World / Politics

Strife-torn Haiti gets new prime minister after assassination

17:21 pm on 21 July 2021

Ariel Henry has been sworn in as Haiti's new prime minister, nearly two weeks after the assassination of the country's President Jovenel Moïse.

Designated Prime Minister Ariel Henry (right) shakes hands with Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship Claude Joseph during a ceremony at La Primature in Port-au-Prince, Haiti Photo: AFP

The late president asked Henry to take the job, days before he was gunned down in the capital, Port-au-Prince.

But Henry was in a political tussle with Claude Joseph, Haiti's interim PM at the time of the attack.

Joseph stepped down on Monday and said Henry's appointment would pave the way for elections in September.

Speaking at a ceremony in Port-au-Prince, the new prime minister called for unity.

"One of my priority tasks will be to reassure the people that we will do everything to restore order and security," said Mr Henry, according to AFP news agency.

Joseph joined him at the ceremony and warned of a tough task ahead.

"You're inheriting an exceptional situation characterized by the absence of a president to serve as your shield, a political crisis unprecedented in the history of the country, galloping insecurity, a morose and precarious economic situation," said Joseph, who has returned to his former role as foreign minister.

The inauguration took place as an official memorial began for Moïse, who was killed at his private residence on 7 July.

His wife Marine was also shot, and she arrived back in Haiti last week after receiving medical treatment in the US.

Moïse, 53, had ruled by decree in Haiti since 2018. Before his death, the country was already mired in political and security crises, with no working parliament, frequent anti-government protests, and a surge in gang violence.

Many of the details of the president's assassination attack remain a mystery.

Haitian police have blamed a group of mainly foreign mercenaries - 26 Colombians and two Haitian Americans.

At least 20 have been detained, while three were killed by police and five are still on the run. Christian Emmanuel Sanon, a Florida-based Haitian doctor, has been accused by police of masterminding the plot.

"All the culprits, perpetrators and sponsors must be identified and brought before Haitian justice," said Henry.

"I hope that exemplary and dissuasive sentences will be pronounced. The nation expects no less from its leaders," he added. "Never again will we have to relive such a tragedy."

- BBC