Carnival cancelled, Haiti capital on lockdown after police attack army HQ

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PORT-AU-PRINCE, Feb 25, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Haiti’s capital was on lockdown
Monday after police attacked the army headquarters to demand better working
conditions, sparking a gun battle that left two servicemen dead and a dozen
wounded.

The main roads through the city were blocked and smaller streets were
deserted, leaving the capital cut off from the rest of the country.

In a statement, the Justice Department denounced Sunday’s violence, which
it said increasingly resembled a “coup attempt” against embattled President
Jovenel Moise.

Moise is working on forming a new government, a source close to the
country’s leader told AFP, noting that it was up to the police to restore
order to the streets.

The United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti also expressed its “deep
concern” over the “serious incidents” on Sunday and urged protesting police
officers to avoid any escalation of violence.

Some of the protesting officers went as far as to seize the keys to the UN
force’s few vehicles and use them to block some roads.

The Haitian National Police Union released a statement asking officers to
return home.

Late Sunday, the government said in a statement it had observed “with
concern and dismay that terror has reigned in certain arteries of the Port-
au-Prince metropolitan area.”

In order to avoid a “bloodbath… it has been decided to cancel Carnival,”
which was scheduled to take place Tuesday, the statement said.

The army said its headquarters was attacked Sunday by gunmen wearing masks.

“We are under siege. We are coming under fire with all kinds of weapons —
assault rifles, Molotov cocktails, tear gas,” General Jodel Lessage told AFP
during the assault.

He said soldiers had returned fire but did not give any casualty figures,
nor could he say how many people were at the army headquarters, near the
presidential palace, at the time of the attack.

One of the protesting officers, who had been among five policemen sacked
from their jobs, said that at least one of his comrades had been killed and
several others wounded in the gun fight with the army.

The Champ de Mars, the area where the clashes broke out Sunday, was still
inaccessible a day later. Even guards from the presidential palace — who
normally conduct regular patrols there — were avoiding it as too dangerous
to enter.

For months, Haitian police have been demanding better working conditions,
in particular the right to form a union so as to ensure transparency in talks
with the police hierarchy.

Last week, some officers took to the street, blocking them and setting fire
to cars.

On Saturday, Moise announced measures designed to ease the crisis,
including the creation of a compensation fund for families of police who die
in the line of duty and a fund to provide officers with insurance.

Haiti has witnessed a spike in kidnappings for ransom since the beginning
of the year and fighting between rival crime gangs, which regularly set up
roadblocks on Haitian highways.

The destitute Caribbean country has also been gripped by a political crisis
for more than a year as people demand the resignation of Moise.

Since coming to power in February 2017, Moise has faced the anger of an
opposition movement that refuses to recognize his victory in an election
widely seen as dubious. Moise is also accused of corruption.