Members of the presidential guard secure the route for the passage of the presidential convoy transporting Haitian President Jovenel Moise, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Monday, Oct. 7, 2019 |
By
Jaqueline Charles, Port-au-Prince, HAITI
Haiti’s
embattled president broke a weeks-long silence Tuesday, telling his protesting
nation that while he hears their cries in the streets, he has no intentions of
stepping down.
“It would be irresponsible on my part for me to
stand here today, to sign and submit a letter of resignation and say ‘I am
leaving’ and leave the country like this and the system regenerates itself,”
President Jovenel Moïse said during an impromptu press conference on the
grounds of the National Palace.
Casting himself as the victim of Haiti’s
constitution and “a system” that encourages underdevelopment and misery, Moïse
evoked the language of his critics over Haiti’s outgrown system in hopes of
quelling tensions as Haiti faced a fifth week of paralysis.
Moïse also blamed the constitution and Parliament
for his inability to improve Haitians’ lives.
“Parliament spent eight months refusing to give us
a government,” said Moïse, who came to office 32 months ago.
Those calling for Moïse’s resignation have called
for a different kind of system to govern the country, arguing that the current
one, created after the fall of the 1986 Duvalier family dictatorship, only
benefits a few. With 60 percent of the population earning less than $2 a day,
and 20 percent of the population controlling 60 percent of the wealth, Haiti,
with 11 million people, is one of the hemisphere’s most unequal countries.
The reaction to Moïse’s rare public appearance,
which came on the same day that the United Nations ended its peacekeeping
presence after 15 years, was swift. Fearing more of the widespread protests,
burning tires and barricades that have paralyzed Haiti since last month, many
Haitians in Port-au-Prince rushed home to get off the streets..
“He showed he’s a president who lacks competence,”
said Lemète Zéphyr, a professor and spokesman for a group of activists,
university professors and chambers of commerce working on a transition plan.
Zéphyr said Moïse may have sped up his own departure
with his antagonizing speech.
“He attacked his base. He attacked the people who
put him in power and he showed the population he wasn’t doing anything. This is
why they made him president, to resolve their problems,” Zéphyr said. “He
hasn’t shown any effort to change the system that he said is no good.”
Moïse opened his address by insinuating that he was
a victim of powerful interests in Haiti, interests that support a system that
provides double-digit interest rates to the poor from the government-run
pension fund, while low rates to the rich and powerful. A system, he said, that
has guardians and heirs.
“The system has victims too. You the people who are
listening to me, watching me, you are victims of the system also,” he said.
To illustrate his point, he spoke of several
contracts he said his administration had canceled. The president did not name
names, and was selective in the details. But at least two of the contracts he
singled out were awarded under former President Michel Martelly, who handpicked
Moïse to succeed him.
One of the contracts involved a $43 million payment
that Moïse said the interim government of President Jocelerme Privert issued to
rebuild the Toussaint Louverture International Airport in Port-au-Prince. He failed
to mention, however, that the contract was entered into by the Martelly
government over the objections of the international community due to the high
interest payments. Martelly’s administration also approved a 10-year border
contract with an Israeli firm for $22 million a year.
“If I were to list the quantity of contracts,
advantages the system used to give that we... have decided to cancel, it would
take me a day,” Moïse said.
Moïse acknowledged that things are not easy in
Haiti today. The United Nations ended its 15-year
peacekeeping presence Tuesday, and a group of university
students entered their third day of a hunger strike at the State University of
Haiti in Port-au-Prince to demand Moïse’s resignation. Schools and businesses
have remained shuttered, and at least 30 people died in the violence since last
month, said the U.N.
“You didn’t vote me to come fight with anyone. You
voted me so that I could come fight against a system,” he said. “It would be
difficult for anyone who became president today to confront this system because
it has the capacity to regenerate itself.”
While he addressed the Haitian population and took
questions from reporters, the U.N. Security Council met in New York, where
diplomats reflected on their mixed Haiti peacekeeping record, the current
turmoil and continued calls for dialogue among Haitians.
“Haiti certainly gives us a lot to reflect upon,”
Jean-Pierre Lacroix, the U.N.’s under-secretary-general for peace operations
told the Security Council. “The country is facing a significant political
crisis, intertwined with socio-economic challenges. These, in turn, affect the
security environment, which further feeds political instability — a cycle that
the country has seen one too many times.”
Lacroix then provided a litany of the current
political turbulence including the opposition’s position that Moïse’s Sept. 25
call for a national dialogue and the formation of a unity government was “too
little, too late.”
“Opposition groups are putting forward the
acceptance by the president of the principle of his departure as a precondition
for dialogue, thereby leaving little room for negotiation of a unity
government,” Lacroix said. ”Mistrust is making compromise difficult, and yet
the formation of such a government may well provide a way forward to lasting
political solutions that are desperately needed.”
That remained a distant possibility Tuesday even as
Moïse called for the opposition to come to the negotiating table, saying Haiti
needs “serenity and calm.” He had read all of the proposals for his departure,
he said, but noted that previous departures by a sitting president in 1986 and
2004 had not gotten the country anywhere.
He believed the country was “worse off,” after the
2004 forced departure of democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide. “We all have to work together,” Moïse said.
Activists calling for Moïse’s departure said his
speech will only add fuel to their calls for renewed protests on Thursday when
Haiti commemorates the assassination of its founding father, Jean-Jacques
Dessalines.
“He doesn’t take any responsibility,” said Velina
Charlier, a member of the anti-corruption grassroots organization Nou
Pap Dòmi (We are not Sleeping).
In a statement, Nou Pap Dòmi said: “The president
must resign. He has no credibility and has long lost our trust. Our position
remains the same: A corrupt president can’t govern our nation.”
Opposition leader and attorney André Michel said
the president’s speech lacked credibility.
“Mr. Jovenel Moise does not have the moral
authority to attack the guards of the exclusionary system that we are fighting
today because his election campaign was betrothed by these people,” Michel
said, adding that during the 2016 elections Moïse “had at his disposal more
economic means than all the other candidates together.”
Recalling the helicopters that flew the president
to campaign stops and the boats that carried rice, iron and zinc sheeting to
hurricane victims in Jeremie on his behalf, Michel said: “We are all aware of
the need to break this system. That’s why we fight every day alongside the
Haitian people.”
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