Haiti’s future governance faces struggle between political power and gang influence
- Haiti’s future is being planned on two tracks, with one involving traditional political power and the other focused on the power of gangs.
- A council of influential figures has been proposed to lead Haiti towards stability, with the power to elect an interim leader.
- A prominent gang leader has rejected any solution supported by the international community.
Haiti’s future is being planned on two tracks — one involving traditional political power, the other focused on the power of gangs.
After an intense session of international diplomacy in Jamaica, a group of Caribbean nations and the United States announced Tuesday that Haiti’s best hope for calming violence rests with a council of influential figures who would elected an interim leader and could steer the country toward fresh presidential elections.
As they spoke to the media, a heavily armed gang leader held an impromptu news conference in Port-au-Prince and rejected any solution led and supported by the international community.
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“Haitian people will choose who will govern them,” Jimmy “Barbecue” Chérizier said Monday.
Haitian politics have lived in these two worlds for decades, experts told The Associated Press this week. Politicians and business interests have maintained on-the-books legal interests while employing gangs to enforce their will on the chaotic streets.
WHO DECIDES HAITI’S FUTURE?
Prime Minister Ariel Henry announced Tuesday that he would resign once the transitional presidential council was created. Guyana President Irfaan Ali said the transitional council would have seven voting members and two nonvoting ones.
The seven voting members include three traditional political parties, a civil-society group known as the Montana Accord and members of the country’s powerful private sector.
The transitional council includes a role for civil society alongside the Montana one, but some observers say that is far from enough.
“The fact that Haiti’s civil society and religious sector will only have ‘observer status’ on a transitional council dominated by members of the country’s disgraced political class and its allies should tell you a lot,” said Michael Deibert, author of “Notes From the Last Testament: The Struggle for Haiti” and “Haiti Will Not Perish: A Recent History.”
WHO ARE THE MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL DECIDING THE FUTURE OF HAITIAN POLITICS?
One of the parties is the Pitit Desalin party, which is run by former senator and presidential candidate Moïse Jean-Charles. He is now an ally of Guy Philippe, a former rebel leader who led a successful 2004 coup and was recently released from a United States prison after pleading guilty to money laundering.
Philippe was a charismatic leader who was instrumental in the 2004 rebellion against former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and had powerful ties to police, politicians and the business elite.
Former Prime Minister Charles Joseph has a party called EDE/RDE, which also has a vote.
Also on the council is the Fanmi Lavalas party backed by Aristide and another coalition led by Henry.
Robert Fatton, a Haitian politics expert at the University of Virginia, said that membership in the group announced Monday appeared to overlap with at least one other group that was founded in recent weeks to calm Haitian civil unrest in the same general way.
WHAT ARE THE BIGGEST OBSTACLES TO SUCCESS?
Solutions to past crises have overly emphasized foreign nations’ ability to resolve problems in Haiti, said Francois Pierre-Louis, a professor of political science at Queens College at the City University of New York.
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“The U.S. government and the international community have not allowed Haitians to decide on their own what needs to be done, and that is done two ways,” Pierre-Louis said.
Specifically, outside actors have undermined civil society and failed to punish bad elements, he said, making the work of constructing a functional society infinitely more difficult.
But Haiti’s domestic instability may have gone so far that only an armed force from overseas can impose order, said Eric Farnsworth, vice president of the Council of the Americas and the Americas Society.
People must be ready to welcome that force. “It’s a no-win situation,” he said.
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