Police arrest alleged mastermind of Haiti president’s murder as U. S. investigators arrive
Moise’s killing fuels political crisis as rivals vie for power
HAITI’S national police has announced the arrest of the suspected mastermind in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise.
A Haitian doctor living in the U. S. state of Florida was arrested, police chief Leon Charles said at a news conference.
The suspected killers called him after the attack and evidence was found in his flat, Mr Charles said.
The 63- year- old doctor recently arrived in Haiti on a private plane to seize the presidency, he said.
He allegedly hired Colombian mercenaries through a private Venezuelan security firm based in Florida.
Meanwhile, a team of American government officials have traveled to Haiti to assist the investigation into the assassination of the country’s president and to push for a political accord, U. S. officials said.
While the White House and Pentagon are reviewing the Haitian government’s request for troops to help secure the country, there has been little enthusiasm for sending American soldiers or Marines.
But a team of F. B. I. agents and Department of Homeland Security officials have been assisting the investigation into last Wednesday’s killing of President Jovenel Moïse of Haiti. State Department and National Security Council officials were also part of the team.
“The delegation reviewed the security of critical infrastructure with Haitian government officials and met with the Haitian National Police, who are leading the investigation into the assassination,” the National Security Council spokeswoman, Emily Horne, said in a statement yesterday.
“The delegation also met with Acting Prime Minister Claude Joseph and Prime Minister- Designate Ariel Henry in a joint meeting, as well as Senate President Joseph Lambert, to encourage open and constructive dialogue to reach a political accord that can enable the country to hold free and fair elections.”
In another development, the wife of assassinated Haitian President, Jovenel Moise, has spoken for the first time since gunmen stormed the couple’s home in Port- au- Prince, saying the attack that killed her husband happened “in the blink of an eye”.
In an audio message posted on her official Twitter account on Saturday, Martine Moise called on Haiti not to “lose its way” after the attack that left her critically injured.
“I am alive, thanks to God,” Martine Moise said in Creole in the audio message, which Haiti’s minister of culture and communications, Pradel Henriquez, confirmed to the AFP news agency as being authentic.
Haitian authorities say an armed commando of 28 men, 26 Colombians and two Haitian- Americans, burst in and opened fire on the couple in their home. Seventeen people have been arrested so far and at least three suspects were killed, but no motive has been made public.
“In the blink of an eye, the mercenaries entered my home and riddled my husband with bullets without even giving him a chance to say a word,” Martine said in the audio message.
She also said the mercenaries were sent to kill her husband “because of roads, water, electricity and referendum as well as elections at the end of the year so that there is no transition in the country”.
“I am crying, it is true, but we cannot let the country lose its way,” Martine Moise said. “We cannot let his blood have been spilled in vain.”
Long before President Jovenel Moïse was assassinated, political fault lines in Haiti had been drawn especially as the president had been attacking his political rivals, dismantling the nation’s democratic institutions and making enemies of church and gang leaders alike .