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What We Know and Don't Know About the Assassination of Haiti's President - The New York Times

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The assassination has rocked the nation, stoking fear and confusion about what is to come.

During a nighttime attack on July 7, a group of assassins fatally shot President Jovenel Moïse of Haiti and wounded his wife, Martine Moïse, in their private residence on the outskirts of the capital, Port-au-Prince. The assassination rocked the nation, stoking fear and confusion among residents and the Haitian diaspora about what is to come.

Some details of the attack are coming into focus, but there are many that we don’t know.

A vehicle riddled with bullet holes outside the residence of Mr. Moïse in Port-au-Prince on Wednesday. 
Joseph Odelyn/Associated Press

The assassins charged into Mr. Moïse’s residence sometime after 1 a.m. in what officials described as a well-planned operation that included “foreigners” who spoke Spanish.

Mr. Moïse had counted on a high level of protection, usually traveling with more than a dozen armored cars and police guards. There are often 100 officers from the presidential guard around the president’s home, former Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe said.

Yet there had been no specific warning of Wednesday’s attack, said Haiti’s ambassador to the United States, Bocchit Edmond.

Carl Henry Destin, a Haitian judge, told the Nouvelliste newspaper that Mr. Moïse was killed in his bedroom where he was shot at least 12 times. A maid and another member of the household staff had been tied up by the attackers as they made their way to the president’s bedroom, he said.

Judge Destin said that Mr. Moise appeared to have been shot with large-caliber guns and smaller 9-millimeter weapons.

Mrs. Moïse was injured in the attack and was flown to the Ryder Trauma Center in Miami. She was in stable condition, according to the ambassador, Mr. Edmond.

The attackers’ precise motive is not yet clear.

Joseph Odelyn/Associated Press

Two Americans are among the 17 people who have been detained thus far, Haitian officials said Thursday, adding to their assertions that “foreigners” had been involved in the brazen assault. The ambassador, Mr. Edmond, described the assailants as “well-trained professionals, killers, commandos.”

At a news conference at National Police Headquarters with the interim prime minister, the American men were identified as Joseph Vincent, 55, and James Solages, 35, Florida residents of Haitian descent. Another 15 detained suspects were described as Colombians.

At least eight more suspects were on the run, authorities said. Security forces made the first arrests after engaging in a chaotic shootout late Wednesday.

Haiti’s police chief, Léon Charles, said that five vehicles that might have been used in the attack had been seized but several of them had been burned by civilians.

Judge Destin told Nouvelliste that the assailants had posed as agents of the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration. Both U.S. and Haitian officials said they were not associated with the D.E.A.

Valerie Baeriswyl/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

A power struggle between two competing prime ministers has further fueled tensions in the turbulent Caribbean nation of 11 million people, one of the poorest in the world.

In the hours after the killing, the country’s interim prime minister, Claude Joseph, said he was in charge, taking command of the police and army. He declared a “state of siege” for 15 days, essentially putting the country under martial law. It was not clear whether he has the legal authority to do so.

Beyond that, questions emerged over whether Mr. Joseph is, in fact, the rightful prime minister.

Just days before his death, Mr. Moïse had appointed a new prime minister, Ariel Henry, who was expected to be sworn in this week. Mr. Henry has said he should be in charge of the government.

Adding to its troubles, Haiti, a parliamentary democracy, has no functioning Parliament. There are currently only 10 sitting senators out of 30; the terms of the other 20 have expired. The entire lower house is no longer sitting, because the representatives’ terms expired last year.

The head of the nation’s highest court, who might have helped bring order, died of Covid-19 in June.

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