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Jovenel Moïse

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Jovenel Moïse
Moïse in 2019
43rd President of Haiti
In office
7 February 2017 – 7 July 2021
Prime Minister
Preceded byJocelerme Privert (interim)
Succeeded byTransitional Presidential Council
Personal details
Born(1968-06-26)26 June 1968
Trou-du-Nord, Nord-Est, Haiti
Died7 July 2021(2021-07-07) (aged 53)
Pétion-Ville, Ouest, Haiti
Manner of deathAssassination by gunshots
Political partyTèt Kale[1]
Spouse
(m. 1996)
Children3[2]
Alma materQuisqueya University

Jovenel Moïse (French pronunciation: [ʒɔv(ə)nɛl mɔiz]; Haitian Creole pronunciation: [ʒovɛnɛl mɔiz]; 26 June 1968 – 7 July 2021) was a Haitian politician and entrepreneur who served as the 43rd president of Haiti from 2017 until his assassination in 2021. He assumed the presidency in February 2017 after winning the November 2016 election.[3][4] During his term, Haiti experienced widespread protests and unrest.[5][6] In the early morning of 7 July 2021, Moïse was assassinated and his wife Martine was injured during an attack on their private residence in Pétion-Ville.[7][8][9] Claude Joseph assumed the role of acting president in the aftermath of Moïse's assassination.[10]

Early life and education

[edit]
Moïse and wife Martine at 73rd United Nations General Assembly in 2018, accompanied by U.S. president Donald Trump and U.S. First Lady Melania Trump

Jovenel Moïse was born on 26 June 1968, in Trou du Nord, Nord-Est, Haiti. His family relocated to Port-au-Prince in July 1974, where he pursued his primary education at the École Nationale Don Durélin. He continued his secondary education at Lycée Toussaint Louverture and later at the Centre Culturel du Collège Canado-Haïtien.[11]

In 1996, he married Martine Marie Étienne Joseph (Martine Moïse), his classmate at the time. The couple decided to leave the capital that same year and settled in Port-de-Paix to focus on developing rural areas.[12]

Together, Jovenel and Martine Moïse had three children: Jomarlie Moïse, Jovenel Moïse Jr., and Joverlein Moïse.

Business career

[edit]

Moïse began his business career with the founding of Jomar Auto Parts. The following year, he began working on an agricultural project involving organic banana production from a plantation covering more than 10 hectares (25 acres) in the Nord-Ouest department. Moïse collaborated with Culligan Water in 2001 to build a drinking water plant for the Nord-Ouest and Nord-Est departments.

In 2012, he founded Agritrans SA, introduced the agricultural project Nourribio to Trou du Nord, and helped create Haiti's first agricultural free trade zone, a 1,000-hectare (2,500-acre) banana plantation in Nord-Est.[13] The intent of this project was to export bananas to Germany for the first time since 1954; however, only two containers were ever sent. This nonetheless led him to be nicknamed Nèg Bannann (Banana Man).[14]

The government granted tax-free access to the land, 15 years' exemption from income tax and customs duties on the purchase of capital equipment,[2] and a $6 million loan to a new company, Agritrans, owned by Moïse, the president of the local chamber of commerce. Anonymous investors contributed at least another $10 million. Agritrans promised to create about 3,000 jobs;[15] however, as of March 2015, it had employed only 600.[16]

Political career

[edit]
Moïse with Canadian prime minister Justin Trudeau in 2018
Moïse and other Caribbean leaders with U.S. president Donald Trump in Florida in 2019
US Ambassador to the UN Kelly Craft, and President Moïse in 2019
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and President Moïse in 2020

In 2015, President Michel Martelly designated Moïse as the presidential candidate of the political party he had founded, the center-right Haitian Tèt Kale Party (PHTK).[17] In his campaign, Moïse promoted bio-ecological agriculture as an economic engine for Haiti, whose population was over 50% rural.[18]

Moïse received 32.8% of votes in the first round of the elections held on 15 October 2015, with 54 candidates competing, qualifying for a runoff with the second-place finisher, Jude Célestin.[19][20] However, an exit poll conducted by the Haiti Sentinel reflected that Moïse had only received about 6% of the vote, and Célestin called the results fraudulent.[21][22] As a result, thousands of people took to the streets in violent protests, forcing the postponement of the runoff election.[23] In their wake, the ballot was ultimately annulled in June 2016.[19][24] In February 2016, after incumbent President Michel Martelly stepped down at the end of his term, special elections were held by parliament, and Jocelerme Privert was installed as interim President until new elections could be held.[25]

On 20 November 2016, a new election was held; a week later, election officials declared, based on preliminary results, that Moïse had won the election with 55.67% of the vote[24] and with an estimated voter turnout of 21%, beating out 26 other candidates — four of whom claimed victory, before the official results were announced.[26][27] Moïse secured the presidency without having to compete in a second-round election. In second, third, and fourth place was mechanical engineer Jude Celestin of LAPEH with 19.52%, leftist senator Jean-Charles Moïse of the Platfòm Pitit Dessalines (PPD) with 11.04 percent, and Maryse Narcisse of Fanmi Lavalas (FL) with 8.99 percent.[28] Jovenel Moïse was sworn in on 7 February 2017 for a five-year term.[29]

Moïse faced challenges to his mandate from opposition leaders who believed that Moïse's five-year mandate should end from the date of the inconclusive 2015 elections — that is, on 7 February 2021, five years to the day since his predecessor in office stepped down, though Moïse, counting from the date of his swearing-in, had claimed that his term would not end till 2022.[30]

In November 2019, Moïse met at the Haiti National Palace with U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Kelly Craft, to discuss the methods necessary to implement a consensual resolution of Haiti's political crisis through inclusive dialogue.[31][32] Craft later met with several political leaders from other parties, listened to their different views, and urged an inclusive solution with Moïse.[32][33] She also urged the Haitian government to fight corruption, investigate and prosecute human rights abusers, and combat narcotics and human trafficking.[32][peacock prose]

Presidency

[edit]

Agricultural

[edit]

President Moïse built the second-largest hydropower plant and agricultural water reservoir in Haiti after Peligue.[34] He built the "Barrage Marion" in Marion, Haiti, which provides electricity and water to farmers in Northern Haiti and rebuilt another water reservoir, the "Barrage la Tannerie" to make more water available for farmers to increase agricultural production in that area.[35] He built several water pumping stations using solar power for the same purpose.[36][37] President Moise was in the process of building a deviation of water from the Dajabón River when he was assassinated.[38]

President Moïse worked to expand the reach of the Artibonite department. He leveraged the Ministry of Public Works to curate the water channel system, making it easier for the farmers to grow rice.[39]

Infrastructure

[edit]

President Moïse built numerous roads in towns like Jeremie, Port-de-Paix, which include the Carrefour Joffre/Anse-à-Foleur and the Carrefour Trois-Rivières. He rebuilt and upgraded the airport in Jérémie and built power plants to provide electricity to many small towns like Jérémie and Port-de-Paix.[40]

President Moïse built several asphalt plants in several provinces in Haiti, including in Gros Mornes,[41] Les Cayes,[42] and Trou-du-Nord.[43] He repaved roads in Les Cayes and rebuilt the town after it suffered significant damage from Hurricane Matthew.[citation needed]

Controversies

[edit]

President Moïse concurred several allegations of corruption, including allegedly taking bribes for road-building projects and short-selling a contract to sell goats to the Haitian government.[44] These allegations, coupled with a declining quality of life for Haitian citizens throughout his administration led to mass protests demanding his resignation.[45]He was accused of using gangs to attack his political rivals and burning their personal property[citation needed]; these accusations were used by his rivals to legimitize the attack on his rental home in Port-au-Prince [citation needed] by Colombian paramilitary mercenaries.

Electoral history

[edit]

Presidential elections were held in Haiti on 25 October 2015, alongside local elections and the second round of the legislative elections.[46]

2015 presidential election

[edit]
2015 Haitian presidential election[47]
Party Candidate Votes %
Haitian Tèt Kale Party Jovenel Moïse 508,761 32.81
LAPEH Jude Célestin 392,782 25.27
Platfòm Pitit Desalin Jean-Charles Moïse 222,109 14.27
Fanmi Lavalas Maryse Narcisse 108,844 7.05
Mouvement Action Socialiste Eric Jean Baptiste 56,427 3.63
Other parties Other candidates 242,047 15.58
Against all Against all 22,161 1.42

As no candidate received more than 50% of the vote, a second round was mandated by law. However, this was repeatedly postponed, and eventually canceled,[48] with an interim president appointed indirectly by the legislature in the February 2016 Haitian presidential election and fresh elections scheduled for 2016.[49]

November 2016 presidential election

[edit]
November 2016 Haitian presidential election[50]
Party Candidate Votes %
Haitian Tèt Kale Party Jovenel Moïse 590,927 55.60
LAPEH Jude Célestin 207,988 19.57
Platfòm Pitit Desalin Jean-Charles Moïse 117,349 11.04
Fanmi Lavalas Maryse Narcisse 95,765 9.01
Renmen Ayiti Jean-Henry Céant 8,014 0.75
Other parties Other candidates 35,593 3.18
Against all Against all 7,203 0.68

With more than 50% of votes cast, Moïse was elected in the first round.[48]

Assassination

[edit]

On 7 July 2021, Moïse was shot dead when gunmen attacked his residence in Pèlerin 5, a district of Pétion-Ville around 1 a.m.[51][52][53][54] Martine Moïse, the first lady of Haiti, was airlifted to Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami to be treated for wounds she sustained during the attack.[55][56][57][58] None of the couple's children appeared to be home during the attack. A press release issued later that day from the office of acting Prime Minister Claude Joseph blamed the attack on "a group of unidentified individuals, some of whom spoke in Spanish." On 10 July, Martine Moïse posted a statement on her Twitter urging Haitians to not let Moïse's contributions go to waste.

In December 2021, The New York Times reported that Moïse's assassination might be linked to Moïse's efforts to curb narcotics trafficking and plans to publicly expose high-ranking Haitian officials involved in the Haitian drug trade.[59]

Ariel Henry, who had been selected as the Prime Minister by Moïse shortly before his death, was later accused by several officials of being connected to Joseph Felix Badio, an alleged mastermind of the assassination, and being involved in the planning.[60][61] One of the alleged masterminds, Rodolphe Jaar, also stated that Henry was close to Badio and had protected him after the assassination.[62] Judge Garry Orélien, who was previously the top judicial official in Haiti overseeing the case, stated that Henry was friends with Badio and planned the assassination with him.[61] Henry resigned in 2024 following mass protests demanding he abandon his de facto governance as head of state functions.

On February 20, 2024, Associated Press announced that the Haitian court had indicted his wife, Martine Moïse, ex-prime minister Claude Joseph, and the former chief of Haiti’s National Police, Léon Charles, along with other unnamed suspects with his murder.[63]

Legacy

[edit]

Public opinion and scholarly assessment of Moïse's tenure were mixed and divided.

Widely perceived as uncompromising and headstrong, Moïse was criticized for his vehement intolerance of dissent and political opposition, and for his attempts to consolidate the government and remain in power. He also received praise for his robust efforts to rein in corruption and his courage in being willing to stand up against oligarchs and the Haitian elite.[64]

Moïse receiving the Order of Brilliant Jade at a ceremony held by Taiwanese president Tsai Ing-wen in 2018

President Moïse and former President Michel Martelly, both from the same political party, faced significant opposition and criticism during their presidencies due to corruption and alleged ties to prominent Haitian gangs.[65][66][67]

Honors

[edit]

Moïse was awarded the Order of Brilliant Jade with Grand Cordon by the president of Taiwan, Tsai Ing-wen, in May 2018.[68][69] Tsai commended the economic initiatives undertaken by Moïse's government.[70]

See also

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References

[edit]
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  2. ^ a b Agriculture: Creation of the first Haitian Agricultural Free Zone Archived 9 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine, 10 August 2013, Haiti Libre. Accessed 9 July 2021.
  3. ^ @cep_haiti (28 November 2016). "Résultats préliminaires des élections présidentielles du 20 Novembre 2016 pic.twitter.com/i9GsrkkU8p" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
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  6. ^ "Miami Herald". Miami Herald. Archived from the original on 6 October 2019. Retrieved 8 October 2019.
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  64. ^ Frances Robles (7 July 2021). "He Went from Banana Exporter to President: 'I Am Not a Dictator". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 8 December 2021. Retrieved 8 December 2021. "To some, he was a corrupt leader, but to others, he was a reformer," said Leonie Hermantin, a Haitian community activist in Miami. "He was a man who was trying to change the power dynamics, particularly when it came to money and who had control over electricity contracts. The oligarchy was paid billions of dollars to provide electricity to a country that was still in the dark."
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Political offices
Preceded by President of Haiti
2017–2021
Vacant