Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Plan to install new leaders in Haiti crumbles

- By Dánica Coto and Evens Sanon

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — A proposal to install new leadership in Haiti appeared to be crumbling Wednesday as some political parties rejected the plan to create a presidenti­al council that would manage the transition.

The panel would be responsibl­e for selecting an interim prime minister and a council of ministers that would attempt to chart a new path for the Caribbean country that has been overrun by gangs. The violence has closed schools and businesses and disrupted daily life across Haiti.

Jean Charles Moïse, an exsenator and presidenti­al candidate who has teamed up with former rebel leader Guy Philippe, held a news conference Wednesday to announce his rejection of the proposed council backed by the internatio­nal community.

Mr. Moïse insisted that a three-person presidenti­al council he created with Philippe and a Haitian judge should be implemente­d.

“We are not going to negotiate it,” he said in a loud voice as he wiped his forehead with a handkerchi­ef. “We have to make them understand.”

His ally Philippe, who helped lead a successful revolt in 2004 against former President Jean- Bertrand Aristide and was recently released from a U.S. prison after pleading guilty to money laundering, said no Haitian should accept any proposal from the internatio­nal community.

In a video posted Tuesday on social media, Philippe accused the community of being complicit with Haiti’s elite and corrupt politician­s and urged Haitians to take to the streets.

“The decision of CARICOM is not our decision,” he said, referring to the regional trade bloc whose leaders presented the plan to create a transition­al council. “Haitians will decide who will govern Haiti.”

Other high-profile Haitian politician­s declined to participat­e in the proposed transition­al council. Among them were Himmler Rébu, former colonel of Haiti’s army and president of the Grand Rally for the Evolution of Haiti, a party that is part of a coalition awarded a spot on the transition­al council.

He said in a statement that the party prefers that a judge from Haiti’s Supreme Court assume the reins of power.

Mr. Rébu added that the party is “ashamed and angry” upon seeing “the search for positions of power that do not take into account the responsibi­lities attached to them.”

Caribbean leaders who announced the plan for the transition­al council did not respond to messages for comment.

 ?? Clarens Siffroy/AFP via Getty Images ?? A protester reacts while tires burn in the street Tuesday during a demonstrat­ion following the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Ariel Henry in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Clarens Siffroy/AFP via Getty Images A protester reacts while tires burn in the street Tuesday during a demonstrat­ion following the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Ariel Henry in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States