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Caribbean leaders meet with Haiti’s prime minister

AP | Caribbean leaders met with embattled Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry on Sunday to talk about his country’s security situation, with one top official noting that his continued presence as head of government remains a main stumbling block to progress.
Bahamian Foreign Minister Fred Mitchell told The Associated Press that opposition leaders and other groups in Haiti oppose Henry as prime minister, even as the regional trade bloc known as CARICOM keeps trying to help change the country’s situation.
Mitchell said the international community also questions how the country would function if Haiti’s prime minister resigns or is removed, adding that “there needs to be a political solution.”
In brief comments to the AP, Henry said that calls for his removal are a power grab, and that nothing will happen “unless we work together.”
Earlier this month, demonstrators across Haiti organized protests as they demanded that Henry resign.
Mitchell spoke to the AP after meeting with Henry and other Caribbean leaders behind closed doors in Guyana before a four-day CARICOM summit in the South American country.
“Haiti is the only topic. Nothing else, really,” he said.
In a statement Sunday, Haiti’s government said that Henry would attend the CARICOM summit, which will host talks about the participation of Caribbean countries to help boost a U.N.-backed deployment of Kenyan police officers to help fight gang violence.
Nations including Jamaica, the Bahamas, Belize, Burundi, Chad and Senegal have said they plan to send forces.
After the CARICOM summit, officials said that Henry is scheduled to travel to Nairobi, Kenya, to “finalize the modalities” of the deployment, which has been halted by a court order.
Mitchell said that the international community has pledged more than US$100 million for the mission to Haiti, with the U.S. pledging another US$200 million, adding that the political situation remains problematic.