Politics
Haiti: Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe is vindicated in the dismissal of a lawsuit against online paper
Haiti Prime Minister., Laurent Lamothe
(PRNewswire) – The owner of the Haiti Observateur Group and Leo Joseph, its owner, agreed to the dismissal of a lawsuit brought against them by Laurent Lamothe, the Prime Minister of Haiti, and Patrice Baker, his former business partner.
Lamothe and Baker sued the online paper in 2012 following an article that accused them of using the Haitian government to pressure Haitel, a bankrupt telecommunications company, to sell its assets at below market value to Nord Citadel, an investment company seeking investments in Haiti.
In exchange for the dismissal and under the penalty of perjury, the online paper agreed to publish in its entirety a sworn declaration by Michael Charles, the founder and managing partner of Nord Citadel. The declaration confirmed that the allegations against Lamothe and Baker were completely fabricated. In telling passages of the declaration, Charles refutes the Observateur’s claims that the Prime Minister was involved in promoting the sale.
“Neither I, nor Nord Citadel was ever pressured in any way by Mr. Lamothe, or anyone else associated with the Haitian government.”
The sworn declaration also shows that Joseph misrepresented the sources he used for writing the article. He claimed that he had interviewed Charles, citing him as the principal source for his allegations against the Prime Minister. According to Charles they held a brief phone call where only time and place of a possible interview were discussed. The interview never materialized.
In another passage of the declaration, Charles denies Joseph’s claims that he was wined and dined in Haiti by Haitian government officials in their attempt to seal the sale of Haitel. Charles notes “I have never been to Haiti in my life.” In the same vein, Charles acknowledges that he has never met Prime Minister Lamothe.
Citing Charles as the source, the Observateur’s central allegation was that the Prime Minister had pressured Nord Citadel to put down a substantial down payment to purchase Haitel and that they had “agreed to a purchase price of 25 million even though the assets of Haitel were worth around $80 million.” In the sworn statement, Charles denied having ever made those false statements to the Observateur’s Joseph simply because the interview never occurred.
