Why Canada should tread lightly as Haiti's PM quits
Toronto Star|March 13, 2024
For some, membership conditions for presidential council are troubling
ALLAN WOODS
Why Canada should tread lightly as Haiti's PM quits

Haitians fill the streets in Port-au-Prince, Tuesday. Bob Rae, Canada's UN ambassador, said Canada is helping train Haitian police and supporting a proposed UN mission.

Haiti is one of the few countries where Canada has had real clout and impact, both diplomatically and practically.

Chalk it up to the large and influential Haitian diaspora in Montreal, or that Canada and Haiti are both French-speaking countries in a hemisphere dominated by the Spanish and English languages.

Canada has a long history of intervening in the troubled affairs of the poorest country in the western hemisphere, be it to push ex-president Jean-Bertrand Aristide from power in 2004, to recover from the catastrophic 2010 earthquake in Port-au-Prince, or through military, police and civilian participation in the various assistance and peacekeeping missions that Haiti has known.

But Prime Minister Justin Trudeau opted to stay largely on the sidelines through much of Haiti's current crisis, a political psychodrama sparked by a presidential assassination that has left the country dealing with shocking levels of gang violence.

With Monday's long-awaited announcement that interim Prime Minister Ariel Henry would resign his post, Canada will be eager to get back into the game, keen to exert influence in a country where it sends tens of millions of dollars each year, making it among the top donors of financial aid.

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