SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico — An anti-corruption agency in Haiti on Wednesday accused three members of the country's transitional presidential council of bribery in a scathing report that threatens to destabilize the country's fragile political stability.
Smith Augustin, Emmanuel Vertilaire and Louis Gérald Gilles are accused of demanding more than $750,000 from the director of the government-owned National Bank of Credit to secure his job, the Unit for Combating Corruption said in its report.
''The message is clear. No one is above the laws of our republic!'' said Hans Joseph, the unit's director, as he detailed the corruption allegations during a news conference where he unveiled the report.
Behind him stood at least half a dozen investigators wearing caps and face masks, their identities concealed.
The report is a significant blow to the nine-member council and is expected to further erode people's trust in it. The council was appointed earlier this year after targeted gang violence forced the country's former prime minister to resign, leaving Haiti without a leader. The council works alongside new Prime Minister Garry Conille and is tasked with helping run the country.
It wasn't immediately clear if the council would take any action against the three members, who did not return messages for comment.
Impunity remains widespread in Haiti even as the Unit for Combating Corruption continues cracking down on government officials.
The agency accused Gilles of organizing a meeting on May 25 among the council members, the former bank director, Raoul Pascal Pierre-Louis, and Haitian consul Lonick Léandre at the Royal Oasis Hotel in the capital of Port-au-Prince, where the demand for more than $750,000 was made.