Port-au-Prince (Haiti):A new prime minister supported by key international diplomats will take charge of Haiti, an official said Monday a move that appeared aimed at averting a leadership struggle following the assassination of President Jovenal Mose. Ariel Henry, who was designated prime minister by Mose before he was slain but never sworn in, will replace the country's interim prime minister, Haiti Elections Minister Mathias Pierre told the media. It wasn't immediately clear how quickly Claude Joseph, who has been leading Haiti with the backing of police and the military since the July 7 assassination of Mose, would step down.
Negotiations are still in course, Pierre said, adding that Joseph would go back to being minister of foreign affairs. There was no immediate comment from Joseph. In an audio recording, Henry referred to himself as prime minister and called for unity, saying he would soon announce the members of what he called a provisional consensus government to lead the country until elections are held.
I present my compliments to the Haitian people who have shown political maturity in the face of what can be considered a coup...Our Haitian brothers gave peace a chance, while leaving the possibility that the truth could one day be restored," Henry said. Now it is up to all the national leaders to walk together in unity, towards the same goal, to show that they are responsible. The political turnover followed a statement Saturday from a key group of international diplomats that appeared to snub Joseph as it called for the creation of "a consensual and inclusive government.
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To this end, it strongly encourages the designated Prime Minister Ariel Henry to continue the mission entrusted to him to form such a government, the statement from the Core Group said. The Core Group is composed of ambassadors from Germany, Brazil, Canada, Spain, the US, France, the European Union and representatives from the United Nations and the Organisation of American States. On Monday, the UN issued a statement calling on Joseph, Henry and other national stakeholders to set aside differences and engage in constructive dialogue on ways to end the current impasse.
The UN added that Joseph and Henry made significant progress in the past week and that it supports dialogue to find minimal consensus for holding fair legislative and presidential elections. Monique Clesca, a Haitian writer, activist and former UN official, said she doesn't anticipate any changes under Henry, whom she expects to carry on Mose's legacy. But she warned Henry might be viewed as tainted because of the international backing that preceded his taking power. There is not only a perception, but the reality that he has been put there by the international community, and I think that's his burden to carry, she said.