Business Day

Kenyan politician to oppose use of police

- Aaron Ross Nairobi /Reuters

A Kenyan opposition leader said on Wednesday he would launch a fresh court challenge to a plan to send police officers to gang-ravaged Haiti, after the two countries signed a deal last week intended to fast-track the deployment.

Ekuru Aukot said the agreement between President William Ruto and Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry was invalid and failed to address objections by the judge who blocked the deployment in January after a lawsuit by Aukot’s party.

Kenya announced in 2023 it would lead a multinatio­nal force in Haiti, where gang violence has killed thousands and displaced hundreds of thousands. But months of legal wrangling have effectivel­y placed the entire mission on hold.

Ruto said at a signing ceremony on Friday that the agreement with Henry would speed up Kenyan officers’ arrival in Haiti, but his government has not provided a timeline or published the deal.

“We still intend to challenge this in court. We are just waiting for the government to make its next move,” Aukot said, adding he could seek a contempt finding if the government tried to deploy the officers without express court approval.

A high court judge ruled in January the officers could only be sent to Haiti if a “reciprocal arrangemen­t” was in place with the host government.

Aukot said Henry, who came to power after the 2021 assassinat­ion of president Juvenal Moise, did not have the legal legitimacy to enter into such an arrangemen­t.

POLICE

He said Haiti’s laws governing the police were not similar enough to Kenya’s to make reciprocat­ion possible.

Kenya’s government spokespers­on did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Henry’s visit to Kenya sparked violence at home and calls by a top gang leader for him to step down.

Henry landed in Puerto Rico on Tuesday, after days of uncertaint­y about his whereabout­s. It was not clear how and when he would return to Haiti.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Next move: Lawyers Charles Midenga and Ekuru Aukot after a Kenyan judge ruled the government’s intention to deploy police officers in Haiti was unconstitu­tional.
/Reuters Next move: Lawyers Charles Midenga and Ekuru Aukot after a Kenyan judge ruled the government’s intention to deploy police officers in Haiti was unconstitu­tional.

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