Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Hérard Abraham

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President
  
Prime Minister
  
Gerard Latortue

President
  
Role
  
Haitian Political figure

Preceded by
  
Yvon Simeon

Name
  
Herard Abraham

Prime Minister
  
Gerard Latortue

Preceded by
  
Jocelerme Privert


Herard Abraham httpsiytimgcomviPIXrQ8PTVUohqdefaultjpg

Similar People
  
Ertha Pascal‑Trouillot, Prosper Avril, Henri Namphy, Boniface Alexandre, Roger Lafontant

Succeeded by
  
Jean Renald Clerisme

General herard abraham and election of1990 junior mengual owner ayiti tan lontan part 4


Hérard Abraham (born July 28, 1940) is a former Haitian political figure.

Contents

Life

Abraham enlisted in the Haitian army as a young man. He rose to the rank of lieutenant general and became one of the few military members in the inner circle of President Jean-Claude Duvalier. Abraham supported the 1986 coup against Duvalier, and served as foreign minister for the first time under Henri Namphy from 1987 to 1988. He became acting President of Haiti on March 10, 1990 after street protests forced President Prosper Avril into exile. He gave up power three days later, becoming the only military leader in Haiti during the twentieth century to give up power voluntarily. In January 1991, Abraham helped to crush a coup attempt by Roger Lafontant.

In 1991, Abraham retired from the army and moved to the United States. He settled in Miami, Florida and drifted into obscurity. He lived near another former Haitian politician, Gérard Latortue, who would later become prime minister. In February 2004, Abraham made a radio address from Florida calling on President Jean-Bertrand Aristide to resign.

After Aristide's forced exile from the country, a new government needed to be formed. Latortue was eventually chosen for prime minister position, and invited Abraham to return to Haiti and become minister of Interior. Abraham served in that position from March 2004 until a January 31, 2005 cabinet reshuffle, in which he became foreign minister. He held that position until 9 June 2006.

References

Hérard Abraham Wikipedia