U.S rebuffs Haiti troops request after president's assassination
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[July 10, 2021]
By Steve Holland and Andre Paultre
WASHINGTON/PORT-AU-PRINCE (Reuters) -The
United States on Friday rebuffed Haiti's request for troops to help
secure key infrastructure after the assassination of President Jovenel
Moise by suspected foreign mercenaries, even as it pledged to help with
the investigation.
The killing of Moise by a squad of gunmen in the early hours of
Wednesday morning at his home in Port-au-Prince pitched Haiti deeper
into a political crisis https://www.reuters.com/article/us-haiti-politics-timeline-idAFKCN2ED1F6
which may worsen growing hunger, gang violence and a COVID-19 outbreak.
Haitian Elections Minister Mathias Pierre said a request for U.S.
security assistance was raised in a conversation between interim Prime
Minister Claude Joseph and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken on
Wednesday. Haiti also made a request for forces to the United Nations
Security Council, Pierre said.
But a senior U.S. administration official said there were "no plans to
provide U.S. military assistance at this time."
A letter from Joseph's office to the U.S. embassy in Haiti, dated
Wednesday and reviewed by Reuters, requested the dispatch of troops to
support the national police in reestablishing security and protecting
key infrastructure across the country following Moise's assassination.
A similar letter, also dated Wednesday and seen by Reuters, was sent to
the U.N. office in Haiti.
"We were in a situation where we believed that infrastructure of the
country the port, airport and energy infrastructure might be a
target," Pierre told Reuters.
Another aim of the request for security reinforcements would be to make
it possible to go ahead with scheduled presidential and legislative
elections on Sept. 26, Pierre said.
The U.N. political mission in Haiti received the letter and it was being
examined, said Jose Luis Diaz, spokesman for the U.N. Department of
Political and Peacebuilding Affairs.
The dispatch of troops under any circumstances would be a matter for
the (15-member) Security Council to decide, he said.
RIDDLED WITH BULLETS
The United States and Colombia said they would send law enforcement and
intelligence officials to assist Haiti after a number of their nationals
were arrested for Moise's murder.
Police in Haiti said the assassination was carried out by a commando
unit of 26 Colombian and two Haitian-American mercenaries. The two
Haitian-Americans were identified as James Solages, 35, and Joseph
Vincent, 55, both from Florida.
Seventeen of the men were captured - including Solages and Vincent -
after a gun battle with Haitian authorities in Petionville, the hillside
suburb of the capital Port-au-Prince where Moise resided.
Three others were killed and eight remain at large, according to Haitian
police. Authorities are hunting for the masterminds of the operation,
they said.
A judge investigating the case told Reuters that Moise was found lying
on his back on the floor of his bedroom. The front door of the residence
had been forced open, while other rooms were ransacked.
"His body was riddled with bullets," Petionville tribunal judge Carl
Henry Destin said. "There was a lot of blood around the corpse and on
the staircase."
Haitian officials have not given a motive for Moise's killing or
explained how the assassins got past his security detail. He had faced
mass protests against his rule since taking office in 2017 - first over
corruption allegations and his management of the economy, then over his
increasing grip on power.
Moise himself had talked of dark forces at play behind the unrest:
fellow politicians and corrupt oligarchs who felt his attempts to clean
up government contracts and to reform Haitian politics were against
their interests.
COMMANDO UNIT
The United States on Thursday pledged to send senior officials from the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Homeland Security to
Haiti as soon as possible to assess the situation and see how best they
can assist, the White House said.
A State Department spokesperson said: "We are aware of the arrest of two
U.S. citizens in Haiti and are monitoring the situation closely."
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Haiti has requested U.S. and U.N. security forces to help it protect
key infrastructure like the airport and ports after the
assassination of President Jovenel Moise by foreign mercenaries, a
government minister said on Friday. Gloria Tso reports.
The head of Colombia's national intelligence
directorate and the intelligence director for the national police
will travel to Haiti with Interpol to help with investigations,
Colombian President Ivan Duque said on Friday.
Investigators in Colombia discovered that 17 of the
suspects had retired from Colombia's army between 2018 and 2020,
armed forces commander General Luis Fernando Navarro told
journalists on Friday.
Jorge Luis Vargas, director of Colombia's national police, said
initial investigations had shown that 11 Colombian suspects had
traveled to Haiti via the resort city of Punta Cana in the Dominican
Republic, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti.
Two others traveled by air to Panama, before flying to Dominican
capital Santo Domingo and then Port-au-Prince, Vargas said.
CONFUSION OVER POLITICAL CONTROL
The Haitian government declared a 15-day state of emergency on
Wednesday to help authorities apprehend the killers but has since
urged businesses to reopen.
Stores, gasoline stations and commercial banks reopened on Friday.
The streets were quiet, although some supermarkets bustled with
people stocking up amid the uncertainty.
Moise's killing has sparked confusion about who is the legitimate
leader of the country of 11 million people, the poorest in the
Americas, miring it deeper into a political crisis.
Even before Moise's death, the country only had 11 elected officials
- himself and 10 senators - given it had postponed legislative
elections in 2019 amid violent unrest.
Swaths of the opposition and civil society no longer recognized him
as president due to a disagreement over the length of his mandate.
Joseph has taken over the reins of power so far. Pierre, the
elections minister, said he would keep that role until presidential
and legislative elections are held on Sept. 26.
But Joseph's authority is in dispute by multiple political factions.
In the latest move, the remaining third of the Senate on Friday
nominated its head, Joseph Lambert, to be interim president.
The senators also urged Joseph to hand over his office as prime
minister to Ariel Henry, a physician seen as more of a consensus
candidate. Moise had tapped him earlier this week to form a unity
government but he had yet been sworn in.
"The Senate secretariat will write to national and international
entities as well as to the general director of the Police and the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs so that the embassies accredited in
Haiti are informed," Lambert told Reuters.
Henry this week told Haitian newspaper Le Nouvelliste he did not
consider Joseph the legitimate prime minister.
"The assassination... has provoked a political and institutional
vacuum at the highest level of state," said Haitian opposition
politician Andre Michel. "There is no constitutional provision for
this exceptional situation."
(Reporting by Steve Holland in Washington and Andre Paultre in
Port-au-Prince; Additional reporting by Sarah Marsh in Havana,
Stefanie Eschenbacher in Mexico City, Julia Symmes Cobb and Luis
Jaime Acosta in Bogota, Brad Brooks in Tamarac, Daphne Psaledakis,
Ali Idrees and Mark Hosenball in Washington and Estailove St-Val in
Port-au-Prince; Writing by Sarah Marsh and Julia Symmes Cobb;
Editing by Daniel Flynn, Rosalba O'Brien and William Mallard)
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