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Haiti Assassination Suspect Was DEA Informant

One of the suspects implicated in the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise was a DEA informant, a U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration official told VOA in an emailed statement.”At times, one of the suspects in the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse was a confidential source to the DEA,” the official confirmed. “Following the assassination of President Moïse, the suspect reached out to his contacts at the DEA. A DEA official assigned to Haiti urged the suspect to surrender to local authorities and, along with a U.S. State Department official, provided information to the Haitian government that assisted in the surrender and arrest of the suspect and one other individual.”The DEA official did not identify the suspect.Bocchit Edmond, Haiti’s ambassador to the United States. (Twitter)Haitian Ambassador to the U.S. Bocchit Edmond told reporters last week he had seen video footage obtained by the national police and deemed credible, in which the assassins, whom he described as “mercenaries,” posed as agents of the DEA.”They [were] speaking Spanish and presented themselves as DEA agents. As we well know, this is not the way the DEA operates. I believe they are fake DEA agents. Experts who saw the video said those are professional killers,” Edmond told reporters.”DEA is aware of reports that President Moïse’s assassins yelled ‘DEA’ at the time of their attack,” the Drug Enforcement Agency official said. “These individuals were not acting on behalf of DEA.”Moïse was shot to death at his private residence in a wealthy suburb of Port-au-Prince in the early morning hours of July 7. His wife, Martine Moïse, was seriously wounded in the attack and is in good condition after undergoing surgery in Miami, Florida.Interim Prime Minister Claude Joseph, who took charge shortly after the president’s death, told reporters Sunday he has spoken with the first lady several times.The DEA declined to specify how many of its agents are currently working in Haiti, citing “security” concerns. According to a U.S. Justice Department Inspector General report, the DEA established an office in Haiti in 1987, a year after the coup that removed dictator Jean Claude Duvalier from power.Haiti’s Police General Director Leon Charles speaks during a press conference in Port-au Prince on July 11, 2021.Arrests so farHaitian National Police Chief Leon Charles said police have arrested 18 Colombians and three Haitians in connection with the attack, and that at least five other people were believed to be at large.The three Haitian Americans currently in police custody have been identified as Christian Emmanuel Sanon, 63, believed to be the assassination plot mastermind, James Solages, 35, and Joseph G. Vincent, 55.Charles said Sanon arrived in Haiti on a private plane in early June with some of the Colombians. He said some of the assailants contacted him by phone shortly after the assassination. Police seized weapons, munitions, a Dominican Republic vehicle registration, two vehicles and documents addressed to various sectors of the population, Charles told reporters.State Department spokesman Ned Price said officials are aware that Haitian Americans are in police custody.”We continue to monitor the situation closely. As in all cases, we will provide appropriate consular services to detained U.S. citizens,” Price said. “Obviously, privacy considerations preclude us from saying much more, but I do suspect that once we have had access to all three American citizens who are detained, we’ll be in a position to confirm that.”FILE – U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, right, meets with Colombia’s Vice President and Foreign Minister, Marta Lucia Ramirez, at the State Department in Washington on May 28, 2021.In New York, Colombia’s Vice President and Minister of Foreign Affairs, Marta Lucia Ramirez denounced the involvement of Colombian nationals in the Moise assassination after a United Nations Security Council meeting Tuesday.”Let me say that the Colombian government, but also the judiciary system is working with the Judiciary and intelligence from other countries in order to help the Haitian state to identify all the responsibilities in this crime — in this major crime,” Ramirez told reporters, adding that her country is also working with the International Criminal Police Organization, Interpol.”And of course, we are helping Interpol in order to have all the information, the track record about the time when they lived in Colombia, all the information about their communications, everything in order to clarify this horrible crime,” Ramirez said. “Everybody who is involved, everybody who was a physical or intellectual actor of this crime must be punished, and must be punished with an extreme and very high capacity of international justice and the Colombian justice and others.”US delegation in HaitiU.S. President Joe Biden said Monday he dispatched a team to Haiti help with the investigation. The decision was in response to a request from Haiti for help.The delegation consists of officials from the Justice, Homeland Security and State departments and the National Security Council arrived Sunday in Haiti, the White House announced.The FBI told VOA in an emailed statement that it “is currently engaging with the U.S. Embassy in Haiti and our law enforcement partners to determine how we can best support this effort.”In addition to assisting Haitian law enforcement with their own investigation, FBI agents must determine any connections between the plot and Haitian Americans living in the United States, and whether any U.S. laws were violated, said David Gomez, a former FBI special agent and national security expert.The arrests in Haiti of two Haitian Americans, as well as a Haitian-born doctor with ties to the U.S., in connection with the assassination plot gives U.S. prosecutors jurisdiction to investigate the case, Gomez said.He added that investigators will likely look into a possible violation of the Neutrality Act, which prohibits Americans from getting involved in foreign affairs such as trying to overthrow a foreign government.”The United States government wants to determine whether there are any other co-conspirators or people of Haitian American background or any background still in the Miami area who may be party to this conspiracy,” Gomez said.The initial FBI team in Haiti is likely to be made up of a top headquarters official, as well as agents from the Miami Field Office, which maintains liaison offices for South America and the Caribbean, and the legal attaché in charge of Haiti.A spokesperson for the Miami Field Office declined to provide details about the investigative team.Moto-taxi drivers wait their turn to fill their tanks at a gas station, in Port-au-Prince, July 13, 2021, almost a week after President Jovenel Moise was assassinated in his home.Leadership vacuumIn Port-au-Prince, although the interim prime minister has taken charge of Haiti’s political affairs, a leadership vacuum remains. A day before his murder, President Moise named Ariel Henry as the country’s new prime minister. Joseph, who was serving as both prime minister and foreign minister, was to stay on as foreign minister.U.S. National Security Council spokesperson Emily Horne said in a statement the U.S. delegation had met with Joseph, Henry and Senate President Joseph Lambert.”The delegation also met with Acting Prime Minister Claude Joseph and Prime Minister-Designate Ariel Henry in a joint meeting, as well as Senate President Joseph Lambert, to encourage open and constructive dialogue to reach a political accord that can enable the country to hold free and fair elections,” the statement said.Senator Lambert denounced Joseph on Twitter Monday, for criticizing Henry during the meeting. Je suis indigné. Le Premier Ministre nommé #ArielHenry avoue que le ministre @ClaudeJoseph03 l’a dénoncé devant la délégation américaine. Injures graves, invectives, calomnies et atteinte ont fait le menu. Ah! ces imberbes…— Sénateur Joseph Lambert (@josephlambertHT) July 12, 2021 “I feel insulted. Prime Minister designate #ArielHenry admits that minister @ClaudeJoseph03 denounced him in front of the American delegation,” he tweeted.Joseph has not yet responded to Lambert’s tweet.Asked by VOA who the United States considers to be the leader of Haiti, the State Department and White House declined to comment.State Department spokesman Price told VOA the administration is concerned about Haiti’s institutions and the path to elections.”It’s about Haiti’s institutions. We continue to support the Haitian people and their constitution, knowing that the constitution needs to be an enduring framework for what happens next,” Price said. “And so yes, in our view there need to be free and fair elections. They need to happen this year — legislative elections, presidential elections — pursuant to the Haitian constitution. And that is precisely why we have continued to support them.”Masood Farivar, State Department Correspondent Nike Ching, United Nations Correspondent Margaret Besheer, White House Bureau Chief Steve Herman and , Matiado Vilme, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, contributed to this report.

Cuba Protesters Cite Shortages, Frustrations with Government

Protesters rallying against Cuba’s government on Sunday expressed a number of grievances, including the state of the country’s economy and the response to the coronavirus pandemic.
 
“What we want is change,” Yamila Monte, a Cuban domestic worker told AFP. “I have had enough.”
 
The protests were the largest against the government in decades and took place in the capital, Havana, as well as multiple areas across the country.
 
People “are angry because there is no food, because there are problems,” Yudeiky Valverde, a 39-year-old primary school employee told AFP.
 A Timeline of Recent Events in Cuba Critical events leading up to current developments as unprecedented protests roil country Cuba is in the midst of severe economic woes.  The government reported the economy shrank by 11% last year.  A drop in tourism after the Trump administration imposed new travel restrictions and the ongoing coronavirus pandemic have added to the strain of the continued U.S. trade embargo and sanctions targeting shipments of oil from Venezuela.
 
With a sharp spike in COVID-19 cases this year, protesters are upset about the medical system.
 
“There have been demonstrations because of the drugs, because there are none, there is nothing in the country,” Niurka Rodriguez, a 57-year-old rumba singer told AFP, while acknowledging the impact of the U.S. embargo.
 People wave Cuban flags during a protest against the Cuban government at Versailles Restaurant in Miami, on July 12, 2021.Cuba’s President Miguel Díaz-Canel blamed the U.S. policies for the unrest, an accusation denied by U.S. officials. U.S. President Joe Biden said the protesters “are demanding their freedom from an authoritarian regime.”
 
A protester who spoke to the Associated Press but declined to identify himself out of fear of possible arrest said: “We are fed up with the queues, the shortages. That’s why I’m here.”
 
Maykel, a Havana resident who spoke to Reuters and declined to give his surname, described the situation in Cuba by saying, “It’s becoming impossible to live here.”Cubans are seen outside Havana’s Capitol during a demonstration against the government of Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel in Havana, July 11, 2021. In Photos: Anti-government Protests in CubaThousands of Cubans have taken to the streets since Sunday in the largest anti-government demonstrations in decades, with people demanding freedom from an authoritarian regime, expressing frustration with the economy and criticizing the government’s response to the coronavirus pandemic.

A Timeline of Recent Events in Cuba 

April 2018: Miguel Díaz-Canel replaces Raúl Castro as president September 2019: United States sanctions maritime firms for transporting Venezuelan oil to Cuba March 2020: Coronavirus pandemic prompts government to halt arrivals of international air passengers September 2020: United States bans Americans from staying at hotels owned by Cuban government December 2020: Cuba reports economy shrank 11% in 2020 January 2021: Cuba ends dual currency system January 2021: U.S. President Donald Trump designates Cuba a state sponsor of terrorism February 2021: Cuba surpasses 30,000 total COVID-19 cases April 2021: Díaz-Canel replaces Castro as head of Communist PartyApril 2021: Cuba surpasses 100,000 total COVID-19 cases June 2021: Cuba surpasses 200,000 total COVID-19 cases July 2021: Anti-government demonstrators protest food lines, electricity cuts, lack of access to medicine Some information for this report came from the Associated Press and Reuters 

Global Support for Cuba Demonstrations

World leaders are expressing their support for the Cuban people after Sunday’s demonstrations across the island.   The foreign minister for the European Union, Josep Borrell, urged the Cuban government “to listen to these protests of discontent” during a press conference Monday in Brussels after meeting with EU foreign ministers.   Erika Guevara-Rosas, Americas director at Amnesty International, called Sunday’s protests “a historic day for Cuba” while expressing concern over reports of “internet blackouts, arbitrary arrests, excessive use of force — including police firing on demonstrators” as well as “a long list of missing persons.” Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador speaks during a ceremony marking the third anniversary of his presidential election at the National Palace in Mexico City, July 1, 2021.  Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador told reporters in Mexico City Monday that a “truly humanitarian gesture” would be for the United States to lift the five-decade economic embargo of Cuba.  “No country in the world should be fenced in, blockaded,” he said. In the United States, the mayor of Miami, Florida, called on the Biden administration to lead an international effort to help Cubans, who are suffering under the island’s long-serving communist government, he said. “The government of Cuba is an illegitimate government,” Mayor Francis Suarez told reporters Monday. “And the people of Cuba are starving. They’re in need of medicine. They’re in need of international help. And frankly, unless the Cuban military or the Cuban police turns on the Cuban government, the Cuban people will continue to be repressed without any hope of freedom in the future.” Miami is home to a large community of Cuban exiles who fled their homeland after Fidel Castro seized power in the 1959 revolution. Another Florida political figure, Republican U.S. Senator Marco Rubio, praised the demonstrations, characterizing the events as “historic, peaceful and organic protests that arose throughout Havana and other provinces in Cuba” in a letter to President Joe Biden. Senator Rubio urged the president to take a number of steps to help the Cuban people, including identifying those involved in “acts of violent repression inside Cuba” and banning them from entering the United States. Democratic U.S Senator Bob Menendez, the chairman of the chamber’s Foreign Relations Committee, called for the “violence and repression” against the Cuban people to end. “The world’s eyes are on Cuba tonight and the dictatorship must understand we will not tolerate the use of brute force to silence the aspirations of the Cuban people,” he said in a statement issued late Sunday. Some information for this report came from the Associated Press, Agence France-Press and Reuters.  

Cuban Protests: What We Know 

There was a heavy police presence in Cuba’s capital, Havana, on Monday, with the streets calm following Sunday’s anti-government protests. President Miguel Díaz-Canel gave a nationally broadcast speech in which he blamed the unrest on “a policy of economic suppression” by the United States. He said the origins of problems cited by the protesters, including shortages of food, electricity and medicine, are all the result of the U.S. embargo on Cuba. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken rejected that position, saying “it would be a grievous mistake for the Cuban regime to interpret what is happening in dozens of towns and cities across the island as the result or product of anything the United States has done.” U.S. President Joe Biden said those protesting “are demanding their freedom from an authoritarian regime.”  He added that the United States “stands firmly with the people of Cuba as they assert their universal rights, and we call on the government of Cuba to refrain from violence in their attempt to silence the voices of the people of Cuba.” Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro expressed his government’s support for Díaz-Canel on Monday and said, “If the U.S. really wants to help Cuba, let it immediately lift the sanctions and the blockade against its people.” The protests were the largest anti-government demonstrations in Cuba in decades.  Some information for this report came from the Associated Press, AFP and Reuters. 

Cubans Used to Massive Rallies, not Anti-government Protests

Cuba is known for mammoth, officially sanctioned gatherings to celebrate the anniversary of the Cuban Revolution and May Day, while even very much smaller anti-government demonstrations like those Sunday are very rare on the tightly controlled island.  Some of the most significant protests: Aug. 5-6, 1994: Thousands of Cubans take to the streets amid a severe economic crisis after the collapse of the Soviet Union, whose aid propped up Cuba’s economy. President Fidel Castro shows up at one gathering, deterring the protesters. 2003: A group of wives and mothers of prisoners, known as the Ladies in White, demonstrate in front of a church in Havana after the government rounds up dissidents and sentences them to severe prison terms. The group stages rallies, with fluctuating numbers of participants and an irregular schedule, in various places until at least 2018. May 2019: A demonstration by the LGBT community without the backing of official institutions ends in confrontation and arrests. Authorities call the rally a provocation. November 2020: Artists, representing numerous approaches to art, gather in front of the Ministry of Culture to demand more space for independent creation. 

Cubans Rally in US in Support of Protesters in Cuba

Cuban Americans gathered again Monday outside a restaurant in Little Havana in Miami to show support for protesters in Cuba.On Sunday, nearly 5,000 people showed up at the Versailles Restaurant, a well-known gathering spot for people of Cuban descent, local media reported. They waved Cuban and U.S. flags and shouted “Viva Cuba libre” and “Down with communism!”Demonstrators also gathered outside the Cuban Embassy in Washington, D.C., on Sunday.Cuban citizens take part in a demonstration against Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel’s government outside the Cuban Embassy, in Mexico City on July 12, 2021.In Miami, social media showed a smaller gathering outside the restaurant on Monday. The local CBS4 news station said hundreds of cars driving by honked in support of demonstrators.Miami Mayor Francis Suarez told the local news station on Monday that the previous day’s protests in Cuba were “a spontaneous uprising that has never happened in the last 60 years. It happened in more than a dozen cities across Cuba.””The United States and the international community must do something now,” Suarez told the gathering outside the restaurant, according to the local CBS new station. “The people of Cuba need medicine. They are starving. They are in need of international help. Unless the Cuban military turns on the government, the people of Cuba will continue to be oppressed without any hope of freedom in the future.””Sixty years of Communism, cruelty and oppression cannot last any longer!” Suarez, who had taken part in Sunday’s demonstration, wrote on Twitter after denouncing Cuban police, who had beaten and detained some demonstrators.Frustrated by the country’s repressive dictatorship and the lack of food and medicine exacerbated by the coronavirus, thousands of Cubans took to the streets in dozens of cities across the country Sunday. Inventario, a website specializing in Cuban data, tracked at least 25 protests in different locations throughout the island, the Miami Herald reported.Many Americans of Cuban origin gathered in the U.S. as a gesture of support.”I am very moved because I did not think it would take place,” Aleida Lopez, a Cuban living in the U.S. state of Florida, told Agence France-Presse on Sunday.”The young people have finally said ‘enough is enough. We will do what the older ones could not do,'” Yanelis Sales, a Cuban American, told AFP.Cuba’s protests were the first major popular mobilization since the 1959 revolution that brought Fidel Castro to power. In Cuba, the only permitted gatherings are usually those of the Communist Party, AFP reported.A woman holds a Cuban flag during a demonstration in support of anti-government protests in Cuba, in front of the Spanish parliament in Madrid, Spain, July 12, 2021.In Florida, state Governor Ron DeSantis said on Twitter that “Florida supports the people of Cuba who take to the streets against the tyrannical regime in Havana,” AFP reported.”The next few days will be decisive for Cubans who demand freedom,” Florida Lieutenant Governor Jeanette Nunez told AFP on Monday.On Monday, U.S. President Joe Biden urged Cuba to “refrain from any violence and any attempt to silence the people of Cuba.”He added: “The Cuban people are demanding their freedom from an authoritarian regime. I don’t think we’ve seen anything like this protest in a long, long time, if, quite frankly, ever.”Cuban American Gianni Leyva, who was among 25 people who demonstrated in front of the White House in Washington on Monday, told AFP, “This is the start of change … I hope that the Cuban people stay out there in the streets. I hope they fight. They fight for their freedom.””Let’s hope the president and Congress take a step in the right direction and help my country,” Sergio Alvarez, a Cuban-born electrician, told AFP. He said his father died last year on the island for lack of medical care.Some information for this report came from Agence France-Presse and The Associated Press. 

Police Patrol Havana in Large Numbers After Rare Protests

Large contingents of Cuban police patrolled the capital of Havana on Monday following rare protests around the island nation against food shortages and high prices amid the coronavirus crisis. Cuba’s president said the demonstrations were stirred up on social media by Cuban Americans in the United States.  Sunday’s protests marked some of the biggest displays of antigovernment sentiment in the tightly controlled country in years. Cuba is going through its worst economic crisis in decades, along with a resurgence of coronavirus cases, as it suffers the consequences of U.S. sanctions imposed by former President Donald Trump’s administration.  Many young people took part in demonstrations in Havana. Protests were also held elsewhere on the island, including in the small town of San Antonio de los Baños, where people objected to power outages and were visited by President Miguel Díaz-Canel. He entered a few homes, where he took questions from residents. Authorities appeared determined to put a stop to the demonstrations. More than a dozen protesters were detained, including a leading Cuban dissident who was arrested trying to attend a march in the city of Santiago, 900 kilometers southeast of Havana. The demonstrators disrupted traffic in the capital for several hours until some threw rocks and police moved in and broke them up. Police stand guard near the National Capitol building in Havana, Cuba, July 12, 2021, the day after protests against food shortages and high prices amid the coronavirus crisis.Internet service was spotty, possibly indicating an effort to prevent protesters from communicating with each other. “We’ve seen how the campaign against Cuba was growing on social media in the past few weeks,” Díaz-Canel said Monday in a nationally televised appearance in which his entire Cabinet was also present. “That’s the way it’s done: Try to create inconformity, dissatisfaction by manipulating emotions and feelings.” In a statement Monday, U.S. President Joe Biden said Cuban protesters were asserting their basic rights.  The U.S. urges the Cuban government to serve their people ”rather than enriching themselves,” Biden added. United Nations deputy spokesman Farhan Haq on Monday stressed the U.N. position “on the need for freedom of expression and peaceful assembly to be respected fully, and we expect that that will be the case.”  The demonstrations were extremely unusual on an island where little dissent against the government is tolerated. The last major public demonstration of discontent, over economic hardship, took place nearly 30 years ago, in 1994. Last year, there were small demonstrations by artists and other groups, but nothing as large or widespread as what erupted this past weekend. A Cuban flag hangs on Parque Central Hotel in Havana, Cuba, early on July 12, 2021, the day after protests against food shortages and high prices amid the coronavirus crisis.In the Havana protest on Sunday, police initially trailed behind as protesters chanted, “Freedom!” “Enough!” and “Unite!” One motorcyclist pulled out a U.S. flag, but it was snatched from him by others. “We are fed up with the queues, the shortages. That’s why I’m here,” one middle-age protester told The Associated Press. He declined to identify himself for fear of being arrested later. Later, about 300 pro-government protesters arrived with a large Cuban flag, shouting slogans in favor of late President Fidel Castro and the Cuban revolution. Some assaulted an AP video journalist, smashing his camera. AP photojournalist Ramón Espinosa was then beaten by a group of police officers in uniforms and civilian clothes. He suffered a broken nose and an eye injury.  The demonstration grew to a few thousand in the vicinity of Galeano Avenue, and the marchers pressed on despite a few charges by police officers and tear gas barrages. People standing on many balconies along the central artery in the Centro Habana neighborhood applauded the protesters passing by. Others joined in the march. About 2 1/2 hours into the march, some protesters pulled up cobblestones and threw them at police, at which point officers began arresting people and the marchers dispersed. AP journalists counted at least 20 people who were taken away in police cars or by individuals in civilian clothes.  

Cuba’s Internet Cutoff: The Go-to Tactic for Global Despots

Cubans facing the country’s worst economic crisis in decades took to the streets over the weekend. In turn, authorities blocked social media sites in an apparent effort to stop the flow of information into, out of and within the beleaguered nation.Restricting internet access has become a tried-and-true method of stifling dissent by authoritarian regimes around the world, alongside government-supported disinformation campaigns and propaganda. On the extreme side, regimes like China and North Korea exert tight control over what regular citizens can access online. Elsewhere, service blockages are more limited, often cutting off common social platforms around elections and times of mass protests.Sites blocked On Monday, Cuban authorities were blocking Facebook, WhatsApp, Instagram and Telegram, said Alp Toker, director of Netblocks, a London-based internet monitoring firm. “This does seem to be a response to social media-fueled protest,” he said. Twitter did not appear to be blocked, though Toker noted Cuba could cut it off if it wanted to.While Cuba’s recent easing of access to the internet has increased social media activity, Toker said, the level of censorship has also risen. Not only does the cutoff block out external voices, he said, it also squelches “the internal voice of the population who have wanted to speak out.”Internet access in Cuba has been expensive and relatively rare until recently. The country was “basically offline” until 2008, then gradually over the past 12 to 15 years, it entered a digital revolution, said Ted Henken, a Latin America expert at Baruch College, City University of New York.The biggest change, Henken noted, was in December 2018 when Cubans got access to mobile internet for the first time via data plans purchased from the state telecom monopoly. Since then, the percentage of Cubans with internet access has grown quickly to more than 50% today, Henken said.Real-time accessThe mobile revolution has given Cubans real-time, anywhere-you-are access to the internet and the ability to share information among themselves, he added. Since early 2019, this access has facilitated regular, if smaller, events and protests on the island, and in response, the government has periodically shut down access to social media, mostly to hide its repressive tactics from both citizens and foreigners, he said.The Cuban government also restricts independent media in Cuba and “routinely blocks access within Cuba to many news websites and blogs,” according to Human Rights Watch.Cuba is going through its worst economic crisis in decades, along with a resurgence of coronavirus cases, as it suffers the consequences of U.S. sanctions imposed by the Trump administration.The protests now, the largest in decades, are “absolutely and definitely fueled by increased access to internet and smartphones in Cuba,” said Sebastian Arcos, associate director of the Cuban Research Institute at Florida International University.”Yesterday evening we had people calling from Cuba to relatives here in Miami trying to figure out what was going on in the next province,” Arcos said. But he noted that Cubans are also using a number of tricks to bypass government control.Internet shutdowns becoming commonGovernment internet shutdowns after or ahead of protests have become commonplace, whether lasting for a few hours or stretching for months. In Ethiopia, there was a three-week shutdown in July 2020 after civil unrest. The internet blackout in the Tigray region has stretched on for months. In Belarus, the internet went down for more than two days after an August 2020 election seen as rigged sparked mass protests. Mobile internet service repeatedly went down during weekend protests for months afterward.A decade ago during the Arab Spring, when social media was still in its early years and Egypt, Tunisia and other countries in the Middle East faced bloody uprisings that were broadcast on social media, headlines declared the movements “Twitter Revolutions,” and experts debated about just how important a role social media played in the events.Ten years later, there is no question that social media and private chat platforms have become an essential organizing tool. Restricting them, in turn, is a routine move to suppress dissent. Internet service was disrupted in Cali, Colombia, during May anti-government protests.This year has also seen disruptions in Armenia, Uganda, Iran, Chad, Senegal and the Republic of Congo.India shuts down internetBut authoritarian regimes aren’t the only ones getting into the act. India routinely shuts down the internet during times of unrest. Toker of NetBlocks said the imposition of internet restrictions in Cuba follows an emerging global pattern and not always in the countries you most expect them, such as a recent Nigerian cutoff of Twitter. On the plus side, he said, the world is much more aware of these incidents because it’s easier to monitor and report them remotely.On Sunday, all of Cuba went offline for less than 30 minutes, after which there were several hours of intermittent but large outages, said Doug Madory of Kentik, a network management company. He said large internet outages were rare in Cuba until very recently.”There was an outage in January just for mobile service following the ’27N’ protests,” Madory said, referring to a movement of Cuban artists, journalists and other members of civil society who marched to the Ministry of Culture on November 27, 2020, demanding freedom and democracy.Henken said he doesn’t believe the government would shut off access for an extended period of time, even though that is its go-to tactic for dissidents and activists.”The problem they have now is that it’s not a handful of activists or artists or independent journalists – it’s now a massive swath of the population all throughout the country,” he said. “So the genie is out of the bottle. They’re trying to put it back in.”

Biden Expresses Support for Cuban People Amid Rare Protests

Amid the largest anti-government protests in decades in Cuba, U.S. President Joe Biden is expressing support for the people of the Caribbean island nation, underscoring their right to peaceful protest.  “The Cuban people are demanding their freedom from an authoritarian regime. I don’t think we’ve seen anything like this protest in a long, long time if, quite frankly ever,” Biden said in the Roosevelt Room of the White House. “The United States stands firmly with the people of Cuba as they assert their universal rights and we call on the government of Cuba to refrain from violence in their attempt to silence the voices of the people of Cuba.” U.S. President Joe Biden speaks during a meeting at the White House in Washington, July 12, 2021.Biden made his remarks at the start of a meeting with local leaders about gun violence.  The White House is also rejecting Cuba’s claim the United States it is to blame for the public unrest.  “There’s every indication that yesterday’s protests were spontaneous expressions of people who are exhausted with the Cuban government’s economic mismanagement and repression,” White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said during Monday’s briefing. “And these are protests inspired by the harsh reality of everyday life in Cuba, not people in another country.” Her comment came shortly after Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla accused U.S.-paid mercenaries of fomenting unrest.”Yesterday in Cuba there was no social uprising, yesterday in Cuba there was disorder, disturbances caused by a communicational operation that had been prepared for some time and to which millions had been dedicated,” said the foreign minister.  Earlier in the day, Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel, in a nationally broadcast address alongside his Cabinet, said the social unrest there was the result of “a policy of economic suppression” by the United States.  A police line is seen blocking a road leading to the National Capitol Building, in Havana, Cuba, July 12, 2021.Demonstrators threw stones at police and at foreign currency shops, stole items and overturned cars, engaging in “totally vulgar, indecent and delinquent behavior,” according to Diaz-Canel. The Cuban president is calling for the country’s “revolutionary” citizens to counter the anti-government protest.  “We are prepared to do anything,” he said. “We will be battling in the streets.” Protesters on Sunday chanted slogans calling for freedom, liberty and unity as they marched in the capital, Havana, until police eventually broke up the march while making some arrests.  Demonstrators turned out in other parts of the country, including in San Antonio de los Banos, near Havana, voicing their anger about long lines for food, cuts in electricity, and trouble with the supply of medicine amid the coronavirus pandemic.  Cuban health officials on Sunday reported 6,923 new COVID-19 infections and 47 deaths.  Cuba has been under communist rule since 1959 when Fidel Castro’s popular revolution compelled dictator Fulgencio Batista to flee the island.  “This regime has brutalized and denied freedom to generations of Cubans, forcing many including my family to flee or be murdered, and over the coming days will widen its violence to try to suppress the brave protesters in the streets,” said Republican Ted Cruz of Texas, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.  Another prominent Republican senator, Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, said on Twitter: “President Biden: freedom in Cuba needs you now. Don’t be AWOL.” AWOL stands for Absent Without Leave.  President Biden, freedom in #Cuba needs you now! Don’t be AWOL.https://t.co/hWgxptw0nJ— Lindsey Graham (@LindseyGrahamSC) July 12, 2021Asked by a reporter on Monday whether the weekend’s events compel the Biden administration to prioritize a review of its Cuba policy, Psaki responded that the White House “is monitoring closely” events in the country, and “we will be closely engaged, we will be looking to provide support for the people of Cuba.”  The United States proclaimed an embargo on trade with Cuba in 1962. The embargo relaxed somewhat in the year 2000, when Congress passed a law allowing American businesses to sell food and “humanitarian goods” including medicine to Cuba. In January of this year, outgoing President Donald Trump hit Cuba with new sanctions in the final days of his administration, redesignating the country as a “state sponsor of terrorism.” Asked by a reporter on Monday whether he would consider a change to the embargo policy, Biden replied he would have more to say on Cuba later in the week, “so stay tuned.”  Some information for this report came from the Associated Press, AFP and Reuters.  
 

UN Human Rights Chief Calls for Action to End Systemic Racism

U.N. human rights chief Michelle Bachelet is calling for action and concrete measures to end systemic racism and racial violence against Africans and people of African descent. The high commissioner has presented a series of recommendations to address existing problems in a report to the U.N. Human Rights Council.
 
The report was mandated by the Council a year ago in the aftermath of the killing of African American George Floyd while in police custody in Minneapolis, in the U.S. state of Minnesota.  
 
Bachelet called Floyd’s murder a tipping point. She said it has shifted the world’s attention to the human rights violations routinely endured by Africans and people of African descent.
 
The report provides a comprehensive view of the inequalities, marginalization, and lack of opportunities that render many people of African descent powerless, trapped in poverty and victimized by a system of social injustice.FILE – United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet looks on after delivering a speech on global human rights developments during a session of the Human Rights Council, in Geneva, June 21, 2021.The report focuses on lethal incidents at the hands of law enforcement. Bachelet says her office has received information about at least such 190 deaths of Africans and people of African descent. She notes 98% have occurred in Europe, Latin America, and North America.  
 
She said there has been a strikingly consistent failure to see justice done in all these cases.
 
“Three key contexts in which police-related fatalities stood out: The policing of minor offenses, traffic stops and stop-and-searches; the intervention of law enforcement officials as first responders in mental health crises; and special police operations in the context of the ‘war on drugs’ or gang-related operations.… Moreover, law enforcement officers are rarely held accountable for human rights violations and crimes against persons of African descent,” Bachelet said.
 
The killing of George Floyd was a rare exception. Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin whose actions resulted in the death of Floyd was captured on video and witnessed by millions, was found guilty of his crime and sentenced to more than 20 years in prison.
 
In a video statement, Floyd’s brother Philonius, said he still feels the horrific pain of watching his brother pass away.
 
“He was tortured to death in broad daylight. That was a modern-day execution…It is difficult knowing that you can run from the police, and they still will shoot you in the back with [you having] no weapon. You do not have any weapon but at the same time they still get qualified immunity,” he said.
 
In view of the profound and wide-ranging injustices, Bachelet said there is an urgent need to confront the legacies of enslavement and to seek reparatory justice.
 
Her recommendations include acknowledging the systemic nature of racism to transform the structures. They call for holding law enforcement officials accountable for crimes, guaranteeing the right of freedom of expression and peaceful assembly during anti-racism protests, and taking steps to address the harms caused by means of a wide range of reparations measures.
 

Hot, Dry Conditions Drive Wildfires in Western US and Canada

Firefighters in the western United States and Canada are battling numerous wildfires as hot, dry weather worsens drought conditions. A wildfire burning in southern Oregon, near the California border, expanded to more than 600 square kilometers, prompting evacuations and disrupting electrical transmission lines that deliver electricity to California. Firefighters are not likely to get much relief in the coming days with conditions forecast to be dry and windy, with temperatures well above average. Authorities said Sunday they are shifting more crews to working overnight when it is easier to battle the fires and build containment lines. California is dealing with its largest wildfire of the year, burning just north of Lake Tahoe. The Beckwourth Complex Fire grew to 348 square kilometers in size, while firefighters managed to get it 20% contained. California power authorities are urging people to conserve energy Monday to try to avoid outages, with many parts of the state and neighboring Nevada under excessive heat warnings. The National Weather Service said Death Valley, California, reached a high temperature of 53 degrees Celsius on Sunday and was expected to nearly match that again Monday. Farther north, officials in the western Canadian state of British Columbia said more than 300 active fires are now burning there, an increase of 36 in two days. Some information for this report came from the Associated Press and Reuters. 

Haiti Police Say Arrested Suspect Linked to Assassination Masterminds

The head of Haiti’s national police said Sunday authorities arrested a Haitian man who flew to the country on a private jet in June and — according to police — worked with the masterminds and alleged killers of President Jovenel Moïse. Police Chief Léon Charles identified the man as Christian Emmanuel Sanon and said he traveled to Haiti with political objectives. Charles said Sanon was accompanied by hired security guards who had an initial mission of protecting Sanon, but who were then tasked with arresting Moïse. The police chief also said that after Moïse’s assassination last week, one of the suspected attackers called Sanon, and that Sanon called two yet-unnamed people whom police consider masterminds of the killing.Police security is seen during the Haiti’s interim Prime Minister Claude Joseph news conference in Port-au-Prince, July 12, 2021.Charles said police have arrested 18 Colombians and 3 Haitians in connection with the attack, and that at least five other people were believed to still be at large. He said after interrogations of those in custody, police believe at least some of the suspects were hired by Miami-based company CTU Security. Moïse was shot to death at his home in Port-au-Prince, the Haitian capital, early Wednesday. His wife, Martine Moïse, was seriously wounded in the attack and taken to Miami for treatment. The United States on Sunday sent a technical team to Haiti to assess its security and other needs. The team includes personnel from the Department of Homeland Security and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The United States earlier rejected Haiti’s request for troops to quell sporadic violence linked to the assassination. The Biden administration official said the U.S. would also consult with its regional partners on the Haitian turmoil and the United Nations.  Some information for this report came from the Associated Press, AFP and Reuters.  

Gangs Complicate Haiti Effort to Move On From Assassination

Gangs in Haiti have long been financed by powerful politicians and their allies — and many Haitians fear those backers may be losing control of the increasingly powerful armed groups who have driven thousands of people from their homes as they battle over territory, kill civilians and raid warehouses of food.The escalation in gang violence threatens to complicate — and be aggravated by — political efforts to recover from last week’s brazen slaying of President Jovenel Moïse. Haiti’s government is in disarray: no parliament, no president, a dispute over who is prime minister, a weak police force. But the gangs seem more organized and powerful than ever.While the violence has been centered in the capital of Port-au-Prince, it has affected life across Haiti, paralyzing the fragile economy, shuttering schools, overwhelming police and disrupting efforts to fight the COVID-19 pandemic.”The country is transformed into a vast desert where wild animals engulf us,” said the Haitian Conference of the Religious in a recent statement about the spike in violent crime. “We are refugees and exiles in our own country.”Gangs recently have stolen tens of thousands of bags of sugar, rice and flour and ransacked and burned homes in the capital. That has driven thousands of people to seek shelter at churches, outdoor fields and a large gymnasium, where the government and international donors struggle to feed them and find long-term housing.Those included dozens of disabled people who fled last month when gangs set fire to the encampment where they settled after the catastrophic 2010 earthquake.”I was running for my life in the camp on these crutches,” said 44-year-old Obas Woylky, who lost a leg in the quake. “Bullets were flying from different directions. … All I was able to see was fire in the homes.”He was among more than 350 people crammed into a school converted into a shelter where hardly anyone wore face masks against coronavirus.Experts say the violence is the worst they’ve seen since in roughly two decades — since before the creation of a second U.N. peacekeeping mission in 2004.Programs aimed at reducing gang activity and an influx of aid following the earthquake helped, but once that money dried up and aid programs shut down, gangs turned to kidnappings and extortion from businesses and neighborhoods they control.Gangs are in part funded by powerful politicians, a practice recently denounced even by one of its reputed beneficiaries — Jimmy Cherizier, a former police officer who heads a gang coalition known as G9 Family and Allies.He complained that the country is being held hostage by people he did not identify: “They reign supreme everywhere, distribute weapons to the populous quarters, playing the division card to establish their domination.”Cherizier, known as Barbecue, has been linked to several massacres, and his coalition is believed to be allied with Moïse’s right-wing party. He criticized those he called “bourgeois” and “exploiters,” adding: “We will use our weapons against them in favor of the Haitian people. … We’re ready for war!”Cherizier held a news conference Saturday and called Moïse’s killing “cowardly and villainous,” saying that while many disagreed with him, “no one wanted this tragic outcome that will worsen the crisis and amplify political instability.”He also issued a veiled warning: “We invite all those who are trying to take advantage of this coup to think carefully, to consider whether they have in their hands the appropriate solution to the country’s problems.”Cherizier added that he and others will demand justice for Moïse: “We are just now warming up.”G9 is one of at least 30 gangs that authorities believe control nearly half of Port-au-Prince. Their names range from “5 Seconds” — for how long it allegedly takes them to commit a crime — to “400 Mawozo” — which roughly translated means 400 lame men.The epicenter of the recent gang violence is Martissant, a community in southern Port-au-Prince whose main road connects the capital to southern Haiti. Drivers’ fear of being caught in a crossfire or worse has almost paralyzed commercial connections between the two regions, driving up prices, delaying the transportation of food and fuel and forcing international organizations to cancel programs including the distribution of cash to more than 30,000 people, according to a July 1 report by the U.N.’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.The agency said more than 1 million people need immediate humanitarian assistance and protection.”Newly displaced people seek refuge in shelters every day,” it said, adding that hygiene there was appalling. Authorities worry about a spike in COVID-19 cases in a country that has yet to give a single vaccine.The overall economy doesn’t help. The U.N. said the cost of a basic food basket rose by 13% in May compared with February, and that foreign direct investment fell by more than 70% from 2018 to 2020, dropping from $105 million to $30 million. That translates into fewer jobs and increased poverty in a country where 60% of the population makes less than $2 a day and 25% makes less than $1 a day.Haiti’s elections minister, Mathias Pierre, said Saturday that those backing the gangs may want to disrupt elections that are scheduled for September and November and are crucial to restoring functional legislative and executive branches now largely moribund.  He said that wouldn’t work, noting that countries have held elections during wars. “We need to organize elections. …They need to back off.”Haiti’s Office of the Protection of Citizens, a sort of ombudsman agency, has urged the international community to help Haiti’s National Police, which it said was “unable to respond effectively to the gangsterization of the country.”Pierre said that lack of resources and weakness of Haiti’s police led the government to ask the United States and United Nations to send troops to help maintain order following Moïse’s killing: “We have a responsibility to avoid chaos.”Officials say they have been trying to boost the budget and manpower of a police force that now has about 9,000 operational officers for a country of more than 11 million people. Experts say it needs at least 30,000 officers to maintain control.The government also is trying to figure out where to put people who have fled their homes because of the violence, such as 43-year-old Marjorie Benoit, her husband and their three children.Benoit, who lost an arm in the earthquake, said they fled as gunfire crackled around their neighborhood. She now also has lost her home and all their belongings.”We have been uprooted,” she said, “and we don’t know where to start.” 

Thousands Join Rare Anti-government Protests in Cuba

Thousands of Cubans took part in rare protests Sunday against the communist government, marching through a town chanting “Down with the dictatorship” and “We want liberty.”The protest in San Antonio de los Banos, a town of about 50,000 people southwest of Havana, came as Cuba is experiencing its toughest phase yet of the coronavirus epidemic, the same day it reported a new daily record of infections and deaths.Some of the demonstrators, mainly young people, shouted insults against President Miguel Diaz-Canel, who turned up at the event, according to amateur videos posted online, while others proclaimed: “We are not afraid.”Social anger has been driven by long food lines and a critical shortage of medicines since the start of the COVID-19 epidemic, with Cuba under U.S. sanctions.The country of 11.2 million people was left relatively unscathed in the first months of the outbreak but has seen a recent hike in infections and a new record of 6,923 daily cases reported Sunday and 47 deaths for a total of 1,537.”These are alarming numbers, which are increasing daily,” said Francisco Duran, head of epidemiology in the health ministry.Under hashtags such as #SOSCuba, calls for assistance have multiplied on social media, with citizens and rap stars alike urging the government to make it possible for much-needed foreign donations to enter the country.An opposition group called Saturday for the creation of a “humanitarian corridor,” an initiative the government rejected by saying Cuba was not a conflict zone.Ernesto Soberon, a foreign affairs official, denounced it as a campaign that sought to “portray an image of total chaos in the country, which does not correspond to the situation.”
 

Who Will Lead Haiti after President’s Killing? 

Three days after the assassination of Haitian leader Jovenel Moise, questions are mounting about how the power vacuum left by his sudden death will be filled, in a violence-wracked country with no working parliament and no workable succession process.The following is a look at what could happen next in the impoverished Caribbean nation, which was already mired in a deep political and security crisis when the slaying — its motive still unclear — took place early Wednesday.Three weakened branches of powerWith Haiti’s executive branch shaken by the murder of the president, the two other branches — the legislative and the judiciary — face enormous pressures in a country crippled by a grave institutional crisis for more than a year.Moise had organized no elections since arriving in power in 2017, leaving Haiti with only 10 elected lawmakers, just one-third of the Senate, since January 2020.His administration had also not nominated any replacements for members of the Superior Council of the Judiciary when their three-year terms ended — or after the council’s president died last month of COVID-19.”As concerns the constitution, there is no possibility of finding a solution, for Jovenel Moise and his team had made sure to dismantle all the institutions,” said Marie Rosy Auguste Ducena, a lawyer with the National Network for the Defense of Human Rights. “Whether you turn to the parliament or to the judiciary, there is nothing.”Duel to fill governing voidOnly hours after Moise’s assassination, Claude Joseph, who was named prime minister in April, announced that he was in charge, while declaring a two-week “state of siege” that gave him even broader powers.”The constitution is clear: I have to organize elections and actually pass the power to someone else who is elected,” he said in English in an interview broadcast Saturday on CNN.Haiti’s constitution states that in the event a president is unable to carry out his duties, the prime minister shall assume power. Only days before his death, Moise had named Ariel Henry to be the country’s next prime minister.That nomination, registered Monday in the official journal of the Haitian republic, led some observers to question Joseph’s claim to power.Facing the real danger of a national power vacuum, eight of the 10 senators still in office signed their names late Friday to a resolution nominating Senate leader Joseph Lambert to be the country’s provisional president.They have some support from opposition parties, but the validity of the document — and how it can be enforced — is unclear.”While there is no denying that the 10 senators are the only remaining 10 elected officials in the country, it is clear that they are not representative of the country,” Haitian policy analyst Emmanuela Douyon said.Foreign troops to provide security?Facing the sudden power vacuum, Claude Joseph asked the United States and the U.N. to send troops to secure strategic sites including seaports and airports, but a senior U.S. administration official said Saturday: “There are no plans to provide U.S. military assistance at this time.” The United Nations maintained a sizable peacekeeping contingent in the country from 2004 to 2017. “And since their departure, look at what is happening: the nearly complete gangster-ization of the nation,” Douyon said.Armed gangs have tightened their grip over Haiti since early this year. Violent clashes between armed groups in western Port-au-Prince have forced thousands of fearful residents to flee.The national police have launched only one major operation against the gangs, in March, and it ended in fiasco: four police officers were killed, their bodies never recovered.”If there’s a need for reinforcements, it will be to clean out the ranks of the police — to salvage what is salvageable,” Douyon said.Letting Haitians decideAs the country’s de facto leader since Wednesday, Joseph has the official backing of Helen La Lime, the U.N. special representative in Haiti. But her stance is deeply decried by many civil society leaders in the country.”It’s not up to a U.N. representative to say, ‘This is who is in charge,’ ” Douyon said. “That reminds us of the colonial periods, and no one wants to live through that again.””After Black Lives Matter, after all these movements demanding reparations for slavery, this is no time for foreign forces to show they are trying to impose solutions on Haitians,” she said. 

New Details Emerge About Suspects in Killing of Haitian President

More details have emerged about the men accused in the assassination of Haiti President Jovenel Moise.Among those arrested are two Haitian Americans, one of whom worked alongside the American actor and humanitarian Sean Penn following the nation’s devastating 2010 earthquake.Haitian police have also detained or killed more than a dozen former members of Colombia’s military.Some of the suspects were seized in a raid on Taiwan’s Embassy, where they were believed to have sought refuge. National Police Chief Leon Charles said another eight suspects were still at large.Colombian officials have said the men were recruited by four companies and traveled to Haiti via the Dominican Republic. U.S.-trained Colombian soldiers are often recruited by security firms and mercenary armies in conflict zones because of their experience in a decades-long war against leftist rebels and drug cartels.The sister of one of the dead suspects, Duberney Capador, told the AP that she last spoke to her brother late Wednesday — hours after Moise was killed — when the men, holed up in a home, were surrounded and trying to negotiate their way out of a shootout.”He told me not to tell our mother, so she wouldn’t worry,” said Yenny Capador, as she fought back tears.FILE – Police search the Morne Calvaire district of Petionville for suspects who remain at large in the killing of Haitian President Jovenel Moise in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 9, 2021. Moise was assassinated on July 7.It’s not known who masterminded the attack. And questions remain about how the perpetrators were able to penetrate the president’s residence posing as U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents, meeting little resistance from those charged with protecting the president.Capador said her brother, who retired from the Colombian army in 2019 with the rank of sergeant, was hired by a private security firm with the understanding he would be providing protection for powerful individuals in Haiti.Capador said she knew almost nothing about the employer but shared a picture of her brother in a uniform emblazoned with the logo of CTU Security, a company based in Doral, a Miami suburb popular with Colombian migrants.The wife of Francisco Uribe, who was among those arrested, told Colombia’s W Radio that CTU offered to pay the men about $2,700 a month — a paltry sum for a dangerous international mission but far more than what most of the men, noncommissioned officers and professional soldiers, earned from their pensions.Uribe is under investigation in the death of an unarmed civilian in 2008 who was presented as someone killed in combat, one of thousands of extrajudicial killings that rocked Colombia’s U.S.-trained army more than a decade ago.CTU Security was registered in 2008 and lists as its president Antonio Intriago, who is also affiliated with several other Florida-registered entities, some since dissolved, including the Counter Terrorist Unit Federal Academy, the Venezuelan American National Council and Doral Food Corp.CTU’s website lists two addresses, one of which is a gray warehouse that was shuttered Friday with no sign indicating who the owner is. The other is a small suite under a different company’s name in a modern office building a few blocks away. A receptionist said Intriago stops by every few days to collect mail and hold meetings.Intriago, who is Venezuelan, did not return phone calls and an email seeking comment.”We are the ones who are most interested in clarifying what happened, so that my brother’s reputation does not remain like it is,” Capador said. “He was a humble, hardworking man. He had honors and decorations.”FILE – Suspects in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moise sit on the floor handcuffed after being detained, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 8, 2021.Besides the Colombians, those detained by police included two Haitian Americans: James Solages and Joseph Vincent.Investigative Judge Clement Noel told Le Nouvelliste that the arrested Americans said the attackers planned only to arrest Moïse, not kill him, and that they were acting as translators for the attackers, the French-language newspaper reported Friday.Solages, 35, described himself as a “certified diplomatic agent,” an advocate for children and budding politician on a now-removed website for a charity he started in 2019 in South Florida to assist residents of his Haitian hometown of Jacmel.He worked briefly as a driver and bodyguard for a relief organization set up by Penn following a magnitude 7.0 earthquake that killed 300,000 Haitians and left tens of thousands homeless. He also lists as past employers the Canadian Embassy in Haiti. His now-deactivated Facebook page features photos of armored military vehicles and an image of himself in front of an American flag.Calls to the charity and Solages’ associates went unanswered. However, a relative in South Florida said that Solages didn’t have any military training and that he didn’t believe Solages was involved in the killing.Interim Prime Minister Claude Joseph refused to specify who was behind the attack but said that Moise had earned numerous enemies while attacking oligarchs who for years profited from overly generous state contracts.Some of those elite insiders are now the focus of investigators, with authorities asking that presidential candidate and businessman Reginald Boulos and former Senate President Youri Latortue meet prosecutors next week for questioning. No further details were provided and none of the men have been charged.Prosecutors also want to interrogate members of Moise’s security detail, including security coordinator Jean Laguel Civil and Dimitri Herard, the head of the General Security Unit of the National Palace.”If you are responsible for the president’s security, where have you been?” Port-au-Prince prosecutor Bed-Ford Claude was quoted as telling Le Nouvelliste. “What did you do to avoid this fate for the president?”

Widow of Slain Haitian President: Assassins Aimed ‘to Kill His Vision, Ideology’ 

Assassins who gunned down Haitian President Jovenel Moise in his private residence aimed “to kill his dream, his vision, his ideology,” according his widow’s first public statement since Wednesday’s predawn shooting in a wealthy suburb of Port-au-Prince threw the impoverished Caribbean nation into turmoil.Speaking from the Miami hospital where she is receiving treatment for wounds sustained in the attack, Martine Moise shared new details about how events unfolded.“In the blink of an eye, the mercenaries entered my home and riddled my husband with bullets … without even giving him a chance to say a word,” Moise said in the Creole language audio statement posted to Twitter on Saturday.“I’m alive, thanks to God,” she said, “but I love my husband Jovenel. We fought together for more than 25 years. During all these years, love radiated within the home. But suddenly, the mercenaries came and pelted my husband with bullets.“You have to be a notorious criminal without guts to assassinate a president like Jovenel Moise with impunity without giving him the chance to speak,” she said, referring to more than a dozen people — at least half of them retired Colombian soldiers — arrested since the attack.The Haitian flag flies at half-staff at the Presidential Palace in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 10, 2021, three days after President Jovenel Moise was assassinated in his home.Haitian police, who are still searching for other suspected members of the 28-person hit squad, said it remained unclear who hired them to attack the president’s house, or why.Moise, 53, who had held office since February 2017, had long faced protests demanding his resignation over allegations of corruption, economic mismanagement and strong-arm tactics to consolidate power.Spoke of opponentsMoise himself had talked of fellow politicians and corrupt oligarchs behind the unrest who felt his attempts to clean up government contracts and to reform Haitian politics were against their interests.“You knew who the president was fighting against,” Martine Moise said. “These people hired mercenaries to kill the president and his family because of the projects of roads, electricity, drinking water supply, organization of the referendum and elections.“The mercenaries who assassinated the president are currently behind bars,” she added, “but other mercenaries currently want to kill his dream, his vision, his ideology.”A man reads the front page of a local newspaper with the news of the assassination of President Jovenel Moise, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 10, 2021.Haitian authorities have not disclosed a motive for the killing but say the heavily armed hit squad included 26 Colombians and two Haitian Americans.Haitian National Police Chief Léon Charles told reporters Thursday that 17 suspects — the two Haitian Americans and 15 Colombians — had been apprehended, three suspects had been killed and eight were still at large.Colombian police said Friday that at least 13 former Colombian soldiers were believed to have been involved.The U.S. State Department has not confirmed the reports that two U.S. citizens are in detention, but Mathias Pierre, Haiti’s minister of elections, on Thursday identified the two Haitian Americans as James Solages, 35, and Joseph Vincent, 55.U.S. officials on Friday said they were deploying FBI and Department of Homeland Security personnel to Port-au-Prince to assist with the investigation.Some information for this report came from The Associated Press and Reuters.

No US Troops Planned for Haiti but Help Being Sent for Assassination Probe

The United States reportedly has no military plans for Haiti after a request to send troops to that nation in the aftermath of the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, but it has agreed to offer immediate help with the investigation. Haiti asked the U.S. and the United Nations Wednesday to deploy troops to the country to protect key infrastructure during a conversation between Haiti’s interim prime minister, Claude Joseph, and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, according to Haitian Elections Minister Mathias Pierre, who spoke with media outlets, including Reuters and Agence France-Presse.Haiti Requests US, UN Troops to Secure InfrastructureHaiti elections minister says request to US was made to the secretary of stateThe minister said Joseph made a request for U.N. troops with the U.N. Security Council on Thursday. “We were in a situation where we believed that infrastructure of the country – the port, airport and energy infrastructure – might be a target,” Minister Pierre told Reuters. Reuters quoted an anonymous senior U.S. administration official Friday, who said the United States has no plans to provide military assistance to Haiti “at this time.”The United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment from AFP.Earlier Friday, the Biden administration said it was sending senior Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in response to a request from the Haitian government for security and investigative assistance. US Sending FBI, Homeland Security Officials to Assist Haiti White House press secretary says assistance is in response to Haiti’s request for security and investigative help after presidential assassination White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Friday the U.S. officials will “assess the situation and how we may be able to assist.” “The United States remains engaged in close consultations with our Haitian and international partners to support the Haitian people in the aftermath of the assassination of the president,” she said. Haiti is in turmoil since Moise was shot to death at his private residence early Wednesday. Interim Prime Minister Joseph said he is in charge. Haitian officials have requested help from the United States to maintain security and help in the investigation to find those responsible for the assassination.Police said Friday that a 28-member assassination team of Colombians and Americans were responsible for the attack, but that a search continued for its organizers.Colombian police said Friday at least 13 former Colombian soldiers were believed to have been involved.  Haitian National Police Chief Léon Charles told reporters Friday that 17 suspects had been apprehended, including two Americans. Three suspects were killed and at least five are still on the run, police said.Haitian Officials: 17 Members of Hit Squad Detained in Killing of PresidentHaitian police say a heavily armed group that included two Americans and 26 Colombians were involved in the assassination; 17 of those people have been detainedColombia’s national police director, General Jorge Luis Vargas Valencia, said at a Friday news conference in Bogota that four companies participated in the “recruitment” of the Colombian suspects. He did not disclose the names of the companies because their names were still being confirmed.Bocchit Edmond, Haiti’s ambassador to the U.S., sent a letter to Blinken requesting sanctions against those implicated in the crime. “We further request for the Biden administration to impose sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act on all perpetrators who are directly responsible or aided and abetted in the execution of the assassination of the president. We look forward to working with the U.S. Embassy in Port-au Prince as we seek truth and justice for the family of President Moise and the people of Haiti,” the letter said. Haiti will receive $75.5 million in U.S. assistance this year, Psaki said, for “democratic governance, health, education, agricultural development, strengthening of pre-election activities, strengthening peace and law enforcement.” She said bolstering “law enforcement capacity” remains a key U.S. priority.  The Biden administration has earmarked $5 million for the Haitian National Police force (PNH), which is already receiving assistance from the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. The money will be used to quell gang violence. Haiti’s police force has been criticized in recent years for human rights abuses, corruption and mismanagement of resources. On the immigration front, the White House press secretary said the United States has extended Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for eligible Haitians currently living in the U.S. The decision was announced by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in May. To help Haiti combat a COVID-19 surge that began last month, Psaki said the U.S. plans to deliver coronavirus vaccines to Haiti “as early as next week.” Haiti’s airports were closed hours after the assassination of the president as law enforcement sought to cut off escape routes to possible suspects. Psaki said the delivery of the vaccines would depend on the status of the airport. In remarks to reporters Friday, U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric expressed concerns about the possible humanitarian implications the current crisis could have on the Haitian people. “Our colleagues are telling us that following the assassination of the president, efforts to respond to the recent increase in COVID-19 cases in the country are being put at risk,” Dujarric said. “The situation is also threatening efforts to provide humanitarian assistance, especially food and water, to people who have been internally displaced due to recent gang attacks.” Dujarric said humanitarian aid flights planned for Wednesday and Thursday were canceled. Helen La Lime, the special representative of the U.N. secretary-general in Haiti, has been in contact with Haitian officials, the spokesperson told reporters, and is pushing for “an inclusive political compromise” to solve the political crisis and sustain stability.  Meanwhile in Tabarre, a suburb of Port-au-Prince, dozens of Haitians gathered in front of the U.S. Embassy to request political asylum. “Whenever there’s a catastrophe in Haiti, people always seek refuge at the embassy. People don’t feel safe, that’s why they’re here,” a man who did not give his name told VOA Creole. He said some people arrived Thursday night. Asked if anyone from the embassy had come out to speak with the group, the man said no. “If something happens, they will stay here and if they have a chance to leave the country they’ll go,” the man said. This story includes information from Associated Press, Reuters and Agence France-Presse.White House Correspondent Patsy Widakuswara, United Nations Correspondent Margaret Besheer,and Matiado Vilme in Port-au-Prince, Haiti contributed to this report.

Haiti Requests US, UN Troops to Secure Infrastructure

Haiti has asked the United States and the United Nations to deploy troops to the country to protect key infrastructure in the aftermath of the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse.Elections Minister Mathias Pierre told media outlets, including Reuters and Agence France-Presse, that the request for U.S. troop assistance was made Wednesday during a conversation between Haiti’s interim prime minister, Claude Joseph, and U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken. He said Joseph made a request for U.N. troops with the U.N. Security Council on Thursday.”We were in a situation where we believed that infrastructure of the country – the port, airport and energy infrastructure – might be a target,” Elections Minister Pierre told Reuters.Reuters quoted an anonymous senior U.S. administration official who said the United States has no plans to provide military assistance to Haiti “at this time.”The United Nations did not immediately respond to a request for comment from AFP.Earlier Friday, the Biden administration said it was sending senior Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) officials to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in response to a request from the Haitian government for security and investigative assistance.White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Friday the U.S. officials will “assess the situation and how we may be able to assist.”“The United States remains engaged in close consultations with our Haitian and international partners to support the Haitian people in the aftermath of the assassination of the president,” she said.Haiti is in turmoil since Moise was shot to death at his private residence early Wednesday. Interim Prime Minister Joseph said he is in charge. Haitian officials have requested help from the United States to maintain security and help in the investigation to find those responsible for the assassination.Bocchit Edmond, Haiti’s ambassador to the U.S., sent a letter to Blinken requesting sanctions against those implicated in the crime.“We further request for the Biden administration to impose sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act on all perpetrators who are directly responsible or aided and abetted in the execution of the assassination of the president. We look forward to working with the U.S. Embassy in Port-au Prince as we seek truth and justice for the family of President Moise and the people of Haiti,” the letter said.Police search the Morne Calvaire district of Petion Ville for suspects who remain at large in the murder of Haitian President Jovenel Moise in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 9, 2021.Haiti will receive $75.5 million in U.S. assistance this year, Psaki said, for “democratic governance, health, education, agricultural development, strengthening of preelection activities, strengthening peace and law enforcement.” She said bolstering “law enforcement capacity” remains a key U.S. priority.The Biden administration has earmarked $5 million for the Haitian National Police force (PNH), which is already receiving assistance from the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. The money will be used to quell gang violence.Haiti’s police force has been criticized in recent years for human rights abuses, corruption and mismanagement of resources.On the immigration front, the White House press secretary said the United States has extended Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for eligible Haitians currently living in the U.S. The decision was announced by Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas in May.To help Haiti combat a COVID-19 surge that began last month, Psaki said the U.S. plans to deliver coronavirus vaccines to Haiti “as early as next week.” Haiti’s airports were closed hours after the assassination of the president as law enforcement sought to cut off escape routes to possible suspects. Psaki said the delivery of the vaccines would depend on the status of the airport.In remarks to reporters Friday, U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric expressed concerns about the possible humanitarian implications the current crisis could have on the Haitian people.A charred car and building are pictured near the Petionville Police station where suspects of being involved in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise are being held, in Petionville, Haiti, July 9, 2021.“Our colleagues are telling us that following the assassination of the president, efforts to respond to the recent increase in COVID-19 cases in the country are being put at risk,” Dujarric said. “The situation is also threatening efforts to provide humanitarian assistance, especially food and water, to people who have been internally displaced due to recent gang attacks.”Dujarric said humanitarian aid flights planned for Wednesday and Thursday were canceled.Helen La Lime, the special representative of the U.N. secretary-general in Haiti, has been in contact with Haitian officials, the spokesperson told reporters, and is pushing for “an inclusive political compromise” to solve the political crisis and sustain stability.Meanwhile in Tabarre, a suburb of Port-au-Prince, dozens of Haitians gathered in front of the U.S. Embassy to request political asylum.“Whenever there’s a catastrophe in Haiti, people always seek refuge at the embassy. People don’t feel safe, that’s why they’re here,” a man who did not give his name told VOA Creole. He said some people arrived Thursday night.Asked if anyone from the embassy had come out to speak with the group, the man said no.“If something happens, they will stay here and if they have a chance to leave the country they’ll go,” the man said.White House Correspondent Patsy Widakuswara, United Nations Correspondent Margaret Besheer and Matiado Vilme in Port-au-Prince, Haiti contributed to this report.

US Sending FBI, Homeland Security Officials to Assist Haiti

The Biden administration is sending senior Federal Bureau of Investigation and Department of Homeland Security officials to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in response to a request from the Haitian government for security and investigative assistance after the assassination of President Jovenel Moise.White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Friday that the U.S. officials would “assess the situation and how we may be able to assist.”“The United States remains engaged in close consultations with our Haitian and international partners to support the Haitian people in the aftermath of the assassination of the president,” she said.Haiti is in turmoil since Moise was shot to death at his private residence early Wednesday. Interim Prime Minister Claude Joseph says he is in charge. Haitian officials have requested help from the United States to maintain security and aid in the investigation to find those responsible for the assassination.Sanctions soughtBocchit Edmond, Haiti’s ambassador to the U.S., sent a letter to U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken requesting sanctions against those implicated in the crime.“We further request for the Biden administration to impose sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act on all perpetrators who are directly responsible or aided and abetted in the execution of the assassination of the president. We look forward to working with the U.S. Embassy in Port-au-Prince as we seek truth and justice for the family of President Moise and the people of Haiti,” the letter said.A charred car and building are pictured near the Petionville police station, where suspects in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise are being held, in Petionville, Haiti, July 9, 2021.Haiti will receive $75.5 million in U.S. assistance this year, Psaki said, for “democratic governance, health, education, agricultural development, strengthening of pre-election activities, strengthening peace and law enforcement.” She said bolstering “law enforcement capacity” remained a key U.S. priority.The Biden administration has earmarked $5 million for the Haitian National Police force, which is already receiving assistance from the State Department’s Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs. The money will be used to quell gang violence.Haiti’s police force has been criticized in recent years for human rights abuses, corruption and mismanagement of resources.On the immigration front, the White House press secretary said the United States had extended Temporary Protected Status for eligible Haitians living in the United States. Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas announced that decision in May.To help Haiti combat a COVID-19 surge that began last month, Psaki said, the U.S. plans to deliver coronavirus vaccines to Haiti “as early as next week.” Haiti’s airports were closed hours after the assassination as law enforcement sought to cut off escape routes for possible suspects. Psaki said the delivery of the vaccines would depend on the status of the airport.Humanitarian aid in jeopardyIn remarks to reporters Friday, U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric expressed concerns about the possible humanitarian implications the current crisis could have on the Haitian people.“Our colleagues are telling us that following the assassination of the president, efforts to respond to the recent increase in COVID-19 cases in the country are being put at risk,” Dujarric said. “The situation is also threatening efforts to provide humanitarian assistance, especially food and water, to people who have been internally displaced due to recent gang attacks.”Dujarric said humanitarian aid flights planned for Wednesday and Thursday were canceled.Helen La Lime, the special representative of the U.N. secretary-general in Haiti, has been in contact with Haitian officials, the spokesperson told reporters, and is pushing for “an inclusive political compromise” to solve the political crisis and sustain stability.Haitians gather in front of the U.S. Embassy amid rumors on radio and social media that the U.S. will be handing out exile and humanitarian visas, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 9, 2021, two days after President Jovenel Moise was assassinated.Meanwhile in Tabarre, a suburb of Port-au-Prince, dozens of Haitians gathered in front of the U.S. Embassy to request political asylum.“Whenever there’s a catastrophe in Haiti, people always seek refuge at the embassy. People don’t feel safe — that’s why they’re here,” a man who did not give his name told VOA Creole. He said some people arrived Thursday night.Asked if anyone from the embassy had come out to speak with the group, the man said no one had.“If something happens, they will stay here, and if they have a chance to leave the country, they’ll go,” the man said. White House Correspondent Patsy Widakuswara, U.N. Correspondent Margaret Besheer and Matiado Vilme in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, contributed to this report.

Residents Tour Canadian Town That Set Heat Record, Burned to the Ground

Residents of Lytton, British Columbia, were able to see the remains of their homes on Friday for the first time since they were forced to flee for their lives days ago.The central British Columbia town made headlines at the end of June for breaking Canada’s heat record — hitting 49.6°C (121.28°F) at its hottest — and then it was almost destroyed in a forest fire caused in part by the heat wave.The town of about 250 people had just minutes to evacuate on June 30, along with roughly 2,000 people living in nearby Indigenous communities, after a forest fire was started by what authorities suspect was human activity.Ninety percent of the town was destroyed, Lytton Mayor Jan Polderman said.”A few buildings survived in town but nearly every home in the center of the village is gone. Where many buildings stood is now simply charred earth,” Polderman wrote in an open letter published in the Merritt Herald, the local newspaper. “We want everyone to know that their bravery was incredible in the face of this unimaginable horror.”Residents had not been able to return to the town until Friday because of ongoing fires and toxic substances in the area. Roughly 250 people, including residents and media, were taken on bus tours of the town Friday afternoon, according to Thompson-Nicola Regional District, which organized the tours.”Didn’t get much sleep last night thinking about the bus tour into Lytton today,” resident Edith Loring-Kuhanga posted on Twitter. “I know it’s going to be heartbreaking but I need to go see our little town even though it’s decimated!”The scenes were a shock to residents, one told the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.”We’ve seen the videos, but until you actually see it, it’s hard to believe,” Chloe Ross said. “I understand why others don’t want to go. Nothing about this feels real.”Two people died in the fire. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police, who have been coordinating family reunification efforts, said Friday that no one had been reported missing so far.

Colombian Suspects, Some Former Military, Were Recruited, Police Say

The Colombians implicated in the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise had been recruited by four companies and traveled to the Caribbean nation in two groups via the Dominican Republic, the head of Colombia’s police said Friday.Haitian National Police Chief Léon Charles said 17 suspects have been detained in the killing of Moise.At a news conference in Colombia’s capital, Bogota, General Jorge Luis Vargas Valencia said four companies had been involved in the “recruitment, the gathering of these people” implicated in the assassination, although he did not identify the companies because their names were still being verified.Two of the suspects traveled to Haiti via Panama and the Dominican Republic, Vargas said, while the second group of 11 arrived in Haiti on Sunday from the Dominican Republic.National Police Director Gen. Jorge Luis Vargas speaks at a press conference regarding the alleged participation of former Colombian soldiers in the killing of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moïse, in Bogota, Colombia, July 9, 2021.Vargas pledged Colombia’s full cooperation after Haiti said about six of the suspects, including two of the three killed, were retired members of Colombia’s army. U.S.-trained Colombian soldiers are heavily recruited by private security firms in global conflict zones because of their experience in fighting leftist rebels and powerful drug cartels.Recruited to provide ‘protection’The wife of one former Colombian soldier in custody said he had been recruited by a security firm to travel to the Dominican Republic last month.The woman, who identified herself only as Yuli, told Colombia’s W Radio that her husband, Francisco Uribe, had been hired for $2,700 a month by a company named CTU to travel to the Dominican Republic, where he was told he would provide protection to some powerful families. She last spoke to him, she said, at 10 p.m. Wednesday, almost a day after Moise’s killing, and he was on guard duty at a house where he and others were staying.”The next day he wrote me a message that sounded like a farewell,” the woman said. “They were running. They had been attacked. … That was the last contact I had.”The woman said she knew little about her husband’s activities and was unaware he had even traveled to Haiti.Uribe is under investigation for his alleged role in extrajudicial killings by Colombia’s army more than a decade ago. Colombian court records show that he and another soldier were accused in 2008 of killing a civilian whom they later tried to present as a criminal slain in combat.Besides the Colombians, among those detained by police were two Haitian Americans. Some of the suspects were seized in a raid on the Taiwan Embassy, where they are believed to have sought refuge.Plan allegedly was to arrest, not killInvestigative Judge Clément Noël told the French-language newspaper Le Nouvelliste that the Haitian Americans arrested, James Solages and Joseph Vincent, had said the attackers originally had planned only to arrest Moise, not kill him. Noël said Solages and Vincent had been acting as translators for the attackers, the newspaper reported Friday.FILE – Journalists stand next to a yellow police cordon near the residence of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moise after he was shot dead by unidentified attackers, in Port-au-Prince, July 7, 2021.The attack, which took place at Moise’s home before dawn Wednesday, also seriously wounded his wife, who was flown to the U.S. city of Miami, Florida, for treatment.The U.S. State Department said it was aware of reports that Haitian Americans were in custody but would not comment.Solages, 35, described himself as a “certified diplomatic agent,” an advocate for children and a budding politician on a now-removed website for a charity he started in 2019 in South Florida to assist residents of his hometown of Jacmel, on Haiti’s southern coast.Solages also said he had worked as a bodyguard at the Canadian Embassy in Haiti, and on his Facebook page, which was also taken down after news of his arrest, he showcased photos of armored military vehicles and of himself standing in front of an American flag.Canada’s foreign relations department released a statement that did not refer to Solages by name but said that one of the men detained for his alleged role in the killing had been “briefly employed as a reserve bodyguard” at its embassy by a private contractor.Calls to the charity and Solages’ associates went unanswered. However, a relative in South Florida said Solages did not have any military training, and that he didn’t believe Solages was involved in the killing. “I feel like my son killed my brother because I love my president and I love James Solages,” Schubert Dorisme, whose wife is Solages’ aunt, told WPLG in Miami.The Taiwan Embassy in Port-au-Prince said police had arrested 11 individuals trying to break into the compound early Thursday.

Local Residents Helped Haiti Police Locate Suspects in Killing of President

WASHINGTON / PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI / MIAMI – Residents of the Jalousie slum in the Haitian capital say they discovered several of the alleged killers linked to the assassination of President Jovenel Moise and helped the national police to arrest them.   “We saw three guys appear in the neighborhood and they were asking us for information. One of the guys tried to fight us, so the residents of Jalousie banded together and we captured them, brought them down to the police station and handed them over,” a Jalousie resident told VOA Creole on condition of anonymity. He said some of the men were naked and threw their weapons into the brush. Another Jalousie resident who spoke to VOA Creole in front of the police station where the suspects are being held said they were easy to identify because of their skin color.   “The people of Jalousie, when we heard that the mercenaries were in our neighborhood – we went to look for them and we found them hiding in the brush,” the man, who did not give his name, told VOA. “These guys came to our country because we are a small (nation) and they tried to overpower our legal system. I can tell you that as a young man, this is the first time I’ve ever experienced something like this. I only previously read about things like this in history books.”   Another man who said he helped apprehend the foreigners said Jalousie residents are angry over the killing by foreigners of their president.   “It’s our president they killed, so we couldn’t just stand by and do nothing. He was the president of the Haitian people. This morning (Thursday) we helped police arrest four men, we want to make them talk (now) and we’ll keep looking for the rest of them who are still hiding out there somewhere,” said the man. “We will turn them over to police. We want them to tell us who plotted with them to kill the president. We will search and find each and every one of them.” Suspects in the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moise are shown to the media at the General Direction of the police in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 8, 2021.In custody  
 
More than a dozen people have been detained in the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise, officials said late Thursday. Haitian authorities described a heavily armed hit squad of 28 “mercenaries,” made up of 26 Colombians and two Haitian Americans, involved in the killing of Moise, 53, at his private residence in a wealthy suburb of the capital, Port-au-Prince, before dawn on Wednesday. Haiti National Police Director Leon Charles said Thursday that 17 men had been detained — the two American citizens and 15 Colombians. Charles said that three suspects had been killed and eight were still at large. Earlier, police had said four suspects had been killed. Neither Charles nor police officials explained the discrepancy. “The pursuit of the mercenaries continues,” Charles said. “Their fate is fixed: They will fall in the fighting or will be arrested.” Early Friday, Taiwan released a statement saying that 11 suspects were caught on the grounds of its embassy in Port-au-Prince after attempting to flee police. “The police launched an operation around 4:00 p.m. (Thursday) and managed to arrest 11 suspects,” the Taiwanese Embassy statement said. Communiqué de Presse Concernant l’Arrestation des Mercenaires à l’Ambassadehttps://t.co/tluc2p2YEf— Embassy Republic of China(Taiwan) in Haiti (@Tw_Haiti) July 9, 2021Mathias Pierre, Haiti’s minister of elections, Thursday identified the two Haitian Americans as James Solages, 35, and Joseph Vincent, 55. The U.S. State Department has not confirmed the reports that two U.S. citizens are in detention. Late Thursday, Colombia’s government confirmed that at least six of the suspects, including two of those killed, appeared to be retired members of the Colombian army. It did not identify the suspects. 
 FILE – Congresswoman Frederica Wilson speaks outside of of the Little Haiti Cultural Center, May 25, 2021, in Miami.Miami diaspora reacts  
 
In Miami, U.S. Representative Frederica Wilson met with members of the Haitian diaspora in the Little Haiti neighborhood Thursday to discuss the Moise assassination.   
 
“It frightens me to think that somebody would come into the president’s home and murder him. I mean, who does that?! And how did they get in?” Wilson told VOA, adding that she was very pleased with the turnout.  
 
Wilson expressed fear that the situation in Haiti will soon deteriorate and said the U.S. should take action.  
 
“It’s really the State Department who needs to act today because this is just the calm ahead of the storm and it’s going to be real bad,” Wilson told VOA.  
 
Over 200,000 Haitian Americans call the Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, Florida area home, according to the Migration Policy Institute. 
 
Haitian American activist Marleine Bastien, who heads the Family Action Network Movement, FANM, told VOA she was alerted to the news of the assassination in the early morning hours of Wednesday, when she began receiving phone calls.  
 
“We are shocked, we are saddened because the fact that thugs were able to enter the president’s home and assassinate him shows that no one is safe in Haiti,” Bastien told VOA in Creole.  
 
She said going forward the diaspora has an important role to play in helping Haiti get back on its feet.  
 
“Stay calm, don’t participate in violence. Let’s speak with one voice,” Bastien said, addressing Haitians back in her native land as well as the diaspora.  “We need a council of government that can create a national dialogue, listen to voices from all sectors of society and develop a short-term and long-term strategy for the country. Haiti is a blessed country. Haiti has a global diaspora that loves the homeland. We have resources, we have competent people all over the world who are ready to pitch in to help rebuild Haiti. “  
 
The need for a national dialogue was also expressed by Father Reginald Jean-Marie, who works at the Notre Dame Catholic Church in Little Haiti.  
 
“There must be a national council, a council of wise people, who reflect all sectors of society who can name a group of serious people who can organize credible elections to lead Haiti out of this crisis,” Father Jean Marie told VOA. “That way, President Moise and all the other Haitians who have been killed will not have died in vain.” 
 
The Haitian priest said the international community also has an important role to play in helping Haiti.  
 
“The international community needs to be honest in its dealings and not just offer up a band-aid but effect real change. There is currently a constitutional vacuum plaguing the country. We see an acting prime minister making decisions – who had recently been fired, who had officially resigned, who had returned to his position as foreign minister – we know Haiti needs leadership, we thank Claude Joseph for stepping in to fill the void, but Haiti cannot go on like this,” Father Jean-Marie said.  
 Leadership vacuum  
 
A day before his death, President Moise had named Ariel Henry, a Haitian politician and neurosurgeon, to replace Joseph as prime minister. In a brief interview with the Associated Press, Henry claimed he was the prime minister, but he acknowledged it was an unusual situation. 
 
Haiti’s constitution says Moise should be replaced by the president of the country’s Supreme Court, but the chief justice died recently from COVID-19.Claude Joseph, Haiti’s acting prime ministerHaiti is currently under a “state of siege,” announced by interim Prime Minister Joseph a few hours after President Moise’s assassination.  An official decree issued Wednesday said the state of siege would be in effect for 15 days.  In addition, the country’s border with the Dominican Republic and its airports are closed.  
 
Brian Concannon, a human rights lawyer, a former United Nations human rights officer, and the founder of the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti, told VOA that the state of siege allows police to do “anything necessary” in pursuit of the killers. “Although almost everybody wants the police to pursue the killers effectively, there’s great concern that this can be abused to round up political opponents,” he said. “There really is nothing — no structures to stop the government from arresting its political opponents under this decree.” 
 
The U.S. has pledged to help Haiti investigate the president’s assassination.  Sorry, but your browser cannot support embedded video of this type, you can
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 State Department correspondent Cindy Saine contributed to this report, which includes some information from The Associated Press, Agence France-Presse and Reuters.