HAITIANS doubt justice being done in Jovenel Moïse's assassination
HAITIANS doubt justice being done in Jovenel Moïse's assassination

Port-au-Prince, Jan 26 (Prensa Latina) Former Haitian Foreign Minister Claude Joseph on Wednesday questioned whether Prime Minister Ariel Henry will do justice regarding the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse, and highlighted the alleged links between the head of Government and a suspect.

 Joseph, who after his dismissal from the Foreign Ministry declared himself an opponent, recalled that the premier held talks with Lawyer Joseph Felix Badio on the day of the assassination, and then the lawyer visited him at the official residence, despite being subject to a search warrant.

“The government led by Prime Minister Ariel Henry will not be able to do justice to late President Jovenel Moïse,” the former head of Government said in a message on Twitter, and claimed that the neurosurgeon “systematically” obstructs the investigation.

The former prime minister suggested that the revocation of Justice Rockefeller Vincent and Government Commissioner Bel-Ford Claude was intended to prevent Henry from being charged with the crime.

Both Vincent and Claude were fired from their positions when the latter invited the head of Government to an audience to answer for the conversations held with Badio.

Joseph also noted that Henry categorically opposed his call for the United Nations to open an international investigation into the archive, calling the existence of a political will to bring those responsible for the assassination to justice illusory.

Moïse, 53, was shot at his residence apparently by a commando of former Colombian soldiers, 18 of whom are being held in the National Penitentiary, although none have been formally charged.

In the meantime, another key suspect linked to the assassination of former Haitian President Jovenel Moïse has been captured in Jamaica. He is John Joel Joseph, a former Opposition Senator, was apprehended by Jamaican law enforcement personnel.

Joseph, who is Haitian, was listed among five “fugitives” for whom Haiti's Justice Minister Rockefeller Vincent said the country would offer six million gourdes for their arrests.

The other key suspect, ex-Colombian military officer Mario Antonio Palacios, was deported from Jamaica on January 3 in keeping with an order by the Supreme Court here.

However, he was reportedly intercepted in Panama by US law enforcement agents and taken to Florida where he was charged with various crimes related to Moïse's assassination.

Moϊse was killed at his private residence overlooking the capital on July 7, 2021.

He was reportedly shot 12 times and had bullet wounds to his forehead and several to his torso.

jg/mem/anne

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