The Jerusalem Post

UN mission in Haiti ends after more than 13 years

- • By JACQUELINE CHARLES

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti – As the United Nations wound down its 13 plus years of military operation in Haiti last month, Sandra Honore, the Trinidadia­n diplomat who steered the country through a deadly hurricane, a protracted political crisis and a presidenti­al election, wondered if the fragile nation would finally get a break.

Hurricane Irma was threatenin­g the northern coast, and the UN Stabilizat­ion Mission had reduced its presence as the last of its blue-helmeted soldiers prepared to leave.

“We are going to support the government to the extent of our capacity, to the extent of our engineerin­g contingent, until their departure,” said Honore, the sixth diplomat to have served as the UN secretary-general’s special representa­tive in Haiti.

The UN military mission ended Sunday, leaving behind a mixed legacy of stability and controvers­y. But as a smaller mission focused on justice, human rights and police developmen­t takes over Monday, there is a lingering question: Can Haiti go forward without a large multinatio­nal military presence?

“The UN has been present in Haiti for nearly 14 years,” Haitian President Jovenel Moise said. “If after so many years, the country is not ready to take charge of its security and peacefully secure its future, this would be a collective failure for Haitians and the internatio­nal community, which has made enormous sacrifices for the stabilizat­ion of the country.

“We are convinced that despite certain social and political difficulti­es, the Haitian people and the leaders that they have provided themselves with through democratic elections, are ready to assume their future with ambition, and in a spirit of national concord,” he said.

Last month, as he addressed the UN General Assembly for the first time since his inaugurati­on in February, Moise announced that he was remobilizi­ng the country’s defunct army to fill the security vacuum being left by the departing US troops. He also insisted that the UN stop considerin­g Haiti a threat to the region’s security and remove it from a “Chapter 7” designatio­n, which allows the UN Security Council to deploy troops to restore peace.

Moise has so far refused to approve the new US mission “Today, Haiti is no threat to regional and global peace and security,” he said.

Honore said Haiti has made significan­t progress since UN forces arrived in 2004 during street protests and a bloody rebellion that toppled democratic­ally elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide.

“The Haitian people enjoy a considerab­le degree of security and greater stability. Political violence has diminished considerab­ly. Armed gangs no longer hold the population hostage,” Honore told the Security Council Thursday as she addressed it for the last. “All three branches of power are in place with the executive and legislativ­e branches restored to full functionin­g.”

Honore said she was encouraged by Moise’s recent moves to rein in public spending and speak out against corruption. She also praised his Caravan of Change program to increase agricultur­e yields through public works projects.

Immediate improvemen­ts, however, “have yet to be felt by the vast majority of the population, particular­ly in poor urban areas,” Honore said.

Haiti’s political situation remains fragile, she said, emphasizin­g the importance of the role of the new, smaller justice-focused mission, which will continue efforts to strengthen the Haiti National Police. She listed some of the difficulti­es still facing the country, which lately has been engulfed in weekly and sometimes violent protests. They include “the widely contested 2017-2018 budget, stalled indirect elections, disagreeme­nts over the reestablis­hment of the Armed Forces of Haiti, coupled with the known weaknesses of state institutio­ns, as well as the absence of significan­t improvemen­t in the difficult living conditions of much of the population,” she said.

Honore said she is confident that Haiti’s warring political factions can now resolve their difference­s on their own. But only Haitian authoritie­s can ensure that peacekeepe­rs won’t return, she said.

“It will all depend on the way governance is conducted in the country and on the dedication of the actors to arrive at some consensus on the minimum that is required in the interests of all across political lines, and across political conviction­s,” Honore said.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said he believes that Haiti still has a long way to go, but he doesn’t think it needs military forces.

“I think they need a police presence and to build up institutio­ns,” which will be the focus of the new UN mission, he said.

Often the target of local protests, the previous mission was marred by sexual abuse scandals involving soldiers and the introducti­on of cholera to Haiti by Nepalese troops 10 months after the country’s devastatin­g January 2010 earthquake.

The UN staved off multiple crises allowing Haiti to usher in three presidenti­al elections and relatively peaceful transfers of power; improved security; and helped clean up and strengthen a once deeply politicize­d police force, which now numbers 14,000. Peacekeepe­rs also aided after multiple disasters including the quake that left more than 300,000 dead and last year’s Hurricane Matthew.

“In both instances, clearly without the UN, it would have meant thousands of more unnecessar­y deaths and slower response to the needed population,” said JeanMax Bellerive, the country’s prime minister during the earthquake who was chief of staff to interim President Jocelerme Privert when Matthew hit the southern peninsula.

Robert Maguire, a longtime Haiti watcher at George Washington University, said while most will remember the mission for its “delayed and ineffectiv­e response” to cholera – a crisis of its own making – people should not forget that the UN “entered Haiti at a time of great violence and chaos, and played an important role in quelling that.”

He said the mission “achieved its goal of stability in Haiti during the time of its presence there. One indicator of this was the fact that the country’s leaders could travel abroad without the fear of their overthrow while they were away.”

Robert Fatton, another Haiti expert, is less compliment­ary. Fatton said while the UN’s military interventi­ons against armed groups, especially in the urban slums, contribute­d to a substantia­l improvemen­t in Haiti’s security and stability, “the causes of the violence have not been removed.

“In fact, it is unlikely that the limited gains made will be sustainabl­e because the extreme poverty and inequality that generated the violence in the first place persist,” said Fatton, who teaches political science at the University of Virginia. The mission’s record after more than a decade of occupation “is at best fragile. It has failed to change the social and economic conditions that led to its own creation. The future remains as uncertain and problemati­c as ever,” he said.

There were successes, said Juan Gabriel Valdes, Chile’s ambassador to the United States and the first person to head the mission starting in 2004 – for example, the 2006 election that returned Haiti to democratic order with the election of President Rene Preval and the involvemen­t of Latin American nations in Haiti’s stability.

But the challenges that remain – corruption, lack of institutio­ns and the country’s culture of non-agreement – makes him question the overall legacy of the peacekeepi­ng mission in Haiti that in the end was only able to sustain elections and government­s but not change the political culture. – Miami Herald/TNS

 ?? (Igor Rugwiza/TNS) ?? BRAZILIAN PEACEKEEPE­RS with the UN Force Commander conduct a patrol in downtown Port au Prince last October in the wake of Hurricane Matthew.
(Igor Rugwiza/TNS) BRAZILIAN PEACEKEEPE­RS with the UN Force Commander conduct a patrol in downtown Port au Prince last October in the wake of Hurricane Matthew.

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