Given the situation of instability that Haiti is experiencing, senators today proposed that international organizations intervene as soon as possible in that nation until it achieves its social, political, health and economic stability.
Bautista Rojas Gómez (Bauta), of the People’s Force (FP), and Ginette Bournigal, of the Modern Revolutionary Party (PRM), agreed that the social crisis in that country, as a result of the control exercised by criminal gangs, has repercussions in the Dominican Republic.
While the PLD senator Elías Piña, Yvan Lawrencesaid he agreed with the call for a binational dialogue, in which the different sectors participate to achieve a point of understanding that can reverse the current situation.
Rojas Gómez and Ginette Bournigal believe that before convening a dialogue between the two countries, Haiti must first have political stability.
“Haiti has a crisis that can only be resolved by the most powerful nations in the world, with the support of other countries and where we are a part, as they are the most affected by that crisis. I don’t think there is a binational solution, that has to be a solution from the rest of the world,” Rojas Gómez said.
You may be interested in reading: Haiti or how to survive the lack of gasoline, gangs and now cholera
“The international organizations have to go with health aid and they have to put the institutional order, they have to install, with their consensus, a transitional government until elections come,” Bournigal explained.
He understands that an intervention that helps the Haitian police would be of great significance for the stabilization of the neighboring country, submerged in crisis due to the rise in crime.
He considered that Haiti cannot continue with this chaos and insisted that it must be intervened institutionally to eliminate the chaos and anarchy that prevails there.
The legislative representative of Puerto Plata proposed to eliminate binational hate speech and that the Dominican Republic and Haiti.
Plan
On his side, Yván Lorenzo accused the government of not having a comprehensive Dominican-Haitian plan that encompasses migration and trade issues, but rather, on the contrary, assumed a populist discourse that to a certain extent has exacerbated the contradictions.