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The strength of Haiti’s revival

In the three years since the assassination of Haiti’s last elected leader, warring gangs have overrun the capital, displacing more than half a million residents. Their violent grip underscores the challenge of stabilizing the Western Hemisphere’s poorest and least secure country.

Yet the Caribbean nation’s newly appointed prime minister, Garry Conille, offers a different perspective. “Please do remember that two thirds of the country, close to 10 million Haitians, live in … circumstances that are relatively peaceful,” he told NPR last week. They deserve leadership “that reflects their courage, that reflects their generosity and certainly their commitment to hard work and change.”

For ordinary Haitians, their new leader’s comment may strike a welcome chord of humility. Restoring governance is more likely to succeed if it begins at the roots rather than at the top. Ordinary citizens, as Keith Mines and Kirk Randolph of the United States Institute of Peace put it, are “force multipliers.” Tapping their resilience requires earning their trust.

“Citizens will need to be empowered to do more, and all indications are that they are more than prepared to play such a role,” they wrote.

By equal indications, they now have leaders who are also willing to follow.

In the three years since the assassination of Haiti’s last elected leader, warring gangs have overrun the capital, displacing more than half a million residents and spiking the murder rate. Their violent grip underscores the challenge of stabilizing the Western Hemisphere’s poorest and least secure country.

Yet the Caribbean nation’s newly appointed prime minister, Garry Conille, offers a different perspective. “Please do remember that two thirds of the country, close to 10 million Haitians, live in … circumstances that are relatively peaceful,” he told NPR last week. They deserve leadership “that reflects their courage, that reflects their generosity and certainly their commitment to hard work and change.”

For ordinary Haitians, their new leader’s comment may strike a welcome chord of humility. It reflects a lesson learned slowly in recent decades from other faltering states. Restoring governance is more likely to succeed if it begins at the roots rather than at the top. Ordinary citizens, as Keith Mines and Kirk Randolph of the United States Institute of Peace put it, are “force multipliers.” Tapping their resilience requires earning their trust.

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