KARIBE Accord: Political Ultimatum and Call for National Refoundation Before February 7, 2026
By La Rédaction · Port-au-Prince · · 2 min read · Updated 24 April 2026
Translated from French — AI-assisted and reviewed by the editorial team. The French version is authoritative. Read the original · About our translation policy

the immediate departure of the Transitional Presidential Council (CPT) and the revocation of Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé, whose failure is total, evident, and fraught with consequences for the nation. The KARIBE Accord states that the CPT and the government have failed on all fronts: security, political, institutional, and moral. This failure is now a collective setback, but it primarily implicates the responsibility of those who have seized power without results, without vision, and without popular legitimacy. Faced with this generalized collapse of the state, the KARIBE Accord issues a solemn call to all new political structures and agreements to unite to provide a clear alternative articulated by a break with past practices. For the Accord's leaders, this call is addressed to new actors, embodying credibility, honesty, competence, and a sense of state, capable of coming together in a spirit of historical responsibility. The objective is clear: to provide the country, by February 7, 2026, at the latest, with a new government, based on a legitimate, functional, bicameral executive, exclusively focused on the nation's supreme interest, the restoration of security, the reconstruction of institutions, and the return of state authority. Furthermore, the KARIBE Accord issues an unequivocal political ultimatum to the parties signatory to the April 3, 2024 Accord:
one cannot be both in power and in opposition. Any ambiguity, duplicity, or political double-dealing is now unacceptable and contrary to the demand for clarity and responsibility before the Haitian people. The CPT and the government have failed. The time for false compromises is over.
Haiti needs a real political break, new leadership, and a national project founded on sovereignty, justice, and dignity, according to the leaders of this political structure, notably Abel Loreston.
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