PORT-AU-PRINCE, (Reuters) – Haitian police arrested former justice official Joseph Felix Badio in the assassination of President Jovenel Moise, a police spokesman told Reuters yesterday,
Badio is accused by investigators of ordering the hitmen who carried out the attack in July 2021.
The assassination of Moise plunged the Caribbean island nation into political disarray and increasing lawlessness as powerful gangs have expanded their reach.
Armed police intercepted Badio as he was driving out of a supermarket parking lot in Petion-Ville, a Port-au-Prince suburb, yesterday afternoon, according to a witness at the scene.
Badio, considered the main suspect in the assassination plot by Haitian officials and rights groups, is charged with murder, attempted murder and armed robbery.
Moise was shot dead in his bedroom after a group of armed men burst into his home in the hills above Port-au-Prince.
The group was mostly comprised of Colombian mercenaries, according to investigators, though several Haitians and Haitian-Americans have also been accused of playing a role in the killing.
Investigators accuse Badio of ordering the Colombian hitmen to carry out the deadly attack.
Others implicated in the case, including former Haitian Senator Joseph Joel John and Haitian-Chilean businessman Rodolphe Jaar, have been convicted in the United States for their role in the murder.
Since the brazen assassination, the impoverished nation’s unelected government has struggled with providing even basic services.
Haiti’s gangs have taken on roles such as running schools and clinics in the place of an increasingly absent government, even as their criminal rackets help gang leaders amass wealth and terrorize victims, according to a U.N. report published on Wednesday.
The U.N. recently ratified deploying an international force to support Haiti’s police at the government’s request, but few countries have committed personnel and it has yet to materialize.