The Haitian National Rescue Movement (Mohsana) proposes a new path to free Haiti from its current political impasse.
Replacing the Presidential Transitional Council (CPT), the movement advocates the establishment of a technocratic, politically neutral administration, free from the influence of the political and financial establishment.
A guest on the Panel Magik program this Wednesday, May 14, Roberson Edouard, a leading figure in the Mohsana movement, advocated for a governance structure consistent with the spirit of the Haitian Constitution, based on a two-headed executive with a president and a prime minister. According to him, the most successful transitions in Haiti's recent history have all followed this model.
For Roberson Edouard, the political neutrality of this new administration is crucial. "It must escape the control and influence of the political and financial establishment," he explained, criticizing the current Presidential Transitional Council, which he considers illegitimate and incapable of guaranteeing the promised stability and security.
The Mohsana movement believes that the CPT has never represented the popular will and accuses its members of fueling internal struggles to defend their personal or partisan interests. This dynamic, the movement believes, has contributed to worsening the country's political and social instability.
Regarding the end of the CPT's mandate, Roberson Edouard envisions two scenarios: a voluntary resignation of its members, motivated by a surge of good faith, or a withdrawal of support from the international community, which had contributed to their rise to power. However, he acknowledges that the Mohsana has not yet formalized specific mechanisms to orchestrate such a transition. He remains open, however, to drawing inspiration from international models adapted to Haiti's specific circumstances.
The Mohsana also calls for an orderly dissolution of the CPT, a condition deemed essential for establishing transitional governance that serves the national interest.