Daily Dispatch

Haiti names transition­al council members

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Haiti’s government on Tuesday named the members of a transition­al council set to take power when Prime Minister Ariel Henry steps down — inching closer to putting in place measures that could restore security in the violence-wracked country.

The council is expected to choose a leader and a prime minister and wield certain presidenti­al powers by majority vote. Its mandate runs to February 2026.

The government, however, did not give a date for the council’s installmen­t and local lawyers have warned that the process of confirming the members could be long and several nominees could be rejected.

Henry left Haiti in February to seek internatio­nal help for the country’s police in their battles with armed and powerful gangs. When worsening violence blocked his return, Henry announced his resignatio­n.

Finance Minister Michel Patrick Boisvert has since been in charge, though his actions have been limited to signing off on nighttime curfews.

The transition­al council, which had been long delayed and whose creation was only formalized on Friday, will include seven voting members and two non-voting members.

The voting members are former central bank governor Fritz Alphonse Jean, former ambassador to the Dominican Republic Smith Augustin, barrister Emmanuel Vertilaire, former senate president Edgard Leblanc, ex-senator Louis Gerald Gilles, businessma­n Laurent Saint-cyr and Leslie Voltaire, a former diplomat.

The non-voting observers are evangelica­l pastor Frinel Joseph and Regine Abraham, who once worked for the World Bank and the country’s environmen­t ministry.

Violence has escalated in Henry’s absence. Ports and the capital’s airport remain closed, and nearly half the country is going hungry.

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