1、CRS INSIGHT Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress INSIGHTINSIGHTi i Haiti: Concerns After the Presidential Assassination Updated July 19, 2021 Armed assailants assassinated Haitian President Jovenel Mose in his private home in the capital, Port-au-Prince, early on July 7, 2021 (see Figure
2、1). Many details of the attack remain under investigation. Haitian police have arrested more than 20 people, including former Colombian soldiers, two Haitian Americans, and a Haitian with long-standing ties to Florida. A Pentagon spokesperson said the U.S. military helped train a “small number” of t
3、he Colombian suspects in the past. Protesters and opposition groups had been calling for Mose to resign since 2019. The assassinations aftermath, on top of several preexisting crises in Haiti, likely points to a period of major instability, presenting challenges for U.S. policymakers and for congres
4、sional oversight of the U.S. response and assistance. The Biden Administration requested $188 million in U.S. assistance for Haiti in FY2022. Congress has previously held hearings, and the cochair of the House Haiti Caucus made a statement on July 7 suggesting reexaminations of U.S. policy options o