Business World

Haiti president’s assassinat­ion shakes fragile nation

- By Catherine Porter, Michael Crowley and Constant Méheut 2021 The New York Times

THE FIRST explosions rang out after 1 a.m., shattering the calm in the neighborho­od that was home to President Jovenel Moïse and many of Haiti’s most affluent citizens.

Residents immediatel­y feared two of the terrors that have plagued the nation — gang violence or an earthquake — but by dawn, a much different reality had emerged: The president was dead.

A group of unknown assailants had stormed Mr. Moïse’s residence early Wednesday, shooting him and wounding his wife, Martine Moïse, in what officials called a wellplanne­d operation that included “foreigners” who spoke Spanish.

In a televised broadcast to the nation, the nation’s interim prime minister, Claude Joseph, appealed for calm and presented himself as the new head of the government, announcing that he and his fellow ministers had declared a “state of siege.” Haiti is now under a form of martial law.

The assassinat­ion left a political void that deepened the turmoil and violence that has gripped Haiti for months, threatenin­g to tip one of the world’s most troubled nations further into lawlessnes­s.

While the details of who shot the president and why remained unknown, four people suspected of being involved in the assassinat­ion were killed by the police in a gunbattle and two others were arrested, Haiti’s police chief said late Wednesday. The chief, Léon Charles, also said that three police officers who had been held hostage were freed.

“The police are engaged in a battle with the assailants,” he said at a news conference, noting that the authoritie­s were still chasing some suspects. “We are pursuing them so that, in a gunfight, they meet their fate or in gunfight they die, or we apprehend them.”

In recent months, protesters had taken to the streets to demand Mr. Moïse step down in February, five years after his election, at what they deemed was the end his term.

Armed gangs have taken greater control of the streets, terrorizin­g poor neighborho­ods and sending thousands fleeing, kidnapping even schoolchil­dren and church pastors in the middle of their services. Poverty and hunger are rising, with many accusing members of the government of enriching themselves while not providing the population with even the most basic services.

In an interview, Mr. Joseph told The New York Times that he was now in control of the country, but it was unclear how much legitimacy he had, or how long it might last. A new prime minister had been scheduled to replace Mr. Joseph this week — he would have been the sixth to hold the job in Mr. Moïse’s term. The head of the nation’s highest court, who might have helped establish order, died of coronaviru­s disease 2019 (COVID-19) in June.

“We are in total confusion,” said Jacky Lumarque, rector of Quisqueya University, a large private university in Port-au-Prince. “We have two prime ministers. We can’t say which is more legitimate than the other.”

“This is the first time where we’ve seen that the state is so weak,” he added.

Haiti’s ambassador to the United States, Bocchit Edmond, said at a news conference that the killing of the country’s president had been carried out “by well-trained profession­als, killers, commandos.”

He said the attackers had presented themselves as agents of the US Drug Enforcemen­t Agency, but that they were “fake DEA” and “profession­al killers.” He said he was basing his assessment on security camera footage of the attack.

Mr. Moïse’s wife survived the attack and was “stable, but in critical condition,” Mr. Edmond said. She was transporte­d to Miami for treatment, arriving there Wednesday evening.

President Joseph R. Biden said Wednesday that he was “shocked and saddened” by the assassinat­ion and the shooting of the president’s wife. “We condemn this heinous act,” Mr. Biden said in a statement. Secretary of State Antony Blinken spoke with Mr. Joseph, offering condolence­s, the State Department said.

Mr. Moïse had held on to the office, arguing he had only occupied the position for four years of the five-year term. In the first year after he was elected, an interim president took over as the country investigat­ed allegation­s of fraud.

Many Haitians — including constituti­onal scholars and legal experts — contended that his fiveyear term started when he was elected, and has since expired. But the United States and the Organizati­on of American States backed Mr. Moïse.

Within Haiti, experts warned, the political vacuum left by Mr. Moïse’s killing could fuel a renewed cycle of violence. As the population struggled to assess the situation, the normally clogged streets of the capital remained ominously empty.

Banks and stores were shuttered; university classrooms vacant; the ti machann — or market women — who normally line the shoulders of roads selling their wares were conspicuou­sly absent.

Lines formed as some people tried to stock up on water — which is normally bought by the container in poorer areas — in case they end up hunkered down for a long time. Many others huddled at home, calling friends and family to check their safety and to ask for updates. In some middle-class neighborho­ods, people gathered on the sidewalks, sharing their fears for the country’s future.

“Things are hard and ugly now,” said Jenny Joseph, a university student from the suburb of Carrefour. “For the next few days, things will be crazy in Haiti.”

Mr. Joseph, the interim prime minister, has put Haiti under a form of martial law. For 15 days, the police and security members can enter homes, control traffic and take special security measures and “all general measures that permit the arrest of the assassins.” The decree also forbids meetings meant to incite disorder.

At the moment, Haiti has no functionin­g Parliament. Mr. Moïse’s government did not call elections, even after the terms of the entire lower house expired more than a year ago. Only 10 of Haiti’s 30 senate seats are currently filled. Mr. Moïse had been struggling to quell growing public anger over remaining in power.

After Mr. Moïse did not leave office in February, when many in the opposition deemed his term over, thousands of Haitians took to the streets in large marches, demanding his resignatio­n. The government responded by arresting 23 people, including a top judge and a senior police officer, who the president said had tried to kill him and overthrow the government.

Mr. Moïse counted on a high level of protection, traveling regularly with more than a dozen armored cars and police guards. There are often 100 officers from the presidenti­al guard around the president’s home, said former Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe.

There had been no specific warning of the overnight attack, said the Haitian ambassador, Mr. Edmond.

It was not clear whether any of the suspected assassins who had not been killed or arrested in the gunbattle with the police were still in Haiti. Because the country’s airport was closed down on Wednesday, the ambassador said, they might have slipped across the border to the Dominican Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, or escaped by sea.

Mr. Edmond said he has been in touch with the White House, the State Department and the US ambassador to Haiti, and has called on the United States for help.

The support, he said, would help “to make sure Haiti doesn’t go even deeper into a spiral of violence,” and specifical­ly, “to make sure that the Haitian police have the necessary means to put the situation under control.” —

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