Jamaica committed to Haiti’s cause – Holness

March 12, 2024
An armed member of the G9 and Family gang patrols a roadblock in the Delmas 6 neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Monday.
An armed member of the G9 and Family gang patrols a roadblock in the Delmas 6 neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on Monday.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness has reaffirmed Jamaica's commitment to the Haitian cause and called on the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) and regional and international partners to act urgently to restore order to the French-speaking island.

Holness made the statement at The Jamaica Pegasus hotel in New Kingston yesterday at a meeting on Haiti convened by the Heads of Government of CARICOM. Holness pointed out that the political, security and humanitarian crisis in Haiti has been worsening on the ground, especially over the last few weeks.

"It is clear that Haiti is now at a tipping point. CARICOM and our regional partners are deeply concerned, as are our international partners," he said.

"We who have agreed to facilitate consensus will do an injustice to the people of Haiti if we ourselves are unable to move forward with urgency and resolve," he added, while noting that the special meeting "must lead us closer to action".

Holness said that CARICOM heads have been intensely engaged in discussions and outreach to prevent the situation in Haiti from becoming a civil war.

"We have all agreed that this cannot be allowed to happen, not in our hemisphere, with our long-standing reputation as a zone of peace," Holness said. He outlined, further, that Haiti requires a long-term reconstruction and support plan from regional and international partners.

Furthermore, with the Haitian national police being under-resourced and outmanned, the prime minister said that the United Nations Security Council-approved multinational support mission to Haiti is a critical and necessary first step to restore basic law and order.

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