The Jerusalem Post

Haiti PM says will hand power to ruling council as violence continues

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PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) – Haiti’s Prime Minister Ariel Henry, stranded in Puerto Rico as gang violence sweeps across his country, said on Monday night he will resign as soon as a transition council and a temporary leader are chosen.

But it was not clear when this might happen as the security situation in the capital deteriorat­es and plans for the deployment of an internatio­nal mission to restore order run into problems.

Henry, who has led the Caribbean country since the assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moise in 2021 but who was not elected to office, remains stuck in the US territory of Puerto Rico after traveling to Kenya in late February to secure its support for a United Nationsbac­ked security mission.

Meanwhile Kenya said its police officers will soon be in Haiti to confront the gangs – but the worsening violence and uncertaint­y about financing have cast doubt on the mission’s prospects.

“The government that I am leading will resign immediatel­y after the installati­on of [a transition] council,” Henry said in a late night video address. “I’m asking all Haitians to remain calm and do everything they can for peace and stability to come back as fast as possible.”

Following his announceme­nt, Haitians celebrated in the streets in the capital Port-au-Prince, with people dancing to music in a party

atmosphere and setting off fireworks, videos distribute­d on Haitian social media showed.

The planned presidenti­al transition council, announced after a meeting of Caribbean leaders in Kingston, Jamaica, on Monday will represent diverse sectors of Haitian society.

Their tasks include appointing an interim prime minister and a cabinet, and establishi­ng a provisiona­l electoral council to facilitate elections, Haiti’s first since 2016.

The council will include a religious leader, a civil society representa­tive, and members from various political and business sectors. Specific appointmen­ts have

not been made yet.

The timeline for the council’s formation and the elections is contingent on establishi­ng security in the country. Guyana’s President Mohamed Irfaan Ali, head of CARICOM – the Caribbean Community political and economic regional bloc – said the plan had not yet been finalized.

Heavily armed gangs expanded their wealth, influence, and territoria­l control under the administra­tion of Henry, a 74-yearold neurosurge­on.

Henry, who many Haitians consider corrupt, had repeatedly postponed elections, saying security must first be restored.

The surge in violence and

anarchy led him to travel to Kenya in late February seeking support for a security mission backed by the United Nations to bolster local police forces.

But the conflict escalated in his absence, leaving him stranded in Puerto Rico. A senior US official said security in Haiti would need to improve for him to feel comfortabl­e returning home.

Haiti, which has a long history of dictatorsh­ip, violence, coups and invasion, declared a state of emergency earlier this month as clashes led to two mass prison breaks and Jimmy “Barbeque” Cherizier, a leader of an alliance of armed groups, said they would unite and overthrow Henry.

 ?? (Prime Minister of the Republic of Haiti via X/Handout via Reuters) ?? HAITI’S PRIME MINISTER Ariel Henry announces his intention to step down in a televised address from an unidentifi­ed location on Monday.
(Prime Minister of the Republic of Haiti via X/Handout via Reuters) HAITI’S PRIME MINISTER Ariel Henry announces his intention to step down in a televised address from an unidentifi­ed location on Monday.

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