Four stood guard as a Roman Catholic priest blessed the coffin and a Haitian flag was unfurled.
Protests by supporters of slain Haitian
President Jovenel Moise broke out again Thursday in his hometown of Cap-Haitien
as he was buried in a private ceremony.
The protesters set tires on fire to
block roads, while workers paved a brick road to Moise’s mausoleum on a dusty
plot of several acres enclosed by high walls.
The demonstrators in Cap-Haitien were
venting anger over the many questions that remain unanswered about the
assassination, including who planned it and why.
Banners celebrating Moise festooned
buildings along the narrow streets of Cap-Haitien’s old town, with
proclamations in Creole including, “They killed the body, but the dream will
never die,” and “Jovenel Moise – defender of the poor.”
Pallbearers in military attire carried
late Jovenel Moise’s body in a closed wooden coffin.
The funeral comes two weeks after he was
shot dead at home in an assassination still shrouded in mystery.
The bearers placed the polished casket on a dais garlanded with flowers in an auditorium.
Foreign dignitaries including U.S.
President Joe Biden’s top advisor for the Western Hemisphere flew to
Cap-Haitien to pay their respects to Moise, joining mourners who have taken
part in a series of commemorations in Haiti this week.
Moise was gunned down in his home in
Port-au-Prince before dawn on July 7, setting off a new political crisis in the
Caribbean country that has struggled with poverty, lawlessness and instability.
Set on land held by Moise’s family and
where he lived as a boy, the partly built tomb stood in the shade of fruit
trees, just a few steps from a mausoleum for Moise’s father, who died last
year.
Police controlled access to the compound
through a single gate.
The assassination was a reminder of the
ongoing influence foreign actors have in the poorest country in the Western
Hemisphere despite it becoming Latin America and the Caribbean’s first
independent state at the start of the 19th century.
The attack was carried out by a group
that included 26 Colombian former soldiers, at least six of whom had previously
received U.S. military training.
Haitian-Americans were also among the
accused.
The attack’s plotters disguised the
mercenaries as U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration agents, a ruse that helped
them enter Moise’s home with no resistance from his security detail,
authorities have said.
At least one of the arrested men, a
Haitian-American, had previously worked as an informant for the DEA.
The turmoil has pushed Haiti up Biden’s foreign policy priorities and on Thursday the State Department named a special envoy for the country.
Biden has rebuffed a request by Haiti’s
interim leaders to send troops to protect infrastructure.
Screens inside the auditorium broadcast
images of Moise and his meetings with world leaders including Pope Francis,
French President Emmanuel Macron and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Helen La Lime, Special Representative of
the UN Secretary-General for Haiti, was among the guests.
A former banana exporter, Moise failed to quell gang violence that surged under his watch and he faced waves of street protests over corruption allegations and his management of the economy.

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