Haiti-Political Crisis: Coalition of Organizations Rejects National Pact and Challenges Governance of Alix Didier Fils-Aimé
By La Rédaction · Port-au-Prince
· 2 min read · Updated 24 April 2026
Translated from French — AI-assisted and reviewed by the editorial team. The French version is authoritative. Read the original · About our translation policy

PORT-AU-PRINCE.— A coalition bringing together political parties, civil society organizations, and diaspora associations speaks out against the «National Pact for Stability and the Organization of Elections» and the management of Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé. In a joint statement, the signatories denounce an institutional drift and the authorities' clear failure to stem the security collapse.
According to them, fifteen months after the establishment of the new authorities, the State has still not re-established its monopoly on force, and large portions of the territory remain under the control of armed groups. They also recall that the head of government was reportedly revoked by a qualified majority of the Transitional Presidential Council, considering that any attempt to remain in power would constitute a serious breach of the principle of legality.
The coalition also criticizes the signing of a border security contract with the firm Evergreen Trading System Limited, for over half a billion dollars. This commitment is deemed opaque, concluded without a clear institutional basis, and, according to them, poses risks to national sovereignty.
Another major grievance: electoral impartiality. The signatories accuse the Prime Minister of having already endorsed a presidential candidate and denounce a conflict of interest likely to compromise the credibility of the election.
In conclusion, the coalition rejects any «circumstantial arrangement» and calls for a lasting Haitian solution, based on a balanced executive, an inclusive political agreement, and the organization of free elections within a stabilized security framework. For its members, stability will not arise from fragile alliances or contested pacts, but from a strict return to institutional legitimacy and republican principles.
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