Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Jean Jacques Honorat

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Preceded by
  
Rene Preval

Nationality
  
Haitian

President
  
Joseph Nerette

Name
  
Jean-Jacques Honorat

Prime Minister
  
Himself

Succeeded by
  
Marc Bazin

Preceded by
  
Jean-Robert Sabalat


Jean-Jacques Honorat wwwhaitianphotoscomspafilesspaalbumpic450

President
  
Joseph Nerette (provisional)

Born
  
April 1, 1931 (age 93) Port-au-Prince, Haiti (
1931-04-01
)

L ancien premier ministre jean jacques honorat a pr sent le livre pour le droit et pour l homme


Jean-Jacques Honorat (born April 1, 1931) was named prime minister of Haiti after the 1991 coup. Haiti's third Prime Minister, Jean-Jacques Honorat, came to the post after the 1991 coup which deposed President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and his appointed Prime Minister, René Préval. Honorat, born on April 1, 1931 in the nation's capital, succeeded to the post under the new, provisional President, Joseph Nérette, but, like many others on the list of 17 since 1988, Honorat's stint would be short-lived and terminated after military interference. He'd spent eight months in office before resigning. He also served from October of 1991 to the end of the year as Minister of Foreign Affairs and Worship.

Accused of having ties to Francois (Papa Doc) Duvalier, even past the obvious, as Jean-Jacques Honorat had served as Minister of Tourism from '58 to '61, Honorat had stated that their families were, indeed, close and in fact, there were family ties between them. However, in a December 1991 phone interview with correspondents from Washington D.C.'s EIR, he also stated that he quickly became an activist after Duvalier staged the 1961 coup, which was why he left the post of tourism director. The rift between families would lead to Honorat's eventual exile to New York after Francois' son Jean-Claude Duvalier expelled him from the country in 1981.

Jean-Jacques Honorat would continue to be a successful and favored personality on the diplomatic scene, his degrees in agronomy and law, along with his fluency in French, Spanish and English serving him well throughout his remaining career.

References

Jean-Jacques Honorat Wikipedia