Haiti Prime Minister resigns as new government set to take over power

The prime minister of Haiti, Ariel Henry, resigned his position on Thursday, paving the way for a new government to be formed in the Caribbean country.

According to CBS News, Henry presented his resignation in a letter dated April 24 and signed in Los Angeles by his office.

The development occurred the same day a council tasked with choosing a new prime minister and cabinet for Haiti was due to be sworn in.

The interim council was set to be installed more than a month after Caribbean leaders announced its creation, following an emergency meeting to tackle Haiti’s spiralling and parallel political and crime crises.

The nine-member council, of which seven have voting powers, is also expected to help set the agenda of a new cabinet. It will also appoint a provisional electoral commission, a requirement before elections can take place, and establish a national security council.

Haiti has been facing security challenges since February.

Gangs launched coordinated attacks in the capital, Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas.

The assailants burned police stations and hospitals opened fire on the main international airport that has remained closed since early March, and stormed Haiti’s two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates.

Gang violence prompts hospital evacuation

A hospital in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince, has been evacuated by police after nearby gang violence.

More than 100 patients – nearly half of them children – had to be removed from the Fontaine Hospital Center, according to its director Jose Ulysse.

The hospital is in the large shantytown of Cite Soleil, where there have been reports of unrest in recent days following the death of a gang leader.

Haiti is currently in the grip of unprecedented levels of lawlessness.

“There was a gang war, but the war is around the hospital,” Mr Ulysse told AFP news agency, clarifying an earlier report that gangs had entered the hospital and taken people hostage.

He said houses around the hospital had been set on fire and that while some people had been able to flee the facility on their own, others – including a woman who had given birth by Caesarean section a day earlier – needed the help of the local authorities.

“We were able to get everyone to safety,” Mr Ulysse added.

A source in Port-au-Prince told the BBC’s Mexico, Central America and Cuba Correspondent, Will Grant, that the situation at the hospital had “escalated very quickly”.

It came a day after powerful gang leader Iskar Andrice was killed in Cite Soleil – raising fears that there could be a further spike in violence in the area.

Gangs have taken increasing control of Port-au-Prince since the assassination of the country’s president in 2021 threw Haiti into a political crisis.

Thousands of Haitians have fled their homes in the capital, while more than 2,400 others have been killed, according to the latest figures from the UN.

Kenya has said it will send 1,000 police officers to Haiti to help restore order – a move that has been backed by the UN.

Haiti police arrest 15 Colombians, two others over president’s assassination

The Haitian police on Thursday night announced that it had arrested 15 Colombians and two Haitian American suspects in connection with the assassination of the Haitian President, Jovenel Moise.

Speaking at a press briefing, Director, Haiti’s National Police, Leon Charles, accompanied by the Interim Prime Minister, Claude Joseph, said about 28 people participated in Moise’s murder, including 26 Colombians and two Haitian Americans.

According to Charles, eight other people who participated in the assassination escaped, while three of the assassins were killed in the gun duel with security operatives.

The late president was shot dead at his residence on Wednesday during an early morning raid by a group of gunmen.

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