Miami Herald

No help for Haiti: Kenyan court blocks sending police to help fight brutal gangs

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

Kenya’s High Court ruled Friday that the East African nation cannot deploy 1,000 police officers to help Haiti fight gangs, dealing a devastatin­g blow to supporters of an armed interventi­on to help its national police.

The High Court in Nairobi made the decision after hearing a constituti­onal challenge to the plan, which has the support of the United Nations. The court ruled that only members of the military can be sent out of the country to participat­e in operations such as the one proposed for Haiti. Under Kenyan law, police officers can only be deployed if there is “a reciprocal arrangemen­t” with the host country, the court’s only judge, Enock Chacha Mwita, ruled.

There is currently no such agreement with Haiti. The decision to deploy Kenyan police, he said, was “unconstitu­tional” and “illegal.”

In a statement, government spokesman Isaac Maigua Mwaura said the government will challenge the ruling. After the High Court, there is the court of appeal and then Kenya’s Supreme Court.

“Kenya has an outstandin­g track record of contributi­ng to peacekeepi­ng missions internatio­nally in countries such as South Sudan, Namibia, Croatia, Liberia, Sierra Leone among others,” Mwaura said. “The government reiterates its commitment in honoring its internatio­nal obligation­s as a member of the community and comity of nations.”

The decision raises serious questions about the internatio­nal push to help Haiti and what comes next.

Kenyan President William Ruto volunteere­d his nation to lead an internatio­nal effort to help Haiti in July. In a speech before the United Nations two months later, he called on the U.N. Security Council to approve a resolution penned by the United States and Ecuador approving the deployment.

But after the Security Council passed the resolution for a non-U.N. multi

national armed force, the High Court in Kenya put a hold on the deployment until it could hear the challenge.

Stéphane Dujarric, spokesman for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, said the need for the multinatio­nal force “remains extremely high.” He reminded journalist­s at a press briefing that it was not the U.N. that designated Kenya for help, but the country’s own leaders who stepped forward.

“We need urgent action. We need urgent funding, and we hope that member states will continue to do their part and then some,” he said during a press briefing in New York.

On Thursday, members of the Security Council expressed worries about the spreading violence in the troubled Caribbean nation. Diplomats — including Haiti’s foreign minister, Jean Victor Geneus — pleaded for the rapid deployment of the Multinatio­nal Security Support Mission. The situation, he said, has gotten sadder and bleaker with the security and humanitari­an situation deteriorat­ing.

“The Haitian people can’t take it anymore,” Geneus said.

Last year, Haiti saw gang-related killings double, he said, to at least 5,000 people and kidnapping­s soared to more than 2,900. As many as 37 police officers were killed by gangs.

“In our country, statistics are sometimes problemati­c, and so the reality is probably worse,” Geneus said. “The situation has prompted over 200,000 people to become internally displaced; they’ve fled their neighborho­ods, their homes, which are sometimes being settled by the gangs.”

In response to the Kenyan court’s ruling, the president of the Chamber of Deputies in the Dominican Republic, Alfredo Pacheco, said his nation, which shares the island of Hispaniola with Haiti, will need to tighten security measures to prevent a spillover of the spreading violence. Increased tensions along the border this week led to a shutdown of Ounanminth­e, a northern Haitian city bordering the Dominican town of Dajabón, by protesters seeking to remove Prime Minister Ariel Henry from power.

“Every day, the situation in Haiti becomes incredibly more complicate­d,” Pacheco told journalist­s. “We have to agree that the internatio­nal community is perhaps underestim­ating the problems occurring in Haiti.”

In addition to escalating gang violence and kidnapping­s, a former rebel leader and convicted felon who 20 years ago launched a violent coup against the president has launched “a revolution” to oust Henry.

Guy Philippe is demanding the resignatio­n of Henry, who has been governing since President Jovenel Moïse was assassinat­ed on July 7, 2021, inside his

bedroom in the hills of Port-au-Prince. This week, Philippe’s supporters marched through the streets of Haiti’s Central Plateau shutting down government offices. They are attempting to make their way into Port-auPrince by crossing gangcontro­lled territory.

During the Security Council’s session on Haiti on Thursday, the Dominican Republic expressed concerns about Philippe’s tactics. Foreign Minister Roberto Alvarez, pleading for the rapid deployment of a force to help Haiti, said “the situation has been ripe for the emergence of new political movers who, putting

themselves forward as messiahs, are acting opportunis­tically and are as damaging and destabiliz­ing as the gangs.”

“These sectors have gone so far as to call for an insurrecti­on and for civil disobedien­ce,” Alvarez said. “We firmly reject these extremely harmful influences for Haitian democracy.”

But much of the focus at the U.N. meeting was on the gangs. Representa­tives insisted that to confront the challenges in Haiti and put an end to the violence, the internatio­nal must be deployed as soon as possible. They argued that any delay threatens any opportunit­y for the restoratio­n of security to Haiti.

Tirana Hassan, executive director of Human Rights Watch, told the Security Council that Haitians told her group about struggling to feed their families in the midst of the violence, and while aware of past problems that Haitians have faced with foreign forces, “they recognize that internatio­nal support is needed now.”

In addition to Kenya, several African and Caribbean countries, including Jamaica, volunteere­d to join the mission. But they were considered too small to lead the effort.

Kenya’s permanent representa­tive to the U.N., Martin Kimani, told the council that his government has made significan­t progress in preparing for the mission. But he also acknowledg­ed that there remain gaps in funding and equipment.

The government of Henry, who pressed for internatio­nal help after gangs took control of the country’s main fuel terminal in Port-au-Prince in the fall of 2022, had yet to comment about Friday’s ruling.

Others said they were disappoint­ed with the court’s decision, although some Haiti observers said they were not surprised given concerns about past internatio­nal forces and the ongoing political crisis in Haiti. Despite repeated calls from the internatio­nal community, Henry and his opponents have been unable to reach an agreement on how to move ahead with long-overdue elections.

“The Kenya-led internatio­nal interventi­on could have brought some relief and improved access to critical public infrastruc­ture such as roads, administra­tion buildings, hospitals, schools, and markets,” said Laurent Uwumuremyi, the director of Mercy Corps., an internatio­nal aid agency working in Haiti. “However, based on past experience with internatio­nal missions ..., internatio­nal interventi­ons have had disastrous consequenc­es.”

“Solutions for Haiti, including those to bolster the Haitian National Police and the army to tamp down violence and return some semblance of security, should be led by Haitians,” Uwumuremyi added.

The effort to send a multinatio­nal force to Haiti was led by the United States, which was seeking a way to avoid sending another U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission to Haiti. As part of its campaign to get other nations to support the measure, the U.S. stressed that it would be a law-enforcemen­t effort, not a military one.

The decision in Nairobi blocking the participat­ion of Kenya’s police raises difficult questions for supporters of the multinatio­nal force, including whether to push for the deployment of a traditiona­l U.N. peacekeepi­ng mission, and whether Kenya could still lead the effort using troops instead of police.

 ?? BRIAN INGANGA AP ?? Judge Enock Chacha Mwita said deploying Kenyan police was ‘illegal.’
BRIAN INGANGA AP Judge Enock Chacha Mwita said deploying Kenyan police was ‘illegal.’
 ?? ODELYN JOSEPH AP | Jan. 18, 2024 ?? In Port-au-Prince, a man walks past tires that were set on fire by protesters to call attention to Haiti’s security crisis.
ODELYN JOSEPH AP | Jan. 18, 2024 In Port-au-Prince, a man walks past tires that were set on fire by protesters to call attention to Haiti’s security crisis.

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