09/07/2021

Most of the commandos who killed Haiti’s president were Colombians, police says

NEARLY ALL MEMBERS OF the heavily armed commando team that killed Haiti’s President on July 7 were Colombian citizens, while several served in the military, according to the Haitian National Police. The attack on the president’s residence, located in the Pétion-Ville suburb of Port-au-Prince, began after midnight local time on Wednesday, when a convoy of at least five vehicles carrying dozens of men arrived at the scene.

The men, described as “highly trained and heavily armed”, quickly exited the vehicles and opened fire on the security detail of President Jovenel Moïse. Many witnesses described the assailants as foreign in appearance and speaking either English or Spanish —languages that are not widely spoken in Haiti, where the local languages are Creole and French. These reports were eventually confirmed when the Haitian National Police identified two of the assailants as Joseph Vincent, 55, and James Solages, 35, both American citizens and residents of Miami’s Little Haiti community. Interestingly, Solages describes himself as a “certified diplomatic [security] agent” and is believed to have served as head of bodyguards at the Embassy of Canada in the Haitian capital.

Late on Thursday, Léon Charles, chief of Haiti's National Police, announced that 17 suspected assailants had been captured alive, seven killed during the raid, while at least eight others remained on the run. He added that all of captured assailants are foreign and all but two are Colombian citizens. Of those, several are retired members of the Military Forces of Colombia. Overall, 26 members of the commando team were Colombian citizens, said Charles. He did not provide further information. Later that same evening, the Associated Press reported that Colombian President Ivan Duque instructed his country’s military leadership to “cooperate in the investigation” by the Haitian authorities.

Importantly, the precise motive of the assailants remains unclear. The attack was almost certainly planned well in advance, and was part of a broader plan to eliminate Moïse, who is championed and reviled by Haitians in equal measure. But the attack also appears to have been combined with an effort to justify the killing, possibly by exposing negative information about the late president following the attack. This would explain why the assailants did not leave Moïse’s residency immediately after assassinating him, but instead ransacked nearly every room of the premises, apparently looking for documents and computer drives.

It is also puzzling how such a heavily armed team, whose members were described by Haitian authorities as “well-trained professionals” did not appear to have an exit plan following the raid on the president’s residence. Their attack was sophisticated enough to penetrate Moïse’s heavy security detail, and even reach its target in a safe room inside the building, reportedly without suffering any losses. However, several assailants were shot dead or injured in firefights that erupted long after the attack. Eventually all but eight members of a 28-member commando team were either killed or captured.

In the hours after the president’s assassination, Haiti was placed under martial law by the Prime Minister, Claude Joseph, a Moïse ally who appears to have the backing of the military. This means little, however, in a country where rival armed gangs control numerous neighborhoods in Port-au-Prince and other major cities and towns. Some of these gangs are affiliated with the country’s two main political parties, the Haitian Tèt Kale Party (which supported Moïse) and the Alternative League for Haitian Progress and Emancipation, which refused to acknowledge Moïse as the legitimate head of state following the national election of 2016.

Joseph Fitsanakis
https://intelnews.org/2021/07/09/01-3035/

1 comment :

  1. Anonymous13/7/21 13:26

    Ένας από τους Αϊτινό-Αμερικανούς άνδρες που συνελήφθησαν ως ύποπτοι για συμμετοχή τους στη δολοφονία του προέδρου της Αϊτής Ζοβενέλ Μοΐζ την περασμένη εβδομάδα ήταν στο παρελθόν ένας πληροφοριοδότης της αμερικανικής Υπηρεσίας Δίωξης Ναρκωτικών (DEA) δήλωσε χθες ένας αξιωματούχος της υπηρεσίας.

    Οι αρχές της Αϊτής συνέλαβαν την περασμένη εβδομάδα δύο Αϊτινό-Αμερικανούς άνδρες, τον Ζοζέφ Βενσάν, 55 ετών και τον Τζέιμς Σολάζ, 35 ετών, οι οποίοι κατηγορούνται ότι συμμετείχαν στην ομάδα των ενόπλων που εισέβαλαν στην ιδιωτική κατοικία του Μοΐζ, σκότωσαν τον πρόεδρο και τραυμάτισαν σοβαρά τη σύζυγό του. Στην ομάδα αυτή μετείχαν και 26 Κολομβιανοί που, σύμφωνα με πηγές του κολομβιανού στρατού, πέρασαν στην Αϊτή από τη γειτονική Δομινικανή Δημοκρατία.

    Ο αξιωματούχος της DEA, ο οποίος μίλησε υπό τον όρο να μην κατονομαστεί, αρνήθηκε να πει ποιος από τους δύο άντρες ήταν πληροφοριοδότης. «Ένας από τους υπόπτους της δολοφονίας του προέδρου της Αϊτής Ζοβενέλ Μοΐζ ήταν μια εμπιστευτική πηγή της DEA», δήλωσε με mail ο αξιωματούχος της αμερικανικής Υπηρεσίας Δίωξης Ναρκωτικών, προσθέτοντας ότι ο ύποπτος επικοινώνησε με την DEA μετά τη δολοφονία και η υπηρεσία τον παρότρυνε να παραδοθεί. «Αυτά τα άτομα δεν ενεργούσαν για λογαριασμό της DEA».

    Ο ύποπτος δεν ήταν ενεργός πληροφοριοδότης τη στιγμή της δολοφονίας, ανέφερε η ίδια πηγή. Ένας τρίτος Αϊτινό-Αμερικανός, ο Κρίστιαν Εμανουέλ Σανόν συνελήφθη την Κυριακή από τις αρχές της Αϊτής, οι οποίες τον κατηγορούν ως εγκέφαλο της επίθεσης. Οι δυνάμεις επιβολής του νόμου των ΗΠΑ και οι αμερικανικές υπηρεσίες πληροφοριών διερευνούν γιατί οι Αϊτινό-Αμερικανοί άνδρες ενδέχεται να συμμετείχαν στη δολοφονία Μοΐζ.

    ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

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