Miami Herald

Who will lead Haiti? Naming of transition panel is mired in uncertaint­y and disputes

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

Caribbean Community leaders, charged with helping Haiti find a path out of political chaos and gang violence, received names Thursday from five national groups for candidates to lead a panel overseeing the transition to a new government.

But the final makeup of the critical panel remains in question. In one case, a candidate expressed concern that throwing his hat in the ring could put his family at risk. Another group submitted multiple candidates. And yet another rejected the idea of outsiders helping decide Haiti’s political future..

The uncertaint­y reflects not just political wrangling but the difficulti­es in trying to move a country forward with a divided political class that has failed to control heavily armed groups that, after a short lull in violence, relaunched attacks. On Thursday, gangs fired shots near the internatio­nal airport in the direction of police headquarte­rs in Port-au-Prince, the capital. They are also believed to be behind a fire at the home of the country’s police chief. The blaze erupted soon after police repelled the attack near their headquarte­rs.

Armed gangs also reportedly looted a coffee business in the Lower Delmas neighborho­od of the capital. A heavy exchange of gunfire was reported near the Marassa/Tabarre bridge, and the Santo road from Marassa to Santo 17 was blocked.

The instabilit­y, the United Nations warned this week, is making an already dire humanitari­an crisis even worse.

While calling on its members to help Haiti with humanitari­an and security needs, United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ spokesman said “there also needs to be a stepping up of the Haitian political class to find a way forward and act in a way that will be in the best interests of the Haitian people.”

Haitian leaders on Monday were given 24 hours to submit their choices after an internatio­nal coalition, led by the 15member Caribbean Community (CARICOM), the United States and other foreign government­s met in Jamaica to begin drawing up a proposal mapping out a political transition. But some parties involved in the discussion­s said it was not enough time to narrow down choices — particular­ly with daily life under duress. “Even the head of the police is unable to protect himself,” one of them said after Police Chief Frantz Elbe’s house went up in flames.

Under the plan, the presidenti­al transition­al council will have sevenvotin­g members and two non-members. It’s task will be to find a replacemen­t for outgoing Prime Minister Ariel Henry after he announced his pending resignatio­n amid U.S. pressure. Then the council and new head of the government will form an inclusive government, ready the country for a Multinatio­nal Security Support mission and eventual elections.

The panel approach was cobbled together after influentia­l Haitian figures were unable to decide among themselves on one proposal and sent several plans to CARICOM.

In at least one case, Caribbean leaders have received several names from one of the groups, December 21. The alliance of opposition forces once pushed for the ouster of late President Jovenel

Moïse but came together to back Henry and help consolidat­e his grip on power with a Dec. 21, 2022, political agreement before he was asked this month by Washington to resign.

Infighting among the members has resulted in the coalition splinterin­g into three factions, sources say, and sending in three names to CARICOM for the December 21’s one voting seat.

How CARICOM will proceed remains unclear. So does the timeline for when the installati­on of the new government will take place. After the presidenti­al council is set up, members will need to figure out who will be president and how the council will function. They also have to decide on a prime minister to replace Henry, who this week announced that he and his government will resign once the council is installed.

Finance Minister Michel Patrick Boisvert, who has been serving as acting prime minister, remains in his role.

On Wednesday, one of the groups given a voting seat — Platform Pitit Desalin, also written as Dessalines and named after Haiti’s founding father, Jean-Jacques Dessalines — declined to participat­e in the council. Party leader*

Jean-Charles Moïse, a former senator, said he had thrown the offer “into the trash.”

“CARICOM cannot present us with a sevenheade­d serpent,” he said during a press conference.

The former presidenti­al candidate and senator, who also goes by Moïse Jean-Charles, said he plans to install his own presidenti­al council. The three-person council includes a member of the religious community, an appeals-court judge and former rebel leader Guy Philippe, who has the backing of his party and some gang leaders to be president.

Jean-Charles claims his three-member council has the endorsemen­t of 150 political parties, 3,250 grassroots organizati­ons, peasants and workers.

“I told them that this agreement was a nonnegotia­ble national consensus,” he said of his discussion with CARICOM. Taking credit for the overthrow of Henry’s government, the political leader said he couldn’t understand how the regional bloc was now asking him to negotiate with people he had kicked out of the country.

“We will take the destiny of our country into our own hands with other leaders so that our threemembe­r Presidenti­al

Council can move forward,” the party leader said.

It remains unclear how Caribbean leaders will assign the Dessalines voting seat. Some are suggesting it be granted to the interfaith community and/or civil society, which both have observer status and have not yet put forward their representa­tives. In the meantime, the Miami Herald has confirmed these groups sent in names:

Collective of political parties of January

30: The alliance of political parties is also known by its Creole-spelled name Collecti and includes the party of former President Michel Martelly. The alliance has forwarded the name of former Sen. Edgard LeBlanc Fils, 68, a co-founder of the Organizati­on of the People in Struggle (OPL), a political party. An engineer, he was president of the Senate from 1995 to 2000 during the administra­tion of President of René Préval

December 21 Agreement: The coalition has been dealing with internal fighting over who should be its representa­tive. One group, supported by political leader Andre Michel, has sent the name of the former president of the Chamber of Deputies (Levaillant Louis-Jeune). A group of younger generation­s

The coalition led by former Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Claude Joseph, who served in the government of Jovenel Moïse, has offered up Marie Gislhaine Mompremier. The only woman named so far, she is a law professor and attorney in the northern city of CapHaïtien. She also is a former minister of Social Affairs and Labor and Women Affairs.

Fanmi Lavalas: The political party of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide has chosen Leslie Voltaire, who studied at Universida­d Nacional Autónoma de México and has a masters degree in urban planning from Cornell University in New York. An architect and urban planner, Voltaire is a former minister for Haitians living abroad during the Aristide government. After Haiti’s devastatin­g 2010 earthquake, he was involved in reconstruc­tion efforts and unsuccessf­ully ran for president in the election that followed. He is fluent in Spanish, French, English and Creole.

Montana Accord:

The group is named after an Aug. 30, 2021, agreement signed at the Montana Hotel in Petionvill­e, a wealthy suburb of Port-auPrince and led by the Commission to Search for a Haitian Solution to the Crisis. The group has submitted Fritz Alphonse Jean, who served as interim prime minister of Haiti’s 2016 caretaker government. He was eventually blocked by the Parliament from taking on the job permanentl­y. A former governor of the Banque de la République d’Haïti from 1998 to 2001, Jean has been involved in promoting developmen­t in the rural sectors of northern Haiti. He’s a U.S.-educated economist who is considered more of a technocrat than a politician.

The private sector: Haiti’s influentia­l private sector has faced its own internal difference­s after the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Haiti said it was not consulted. A name has yet to be offered.

Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH AP ?? A father lifts his daughter to the front of a line of people waiting on Thursday to receive food at a shelter for families displaced by gang violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
ODELYN JOSEPH AP A father lifts his daughter to the front of a line of people waiting on Thursday to receive food at a shelter for families displaced by gang violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH AP ?? A woman squeezes through volunteers after she is given the go-ahead on Thursday to pass through for food at a shelter for families displaced by gang violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
ODELYN JOSEPH AP A woman squeezes through volunteers after she is given the go-ahead on Thursday to pass through for food at a shelter for families displaced by gang violence in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States