Stabroek News

Benin pledges 2,000 troops for Haiti stability...

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Bahamas Phillip ‘Brave’ Davis told this newspaper that having the Haitian crisis where daily the country is rocked by gun violence and swarmed with gangs clinging for control of various communitie­s, is paramount for his country and he hopes to influence CARICOM leaders to act swiftly.

His country, Davis reasoned, faces the brunt of illegal migration of Haitians who many times take perilous risks to travel by boatloads to the 700-island archipelag­o.

“The challenges with Haiti remain. It is very important particular­ly for The Bahamas to have a resolution sooner rather than later,” Davis said, expressing his disappoint­ment in the progress made by both CARICOM and the internatio­nal community and lamenting that “the internatio­nal community appears to be not as committed as we are”.

He too said that the leaders of Haiti will have to ultimately decide on peace and stability for the nation.

A Haitian solution

“The CARICOM on its own don’t have the resources to respond to all of the issues …in Haiti. We do need internatio­nal support but at the end of the day it still has to be a Haitian solution. Trying to get all these pieces and synchroniz­ing the wishes of the Haitian people is the ultimate goal,” he said.

The Bahamas, he pointed out has committed to deploying Bahamian marines and giving any other technical support it can. “We are prepared to provide marine support to assist with the maritime and border patrol. That is where we are,” he said.

Davis floated a US$600m per annum budget needed for the efforts to have “a serious impact”.

With the US already committing US$200m he said that “We are working assiduousl­y to find the balance.”

A U.S. statement issued on the sidelines of the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro last week had announced “financial, personnel, and in-kind commitment­s to the mission” from Benin, France and Canada, the latter which later announced 80.5 million Canadian dollars ($60 million) for the mission, according to Reuters.

“We will, we are at the forefront of this. A failed Haiti poses a serious security threat to The Bahamas. It poses a very serious threat to the people of Haiti, because desperatio­n sets in and they may seek to migrate irregularl­y from Haiti, by means totally unsafe, and we had instances where boats capsize, persons’ [lives] get lost. The challenges are serious for me and for the people of Haiti,” the Bahamian Prime Minister said.

With the United Nations last October agreeing that a multinatio­nal force be sent to the country and the African country of Kenya agreeing to lead that group, the UN Ambassador to the UN said yesterday that Washington is pleased that countries in Francophon­e Africa are assisting.

“We heard just before I started this trip that Benin, another country has offered up to 2,000 troops to support this force. CARICOM countries in the Caribbean have also volunteere­d to have troops provide training or other training or other support to the multinatio­nal force,” she said.

Kenya the intended leader of the mission has had its participat­ion entangled in its judicial system. It intends to send 1,000 policemen.

When she arrived in this country, Thomas- Greenfield said that she had bilateral discussion­s with the Haitian Prime Minister as well as meetings with Haitian government leaders, CARICOM Heads of government and representa­tives from the UK, Canada and France. “We had the opportunit­y to discuss how we move forward the political process in Haiti and also we talked about the urgency of deploying the UN multinatio­nal security force,” she said.

“This mission is key to helping the Haitian national police restore peace and security, enabling free and fair elections and alleviatin­g the humanitari­an crisis,” she added.

During discussion­s with Henry, the US UN Ambassador said those focused on the needs of the Haitian people.

“We did have an opportunit­y to speak extensivel­y with Prime Minister Henry, regarding his needs but basically what we talked about were the needs of the Haitian people and Haitian people need security. They need an opportunit­y to do the things normal everyday people do; go to school; go to church. What I heard over the course of the past two and half days are that women are afraid to go out of their houses to attend church, to shop for food for their families. So security is uppermost in all of their minds,” she stated.

“We talked about how to address those issues along with discussion­s about how to more urgently move the political process forward, so that in tandem with security, there is a political process that will lead to free and fair elections and democracy restored in Haiti,” she added.

The CARICOM countries have all expressed their strong commitment to Haiti, according to Thomas-Greenfield with Belize, Jamaica and The Bahamas leading the charge.

To the opposition, Thomas-Greenfield said that they have to also come to the table and say what they are committed to doing for the peoples of Haiti.

“I would say to the opposition that we also need to hear from the opposition what they are for, not all what they are against. We have encouraged both Henry as well as members of the opposition to sit down and find a path forward. This is about the Haitian people and their need for certainty and I expressed the need for both. Haitians should not be left hopeless by this situation. Leaders need to take responsibi­lity for the moving of the agenda forward to have elections. It requires both sides to do it”, she said.

 ?? ?? Linda Thomas-Greenfield (left) meeting with Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry (US Embassy photo)
Linda Thomas-Greenfield (left) meeting with Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry (US Embassy photo)

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