Bill Clinton to lead investor mission to Haiti

MIAMI, (Reuters) – Former U.S. President Bill Clinton  said yesterday he would lead an international trade mission of  private investors to Haiti in October to pursue energy and  other development amid signs the nation is stabilizing.

Clinton burnished his credentials as an elder statesman  last week when he visited North Korea to retrieve two American  journalists who had been held in the communist-ruled Asian  nation and met with its reclusive leader Kim Jong-il.

He did not mention North Korea during Sunday’s speech to  the Haitian Diaspora Unity Congress in Miami.

In his first major address to the Haitian diaspora since  becoming U.N. special envoy to Haiti, Clinton said stability  had improved in the troubled Caribbean nation, providing new  opportunity for foreign investment.

“I think we are really on the verge of being able to make  some significant changes,” Clinton said.

Deeply impoverished Haiti was plagued by coups and sporadic  unrest for much of the 1980s and 1990s. U.N. peacekeeping  forces have been helping maintain order in the Caribbean nation  since the last revolt in 2004.

But United States, Canada and other nations have recently  eased their travel warnings for Haiti in recognition of  improving security, while the Haitian government has  streamlined the approval process for business ventures, Clinton  said. The World Bank and International Monetary Fund granted  Haiti $1.2 billion of debt relief in June, helping ease its  financial burden.