PORT-AU-PRINCE: Haiti's Prime Minister
Jean-Henry Ceant on Saturday (Nov 24) promised a crash program to create
jobs in poor neighborhoods after a tense week marred by violence and
protests against the government.
In a speech posted on Facebook, Ceant said public works programs to
clean canals, build roads and pick up trash will begin on Monday.
"These are jobs that will be created, economic activity that will be
started, and the country will be put back in shape," he said.
The message comes a day after clashes in Port-au-Prince between police
and protesters that left several vehicles ablaze and a police officer
injured by a firebomb.
Haiti, the poorest country in the Americas, has been gripped by tension
since large-scale protests on November 18 sent tens of thousands into
the streets to demand the resignation of President Jovenel Moise.
The opposition says 11 people were killed during those demonstrations, while the police confirmed three deaths.
Public unrest has mounted in recent months, fueled by high inflation and
a sharp devaluation of the national currency, which has hit people's
pocketbooks especially hard in the country that imports most of what it
consumes.
The protests initially focused on demands for action against government
corruption, but increasingly they have set their sights on Moise.
Offering assurances that he was hearing the complaints of young Haitians
who have spearheaded the protests, Ceant said the government would
create a program of credits for young people.
"We are going to help young people create businesses. There will be
loans to create 1,000 small businesses a month, including 200 a month
earmarked for young people so they can create their own jobs," Ceant
said.
He gave no details on the size or duration of the loans.
In office since September, Ceant's government has yet to present a
budget to the parliament, even though Haiti's fiscal year began October
1.
Ceant noted that nearly 80 per cent of Haiti's population live on less
than two dollars a day, and the country's Gross Domestic Product per
inhabitant is only US$765 a year, six times less than that of
neighboring Dominican Republic.
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