According to the opposition, Haiti's President Jovenel Moise ordered security forces to mobilize ahead of protests on February 7, when his mandate expires.
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Haiti: President Moise Deploys Police To Halt Rising Protests
Since Monday, protests have only increased when people hit the streets against a referendum promoted by Moise, who seeks to extend his mandate until 2022. The president requested the Police and the Interior and Justice Ministries to deploy their personnel to contain the social unrest.
"Our strength is in line. In accordance with the resolution of August 21, today, January 14, at 5 o'clock, we will sit to the members of the opposition on the final proposal to present to the nation: 10 ministries without brothers, a government without party leaders, brothers ministers will do social projects so that the mass can breathe."
Nonetheless, Haitian unions such as the National Union of Haitian Workers and the Lawyers' Collective for the Defense of Human Rights called for a general strike on February 1 and 2 to demonstrate against widespread violence.
Several demonstrators created the movement Collective of Haitian Trade Unions for Respect of the 1987 Constitution, which demands compensation from the government to the families of the victims of the nationwide violence wave.