Haiti’s transitional council names new PM amid hopes of quelling violence
Fritz Belizaire replaces Michel Patrick Boisvert, who was the current interim prime minister.
Haiti’s newly installed transitional council has chosen former sports minister Fritz Belizaire as the country’s prime minister as it presses forward in its monumental task of trying to establish a stable new government amid stifling violence.
Mr Belizaire replaces Michel Patrick Boisvert, the former minister of economy and finance who was the current interim prime minister.
Mr Belizaire is little known and even some members of the council said they were unfamiliar with him.
The nine-member transitional council, seven of whom have voting rights, is choosing a new prime minister and cabinet in a bid to help quell gang violence that is choking the capital, Port-au-Prince, and beyond. Mr Belizaire had the support of four of the council’s voting members.
Heavy gunfire was reported in several neighbourhoods in Port-au-Prince on Tuesday, including near the National Palace, although it was not immediately clear if it was in response to the unexpected announcement of a new prime minister.
Earlier on Tuesday, the council chose Edgard Leblanc Fils, a former presidential candidate, as its president.
“This is a very good choice for prime minister,” Mr Fils said of Mr Belizaire during a brief speech to nearly two dozen attendees. “The important thing for us is this will, this determination to go beyond divisions, to overcome conflicts and to reach a consensus.”
He said the council met on Monday with army and police officials to talk about Haiti’s security crisis and how best to resolve it.
“We are publicly recognising the suffering,” he said of the population.
The announcement of Mr Belizaire came as a surprise. A murmur rose through the attendees as Mr Fils announced that four council members with voting powers had selected Mr Belizaire as prime minister.
Leslie Voltaire, one of the voting council members, told the Associated Press, “I don’t know him”, when asked whether he supported Mr Belizaire.
Mr Belizaire served as Haiti’s sports minister during the second presidency of Rene Preval from 2006 to 2011.
“He’s kind of an unknown figure,” said Robert Fatton, a Haitian politics expert at the University of Virginia. “He doesn’t seem to have his own constituency. Maybe that made him the likely prime minister so different parties can accept him as prime minister.”
Council member Louis Gerald Gilles, who supported Mr Belizaire, told the Associated Press that the council wanted to act quickly in choosing a prime minister.
“The Haitian population can no longer wait,” he said. “The security issue is essential for societal calm.”
The majority supporting Mr Belizaire as prime minister included Mr Fils, Smith Augustin, Mr Gilles and Emmanuel Vertilaire.
Mr Fatton called them an “unlikely” alliance, adding: “We’ll see if it can last.”
The transitional council will act as the country’s presidency until it can arrange presidential elections some time before it disbands, which must be by February 2026.
Haitians remain divided over whether they believe a transitional government can help calm a troubled country whose capital has been under siege since gangs launched co-ordinated attacks that began on February 29.
Gang members have burned police stations, opened fire on the main international airport that remains closed since early March and broke into Haiti’s two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates. The country’s biggest seaport also remains largely paralysed by gang violence.
The council is expected to support the UN-backed deployment of a Kenyan police force to help fight gangs, although it is unclear when that might happen.
Former prime minister Ariel Henry was on an official trip to the East African country when the co-ordinated gang attacks began, and he remains locked out of Haiti. He submitted his resignation last week.