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Haiti: Clashes in protest over the high cost of fuel

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Road blocked during protest in Port-au-PrinceImage source, AFP
Image caption,

Improvised football matches replaced busy traffic on some the main streets of the capital

Police in Haiti have clashed with anti-government protesters angry about the high cost of fuel.

Several people were injured as police moved in to clear roadblocks set up in the capital, Port-au-Prince.

Protest organisers said that drivers who ventured into the city centre during the two-day protest would be putting their lives at risk.

Haiti has seen months of protests against President Michel Martelly over delayed elections.

"Because of the price of fuel, the cost of living is going up," said Ralph La Croix, a Port-au-Prince resident.

"If the government could cut the price of fuel so it was lower, the population would live better," he told the Reuters news agency.

'Devastating consequences'

Petrol and diesel prices have been reduced by the government recently, but protesters want a 50% cut, reflecting the drop in international oil prices over the past six months.

The price of a gallon of petrol in Haiti initially dropped by about 25 cents to $4.50 (£3) and further cuts will reduce that price to about $4. Diesel prices were cut down by 20 cents to $3.55 (£2.30) and will now go down to $3.30.

Image source, Reuters
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Protesters warned drivers and commuters not to try to go into the city centre

Image source, AFP
Image caption,

Burning tyres have been used to block roads in several points of the city

Image source, AFP
Image caption,

Haiti police said the protest had not been authorised and roadblocks would be removed

The government said the protests would damage the country's troubled economy and create "devastating consequences for the most vulnerably people in our population".

Prime Minister Evans Paul made an appeal for calm.

The government "cannot lower the price of petrol. It's not that we do not want to, it's because we are not able to," he said.

Protesters say they will set up new roadblocks in Port-au-Prince on Tuesday.

Mr Martelly began ruling by decree last month after the parliament's term expired.

He has since reached an agreement with the opposition to form a new government and hold general and local elections, which are three years overdue.

But discontent continues in the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere, struck by a powerful earthquake in 2010 which devastated much of Port-au-Prince.