Transition Government For Haiti Proposed

A group concerned about Haiti’s future is calling for a provisional government in the Caribbean country to bolster its security and ensure free elections in two years.

2022-02-07 20:09:41 - VI News Staff

According to a Reuters report, the group, called Montana Accord, is proposing its 65-year-old leader and economist Fritz Jean to take the helm of the two-year transition government of Haiti⁠—replacing Prime Minister Ariel Henry.

The group’s name takes after the Montana hotel in Port-au-Prince where they have been meeting.

The proposed transition government comes as the current leadership faces a crisis of legitimacy.

“We’re close to a situation of chaos,” said Jean in a Zoom interview from his residence in Port-au-Prince, emphasizing that voters in the 11-million strong Caribbean nation cannot simply participate because of the country’s security problems.

The Montana Accord includes “civic leaders, former politicians, journalists, economists and entrepreneurs who have met for nearly a year to discuss a common political platform,” Reuters wrote.

Haiti, the poorest in the Western hemisphere, has been in a political vacuum since the murder of President Jovenel Moïse’s in July 2021. With the gang violence becoming rampant by the day, authorities and politicians are worried Haiti is in no condition to hold elections.

In broad daylight, gangs in Haiti have increasingly carried out kidnappings and entire neighborhoods are under gang control. Because of gun battles between the police and the gang, a number of state events have been cancelled by the government.

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