new prime minister, Ariel Henry. He had not taken office when Moise was killed.

Hours after the assassinat­ion, Henry’s predecesso­r Claude Joseph said he was in charge.

While the opposition has accused Joseph of powergrabb­ing, the United Nations has said he had authority because Henry had not been sworn in.

Late Friday, a third option was floated.

In an attempt to emerge from what it called an “institutio­nal and political vacuum,” the Senate voted on a resolution to make Senator Joseph Lambert the provisiona­l president.

But the announceme­nt is non-binding. While it does have some support among opposition politician­s, not enough senators are currently in office to legally pass the resolution.

Haiti was already in the midst of an institutio­nal crisis before the assassinat­ion.

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