PORT-AU-PRINCE: A fourth contingent of Kenyan police arrived Thursday in Haiti to help repel violent gangs as officials brushed off concerns over a halt in some US funding to the UN-backed mission.
The 200 police officers from the East African country join more than 600 other Kenyans already working alongside Haiti’s national police as part of a multinational force boosted by soldiers and police deployed by countries including Jamaica, Guatemala and El Salvador.
“We are reaching close to our full strength so the mission can start giving results,” Godfrey Otunge, the mission’s force commander, said as he greeted the new officers at Haiti’s main international airport, which remains closed to commercial flights because of ongoing gang violence.
The latest deployment of Kenyan police comes two days after the US notified the United Nations that it was freezing $13.3 million slated for the mission as part of a sweeping freeze on foreign assistance imposed by US President Donald Trump.
Otunge said in a statement Wednesday that the amount frozen represents less than 3 per cent of ongoing assistance to the mission.
“I want to assure everyone, especially the people of Haiti, that the mission remains on track,” he said.
He noted that the US and other partner countries are still providing logistical, financial and equipment support, with support flights arriving almost daily.
“Both the department of defense and the department of state remain actively engaged in (the mission’s) operations,” Otunge stated.
The US state department said it approved waivers for $40.7 million in foreign assistance to help the mission and Haitian police, including contracts to support forward operating bases, medical services and vehicle maintenance.
It noted that as recently as Tuesday, the US delivered “much-needed heavy armored equipment” to the mission and Haitian police.
“The Haitian people need security,” said Haitian prime minister Alix Didier Fils-Aime as he pointed to a plane on the tarmac. “This is all the equipment that we promised is coming in.”
William O’Neill, UN designated expert on Haiti, said Thursday that the mission plays a crucial role in helping local officers establish security.
“The Haitian national police are outnumbered and outgunned by the gangs,” he said. “Steady and predictable funding for the (mission) requires all states to contribute, especially those in the region. More stability in Haiti will reduce the pressure to migrate, which is in everyone’s interest.”
On Tuesday, US secretary of state Marco Rubio spoke with Kenyan President William Ruto to thank him for his country’s leadership of the mission in Haiti, which remains fully operational, and Kenya’s role in promoting peace in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
The mission, which began last year, is struggling with a lack of funding and personnel as gangs that control 85 per cent of the capital, Port-au-Prince, keep seizing more territory.
An ongoing, weeklong attack in an upscale community near the capital has killed some 150 people, Marie Yolene Gilles of the nonprofit Fondasyon Je Klere told Magik9 radio station on Wednesday.
She said more than 100 homes also were set on fire.
The attack on Kenscoff that began January 27 has left more than 1,660 people homeless, according to the international organization for migration.