Weekend Herald

Haiti: How everything changed in days

Ruthless gangs now pushing to become legitimate political force

- Times.

Even as gangs terrorised Haiti, kidnapped civilians en masse and killed at will, the country’s embattled prime minister held on to power for years.

Then, in a matter of days, everything changed.

In the midst of political upheaval not seen since the country’s president was assassinat­ed in 2021, Haiti’s prime minister, Ariel Henry, agreed to step down. Now, neighbouri­ng countries are scrambling to create a transition­al council to run the country and plot a course for elections, which once seemed a distant possibilit­y.

What made this moment different, experts say: The gangs united, forcing the country’s leader to relinquish power.

“Prime Minister Ariel resigned not because of politics, not because of the massive street demonstrat­ions against him over the years, but because of the violence gangs have carried out,” said Judes Jonathas, a Haitian consultant. “The situation totally changed now, because the gangs are now working together.”

It is unclear how strong the alliance is or whether it will last. What is apparent is that the gangs are trying to capitalise on their control of Port-auPrince, the capital, to become a legitimate political force in the negotiatio­ns being brokered by foreign government­s including the United States, France and Caribbean nations.

In early March, Henry travelled to Nairobi to finalise a deal for a Kenyanled security force to deploy to Haiti. Criminal groups seized on the absence of Henry, who is highly unpopular. Within days, the gangs shut down the airport, looted seaports, attacked about a dozen police stations and released about 4600 prisoners.

They demanded Henry resign, threatenin­g to worsen the violence if he refused. Since he agreed to step down, the gangs seem to be largely focused on securing immunity from criminal prosecutio­n and staying out of jail, analysts said.

“Their biggest objective is amnesty,” Jonathas said.

The criminals’ most prominent political ally is Guy Philippe, a former police commander and coup leader who served six years in US federal prison for laundering drug money before being deported to Haiti late last year. He has led the push for Henry to resign.

Now Philippe is openly calling for the gangs to receive amnesty.

“We have to tell them, ‘You will put down the weapons or you will face big consequenc­es,’” Philippe told The New York Times in an interview in January, referring to the gangs. “If you put down the weapons,” he said, “you will have a second chance. You will have some kind of amnesty.”

Philippe does not have a seat on the transition­al council appointed to lead Haiti.

But he is using his connection­s to the Pitit Desalin political party to bring those demands to the negotiatin­g table in Jamaica, where Caribbean and internatio­nal officials are meeting to forge a solution to the crisis in Haiti, according to three people familiar with the discussion­s.

Gang leaders’ decision to unite was most likely motivated by a desire to consolidat­e power after Henry signed the agreement with Kenya to bring 1000 police officers to Port-auPrince, said William O’Neill, the United Nations expert on human rights in Haiti.

Many gang members in Haiti are teenagers, he said, who are looking to be paid but who probably have little interest in going to war with a wellarmed police force.

The gangs respect “fear and force,” O’Neill said. “They fear a force stronger than they are.”

While many doubt that the Kenyan force will bring lasting stability, its arrival would represent the biggest challenge to the gang’s territoria­l control in years.

“The gangs have been hearing about this Kenyan-led force,” for years, said Louis-Henri Mars, the executive director of Lakou Lap, an organisati­on that works with Haitian gangs. “Then they saw that it was finally coming, so they launched a preemptive strike.”

The violence unleashed by the gangs shut down much of the capital and prevented Henry from being able to return to his country.

This was the tipping point: The United States and Caribbean leaders viewed Haiti’s situation as “untenable.” US officials concluded Henry was no longer a viable partner and sharpened their calls for him to move quickly toward a transition of power, officials involved in the political negotiatio­ns said.

Since then, gang leaders have been speaking to journalist­s, holding news conference­s, promising peace and demanding a seat at the table.

Jimmy Chrizier, a powerful gang leader also known as Barbecue, has become one of the best-known faces of the new gang alliance, known as Living Together.

A former police officer known for his ruthlessne­ss, Chrizier’s gang, the G-9, commands downtown Port-auPrince and has been accused of attacking neighbourh­oods allied with opposition political parties, looting homes, raping women and killing people at random.

Yet in his news conference­s, Chrizier has apologised for the violence and blamed Haiti’s economic and political systems for country’s destitutio­n and inequality. Philippe has echoed that thinking.

“Those young girls, those young boys, they have no other opportunit­y — to die starving or to take weapons,” Philippe told the

“They chose to take weapons.”

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