Miami Herald

Political wrangling and a delay in Kenyan deployment complicate path out of Haiti’s crisis

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES AND MICHAEL WILNER jcharles@miamiheral­d.com mwilner@mcclatchyd­c.com

A day after an internatio­nal coalition tasked a group of prominent Haitians with putting together a transition­al presidenti­al council that would create a functionin­g government for the gang-ridden nation, bickering among the Haitian leaders threatened to derail the deal.

On Monday, a group of nations, led by the 15member Caribbean Community bloc known as CARICOM and which included the United States and the United Nations, came together in Jamaica to discuss ways to help violence-torn Haiti figure out a way forward. After hearing on Zoom from Haitian leaders representi­ng a broad section of society, the group gave the Haitians 24 hours to come up with names to form a council with seven voting members and two nonvoting members serving as observers.

The council’s first task: Replace Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who has announced his intention to step down. The other key tasks: Ready the country for the arrival of a multinatio­nal security force and prepare the way for elections.

As of late Tuesday night, no names had been transmitte­d.

Soon after agreeing to the proposal Monday evening, the Haitian leaders, who represent broadbased groups, started fighting among themselves. Among their concerns: the presidenti­al council is too large. It is unclear who would be in charge. The compositio­n gives some political factions more influence than others.

Gédéon Jean — who participat­ed in the Kingston meeting as a representa­tive of civil society, which has a role as an observer along with the interfaith community — agreed that, although not perfect, the Jamaica group’s proposal is workable.

“A presidenti­al college is not an ideal solution, but it responds to a need,” said Jean, founder of the Center for Analysis and Research. But the disagreeme­nts on how to run Haiti with a more inclusive government, even before Tuesday, kept the groups from reaching an accord, he said: “We couldn’t.”

Any delay carries serious risks. Powerful gangs control most of Port-auPrince, the country’s capital, and the U.S., among others, fears the country’s last remnants of a government could fall soon. An internatio­nal force to be fielded by Kenya won’t deploy, the country’s leadership made clear Monday, until Henry’s replacemen­t is in position. And without any semblance of stability and security, Haiti, which doesn’t have a single elected official, cannot hold elections. The country last held general elections in 2016.

Although leaders of the seven groups did not make public announceme­nts Tuesday about the infighting, sources involved in the discussion­s over names and others following the developmen­ts told the Miami Herald there were serious disagreeme­nts, especially among those who are aligned with civic groups and said they believed there was an over-representa­tion of political parties on the council. Divisions were also reported among the supporters who backed a December 21, 2022, agreement and Henry.

In a statement, former army Colonel Himmler Rebu, who participat­ed in an initial meeting in Jamaica nine months ago about finding a way out of the crisis, said his party, the Grand Rally for the Evolution of Haiti, GREH, is ashamed and angry over “the negotiatio­ns for the search for positions of power,” which ignore the gang-plagued crisis confrontin­g Haiti. GREH is in the Collective of political parties of January 30 and is among the seven voting members.

Rebu suggested Haiti return to the model it used in 2004, when it found itself in another transition: pluck a judge from the Supreme Court to preside as president, Rebu said, adding his party “declares that it does not support any of the approaches dealing with the presidenti­al college.”

His party is part of the Collective of political parties of January 30.

The seven voting groups tasked with naming the presidenti­al panel represent a cross-section of Haitian society, including political parties, civil leaders and the business community. They are:

Collective of political parties of January 30, an alliance that includes former Sen. Edgard LeBlanc Fils, former presidenti­al candidate and journalist Clarens Renois, and Liné Balthazar, leader of Parti Haïtien Tèt Kale, PHTK, the party of former President Michel Martelly.

December 21 Agreement, a coalition of 35 political parties, civic organizati­ons, women’s and young people’s groups as well as churches and business leaders. They got their name after backing a Dec. 21, 2022, political accord that consolidat­ed Henry’s grip on power. Some of its most notable personalit­ies include former Sen. Edmonde Supplice Beauzile, head of the Fusion Social Democrats politcal party and opposition leader and lawyer Andre Michel.

EDE/RED/Compromis Historique, a coalition led by Claude Joseph, who served as foreign minister and prime minister in the government of former President Jovenel Moïse. Joseph is the founder of Engagés pour le développem­ent — Creole for the party Committed to Developmen­t. Also in the alliance is former Chamber of Deputies member Antoine Rodon Bien-Aimé, founder of Compromis Historique. The alliance is often referred to as the Jovenelist­s, an ode to the supporters of the late president, who was assassinat­ed in the middle of the night on July 7, 2021.

Fanmi Lavalas, the political party of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Fanmi Lavalas along with the party En Avant, founded by former lawmaker Jerry Tardieu, helped author a March 9 proposal that was sent to CARICOM, and helped influenced the final plan.

Montana Accord, named after an Aug. 30, 2021, agreement signed at the Montana Hotel in Petionvill­le, a wealthy suburb of Port-au-Prince. Led by the Commission to Search for a Haitian Solution to the Crisis, the group is a coalition of political parties, civic organizati­ons and the private sector and has found support among Haitians abroad, the U.S. Congress and Canada’s parliament. The group waged a campaign to lead a transition in Haiti and had named Fritz Alphonse Jean, the former governor of the country’s central bank, as president, and former Sen. Steven Benoit as prime minister.

Pitit Desalin, the party of former senator and presidenti­al candidate Jean-Charles Moïse, who is also known as Moïse Jean-Charles. The onetime lawmaker, who served as mayor of the northern town of Milot, recently joined an alliance with a former rebel leader, Guy Philippe, and has backed a three-person presidenti­al transition council with Philippe as a member.

The private sector, which includes business associatio­ns and chambers. However, in a press release on Tuesday, the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Haiti said while it remains “hopeful for a rapid and peaceful resolution” to the crisis, as the representa­tive body of the country’s influentia­l business community it had “not been contacted by the actors involved in the search for a solution.”

In Haitian political circles on Tuesday, some critics were calling the transition­al plan “totally ungovernab­le.”

The rules for membership on the presidenti­al panel exclude anyone with a criminal conviction. One-time coup leader Philippe, who served more than six years in a U.S. federal prison on a drugtraffi­cking conviction, wasted no time in publicly accusing the Caribbean Community and other countries of destroying Haiti.

“They destroyed all of the structures we could have put in place to help our people and they took total control of all that is being decided in Haiti,” Philippe said. “Their only objective is to drop Haiti in a hole.”

Haitians, he said, cannot accept what the group of nations that met in Jamaica has proposed.

One of Haiti’s most powerful gang leaders, Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier, who had warned of a civil war if Henry did not resign, dismissed the Jamaica proposal as well.

Despite their objections, the capital was relatively calm on Tuesday, although the night before, there were reports of looting at businesses not far from the U.S. Embassy in Tabarre.

THE CRITERIA

Each group must submit a name to members of the 15-member Caribbean Community and each person selected must meet certain criteria, which include: the person cannot run in the next election; cannot be under U.N. sanctions; and must support the Multinatio­nal Security Support mission to Haiti.

The criteria does not ban people who have been sanctioned by the U.S., Canada or another country.

Paul Namphy, an activist in Miami, said the criteria do not go far enough. Even with the disqualifi­cation of those with conviction­s or indictment­s, Namphy, head of the activist arm of Miamibased Family Action Network Movement, said, “There are a lot of the actors who are able to be part of this council who have connection­s to the gangs.”

In a statement, the organizati­on said parties

“are now obliged to negotiate for power-sharing and an emergency solution while a gun is pointed at the head of the Haitian people.”

Caribbean leaders said they considered proposals from the Haitian groups before settling on the presidenti­al panel of seven members plus two nonvoting observers.

“You can’t have absolute purity, and politics doesn’t come to an end with the transition­al presidenti­al council,” Ralph Gonsalves, the prime minister of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, told the Miami Herald. “It’s a body to provide some framework for governance.”

Gonsalves was among the Caribbean leaders who flew to Kingston for the meetings. He said he hopes Haitians understand what is at stake: The potential rise of a dictator and a society where “everybody who’s squabbling now will be behind closed doors or in jail. They must be mature, and they must learn how to think carefully politicall­y and comprise.”

A senior State Department official praised the Jamaica negotiatio­ns, saying 39 Haitians had been part of conversati­ons in the days leading up to the Kingston meeting.

“I think this is an incredibly important milestone in broadening Haitian governance, and addressing the concerns of the Haitian people going forward,” he said.

In his briefing with reporters at the White House on Monday, Jake Sullivan, the president’s national-security adviser, would not predict success for the new political effort.

“What we are driving toward is a transition­al council that can pave the way to elections and the restoratio­n of calm on the streets of Haiti, and then a new government that can come in alongside this Multinatio­nal Security Support mission, enable security, and then build from there. That is what we are driving towards,” he said.

“Can I confidentl­y predict that will happen?” he added. “I cannot.”

Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

 ?? ??
 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH AP ?? Pedestrian­s and commuters fill a street in Port-au-Prince on Tuesday. Soon after agreeing to a proposal Monday, Haitian leaders started fighting among themselves. Among their concerns: the presidenti­al council is too large. It is unclear who would be in charge. The compositio­n gives some political factions more influence than others.
ODELYN JOSEPH AP Pedestrian­s and commuters fill a street in Port-au-Prince on Tuesday. Soon after agreeing to a proposal Monday, Haitian leaders started fighting among themselves. Among their concerns: the presidenti­al council is too large. It is unclear who would be in charge. The compositio­n gives some political factions more influence than others.
 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH AP ?? A priest swings incense in front of a photo of police Officer Luciana Pierre during her memorial service in Port-au-Prince on Tuesday. According to her family, Pierre was killed by gangs the previous week and her body has not been recovered.
ODELYN JOSEPH AP A priest swings incense in front of a photo of police Officer Luciana Pierre during her memorial service in Port-au-Prince on Tuesday. According to her family, Pierre was killed by gangs the previous week and her body has not been recovered.

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