Four suspects killed in shootout after Haiti president's assassination
text_fieldsPort-au-Prince: Following the assassination of Haiti's President Jovenel Moise, four persons suspected of the crime have been killed in a shootout with the security forces, police said.
Two others have been detained, while officers are still in combat with some remaining suspects in Haiti capital Port-au-Prince, the BBC reported citing officials.
Police chief Leon Charles sounded determined and in no mood to take chances when he said "They will be killed or captured."
"Four mercenaries were killed (and) two were intercepted under our control," Charles said in a televised statement late on Wednesday. "Three policemen who had been taken hostage have been recovered."
"We blocked (the suspects) en route as they left the scene of the crime," the police chief added. "Since then, we have been battling with them."
Moise, 53, was fatally shot and his wife was injured when attackers stormed their home early on Wednesday.
The unidentified gunmen entered the private residence in Port-au-Prince at 1 a.m. local time (05:00 GMT). Moise died, but his wife Martine Moise survived and has been flown to Florida where she is receiving treatment.
She is reported to be in a stable but critical condition.
Speaking after the killing, interim Prime Minister Claude Joseph called for calm and declared a nationwide state of emergency.
The state of emergency, or "state of siege", allows for the banning of gatherings and use of the military for police roles, along with other extensions of executive powers.
US President Joe Biden offered condolences to the people of Haiti for the "horrific assassination". UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, meanwhile, called it "an abhorrent act" and also appealed for calm.
Moise became president of Haiti in 2017, but in recent times faced widespread protests demanding his resignation.
Haiti's history has been dotted with coups, political instability, widespread gang violence and natural disasters for decades and the country remains the poorest nation in the Americas.
Joseph said the attackers were "foreigners who spoke English and Spanish". Haiti's official languages are Creole and French.
Some reports spoke of men dressed in black who carried high-powered weapons who may have pretended to be part of a US drug enforcement operation, although no official details have been given.
Haiti's ambassador to the US, Bocchit Edmond, discounted conjectures of drugs agents being behind the attack and suspected it was were probably the work of "professional mercenaries".
(Based on IANS feed)