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US charges Colombian suspect over Haiti president’s murder

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US authorities have charged a retired Colombian soldier over the assassination of Haiti’s President Jovenel Moise last July, justice officials said Tuesday.

In this file photo taken on November 18, 2021 Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry speaks during a ceremony marking the 218th anniversary of the Battle of Vertières in Port-au-Prince, Haiti. – Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry told AFP in an interview January 3, 2022 that he was targeted in an assassination attempt during weekend national day celebrations. “An attempt has been made against me personally. My life has been put in the crosshairs,” said Henry, who has been de-facto running the country since the July assassination of president Jovenel Moise. Richard Pierrin / AFP

The Justice Department said in a statement that 43-year-old Mario Palacios, along with others, “participated in a plot to kidnap or kill the Haitian President.”

Palacios was detained at a Panamanian airport late Monday and extradited to the United States.

If convicted, Palacios faces a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. He was scheduled to appear in court later Tuesday.

US prosecutors said the plot against Moise “initially focused on conducting a kidnapping of the president as part of a purported arrest operation,” but it “ultimately resulted in a plot to kill.”

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Prosecutors alleged in their complaint that “on July 7, 2021, Palacios and others entered the president’s residence in Haiti with the intent and purpose of killing President Moise, and in fact the president was killed.”

Others involved in the plot were 20 Colombian citizens and a group of Haiti-based dual Haitian-American citizens, according to statement.

Palacios had been on his way to Colombia after being deported by Jamaica for a lack of evidence connecting him to the assassination, but he was arrested during a stopover at Tocumen International Airport in Panama.

After his arrest, Palacios “accepted voluntary extradition, so last night (Monday) he boarded a flight to Miami,” Panama migration service head Samira Gozaine said, who added there was an Interpol warrant out for the ex-soldier on “charges of murder and conspiracy to kill.”

Moise was shot on July 7 at his home in Port-au-Prince.

Three Colombians were killed by Haitian armed forces responding to the attack and 18 more were detained, alongside two US citizens of Haitian descent.

Dozens of people have since been arrested, but the authors of the attack remain unknown.

The assassination deepened an already dramatic crisis in Haiti, which is suffering from a lack of security, soaring gang violence and a spate of kidnappings.

Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who has in effect been running the country since Moise’s killing, told AFP on Monday that he too had been targeted in an assassination attempt, during last weekend’s national day celebrations.

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