Kenya say it won’t send police mission to Haiti until UN funds it

NAIROBI, Nov 12 (NNN-AFRICANEWS) — Kenya’s government has said it won’t deploy its police officers to Haiti until all conditions on training and funding are met.

Last month the UN Security Council gave its approval for Kenya to command a multinational mission to combat violent gangs in the troubled Caribbean country.

Interior Minister Kithure Kindiki told Parliament’s Departmental Committee on Administration and Internal Security that “unless all resources are mobilized and availed, our troops will not leave the country.”

He said UN member states are securing resources and have identified how funds will be mobilised and made available to Kenya for the mission. However, it was not immediately clear when the forces would be fully trained and funded to allow for deployment, or when they might be deployed.

Kindiki also tweeted that the “Deployment of National Police Service Officers to Haiti will neither compromise nor undermine the capacity and capability of the service to fulfil its mandate to secure citizens and their property.” 

Meanwhile, in PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti is reporting a fresh round of gang-related killings and kidnappings as it awaits help.

On Wednesday, Haiti’s Superior Court of Auditors and Administrative Disputes said five of its employees were kidnapped in the capital, Port-au-Prince, forcing the agency to temporarily postpone all hearings.

“The court hopes that the civil servants, who do not receive a salary that allows them to meet the financial demands of the kidnappers, will be quickly released,” it said in a statement.

Also this week, the U.N.’s International Organisation for Migration said that nearly 2,500 people in the coastal town of Mariani located west of the capital were displaced by violence as gangs infiltrate previously peaceful communities.

Nearly 200,000 Haitians have now lost their homes to gangs who pillage neighbourhoods operated by rivals in their quest to control more territory. Many of the displaced are now sleeping outside or in makeshift settlements that are crowded and extremely unsanitary.

The UN’s children’s agency says nearly five million Haitians are going hungry, partly because of the gang violence.

More than 1,230 killings and 701 kidnappings were reported across Haiti from July 1 to Sept. 30, more than double the figure reported during the same period last year, according to the U.N.

Gangs continue to overwhelm Haiti’s National Police, which remains understaffed and underfunded despite the international community supplying training and resources. In late October, two more police officers were killed, according to a police union, with a total of 32 officers slain so far this year.

Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry first requested the immediate deployment of foreign armed forces more than a year ago, but it wasn’t until early October that the U.N. Security Council voted to send a non-U.N. multinational force to Haiti that would be funded by voluntary contributions. — NNN-AGENCIES

administrator

Related Articles