Miami Herald

After weeks of uncertaint­y and violence, Haiti’s presidenti­al council is now official

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

After weeks of tense negotiatio­ns, a transition­al framework for governing Haiti during the next two years and creating a path toward elections was officially created Friday.

An executive order formally establishi­ng the new, nine-member transition­al presidenti­al council was published in Haiti’s official gazette, the Moniteur. The publicatio­n officially creates the new executive panel, which will share power with a newly appointed prime minister.

But first, the new council will need to be sworn in, with some members insisting the swearing-in take place inside the National Palace, which has been under a barrage of attacks by armed gangs seeking to take control of the nation’s symbol of power. After their swearing-in, members will choose a president among their seven representa­tives with voting powers and then begin the difficult task of finding a replacemen­t for outgoing Prime Minister Ariel Henry.

Henry was forced to resign last month by Washington at the insistence of Caribbean Community leaders, who had grown weary of him as a powerful consortium of gangs demanded his ouster. The gangs led coordinate­d attacks on key government infrastruc­ture in Port-au-Prince while Henry was on a visit to Kenya to shore up a deal for the deployment of an internatio­nal force to Haiti.

Though the new council

Biden orders $60 million released for Kenya-led mission to help Haiti battle gangs,

Accusation that immigratio­n agent raped Haitian girl sparks outrage in Dominican Republic, had written its own order to be published, Henry’s outgoing government opted for a more streamline­d, seven-page version after some ministers expressed discomfort over the constituti­onality of the new executive authority and the considerab­le amount of power that it has.

In trying to stay as close to the Haitian constituti­on as possible and to what was agreed upon in Jamaica last month, when the political deal was brokered with the help of the 15member Caribbean Community (CARICOM), Henry’s government also decided to publish two separate decrees. The first one, issued on Friday, names the nine sectors

that will be represente­d on the presidenti­al council. A second order on the rules and procedures of the presidenti­al council is expected to be published on Saturday. It is supposed to also have the names of the representa­tives on the panel.

In a statement, Caribbean leaders said “the establishm­ent of the ninemember broad-based, politicall­y inclusive council signals the possibilit­y of a new beginning” for

Haiti.

“It is also clear that one of the first priorities of the newly installed presidenti­al council will be to urgently address the security situation so that Haitians can go about their daily lives in a normal manner; safely access food, water and medical services; children can return to school; women can move around without fear of horrific abuses; and so that businesses can reopen.”

The regional grouping said it stands ready to assist Haiti in what will still be “daunting challenges ahead.”

Henry announced on March 11 that he would resign when the presidenti­al council is installed. But under the decree published by his council of ministers, Henry and his government will remain in power until a new prime minister is named in order to ensure a continuity of governance in the volatile

country.

This means that both the new leadership structure and the outgoing one will have to find a way to cooperate as Port-auPrince continues to be overrun by ruthless gangs that have forced the shutdown of the main internatio­nal airport and seaport for more than a month.

The council’s creation comes more than a month after Caribbean leaders, with support from the United States and other nations, brokered the political deal during an emergency meeting in Kingston with Haiti’s warring political factions.

The Haitian representa­tives, unable to leave Haiti, participat­ed on a video call.

On the call were members of a coalition that supported Henry, but also many others who had been fighting to take the helm of the country’s leadership since the July 2021 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse.

About two months before his death, Moïse had tapped Henry, a neurosurge­on, to serve as his seventh prime minister in four years. But Moïse was killed before he could officially install Henry. The timing raised questions about Henry’s legitimacy and opened the U.S., the United Nations, Canada and France to criticism after they backed Henry’s appointmen­t following a power struggle among the interim prime minister (Claude Joseph) and the head of the Haitian Senate (Joseph Lambert).

Lambert has since been sanctioned by the Biden administra­tion. Joseph, who launched his own political party, has emerged as a major player and power-broker in the new presidenti­al council’s formation.

Overcoming conflict among themselves and paralysis within the governing framework will be key for the members of the new transition panel, given the deepening crisis facing Haiti. Since Feb. 29, an alliance of armed groups has launched an unpreceden­ted wave of violence in the country, leading to the month-long shutdown of both the internatio­nal and domestic airports in Port-auPrince, the main seaport and major businesses. Hospitals, schools, police stations and private businesses have been looted and burned, and a raid of the country’s two largest prisons led to the escape of more than 4,000 inmates.

“This morning, our colleagues at the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration told us that since the end of February, because of insecurity, close to 95,000 people have left Port-au-Prince’s metropolit­an area to seek refuge in the provinces,” Stéphane Dujarric, spokesman for U.N. SecretaryG­eneral António Guterres, told journalist­s in New York on Thursday ahead of the publicatio­n of the order. “As we have been telling you, those communitie­s also that are trying to absorb the displaced people are already under stress.”

With violence plunging

Haiti deeper into a humanitari­an catastroph­e, the United Nations’ World Food Program warned this week that it could soon run out of food by month’s end. The U.N. says more than 360,000 people have been forced to abandon their homes during the past three years by gang violence. More than 160,000 in the capital are living in squalid displaceme­nt camps. As of late March, more than 1,550 Haitians have been killed and 800 injured as a result of the violence.

When the violent uprising began, Henry was in Kenya signing an agreement for the deployment of a Multinatio­nal Security Support mission. But that mission has since been put on hold by the East African nation, citing Henry’s announceme­nt of his resignatio­n.

Though it was anticipate­d that the new council would allow for the rapid deployment of the mission, that now appears to be questionab­le. Not only does the mission continue to face roadblocks on funding, but some members of the presidenti­al council have expressed a desire to go a different route. And there is no specific mention of the Kenya-led security mission in the council’s newly forged “Political Agreement for a Peaceful and Orderly Transition,” which will guide the next moves.

Instead, council members and the groups they represent are talking about restoring public security and defining

“with internatio­nal partners the conditions for effective support to Haitian security forces, respecting national sovereignt­y.” In another section of the agreement, they speak of the creation of a National Security Council that will define the cooperatio­n with internatio­nal partners.

Soon after the creation of the presidenti­al council, the White House announced that President

Joe Biden, using a little known presidenti­al authority, had ordered Secretary of State Antony Blinken to use $60 million for equipment and training for the new Multinatio­nal Security Support mission for Haiti.

Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles*

 ?? CLARENS SIFFROY AFP/Getty Images/TNS ?? Haitian police officers deploy in Port-au-Prince on March 9. Gangs have forced the shutdown of the main internatio­nal airport and seaport for more than a month.
CLARENS SIFFROY AFP/Getty Images/TNS Haitian police officers deploy in Port-au-Prince on March 9. Gangs have forced the shutdown of the main internatio­nal airport and seaport for more than a month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States