Santa Fe New Mexican

Caribbean leaders to tackle Haiti’s woes in summit

- By Bert Wilkinson

GEORGETOWN, Guyana — Top Caribbean leaders are expected to debate Haiti’s spiraling chaos and its impact on the region during a biannual meeting this week, with some complainin­g bitterly about a constant stream of migrants arriving on their shores as they flee poverty and worsening violence.

The three-day meeting of the Caribbean trade block known as Caricom starts Wednesday in the Bahamas.

Some of the group’s 15 members are pushing to get key Haitian stakeholde­rs to a neutral nation in the region to reach a consensus agreement on holding elections in the impoverish­ed country that has been stripped of all democratic­ally elected institutio­ns.

However, the internatio­nal community and local officials have noted that elections cannot be held in Haiti until violence is quelled.

Haiti’s foreign minister, Jean Victor Généus, warned during an Organizati­on of American States meeting Friday that insecurity has risen and will spill over into neighborin­g countries.

“We must absolutely tackle this problem in Haiti because no one else in the Caribbean will be spared,” he said.

The Caricom meeting will be hosted by Bahamian Prime Minister Philip Davis, who has persistent­ly complained about the cost of repatriati­ng thousands of Haitians as well as hundreds of Cubans in the past year. He says Caricom needs to help find a solution to Haiti’s security, political and economic crisis.

Violence has soared in Haiti as poverty and hunger deepens, with gangs growing more powerful since the July 2021 assassinat­ion of President Jovenel Moïse. The number of reported kidnapping­s rose to more than 1,200 last year, more than double what was reported the previous year. Meanwhile, 1,200 killings were reported last year, an increase of 35% compared with the previous year, according to the U.N.

The violence, coupled with double-digit inflation, has prompted thousands to flee Haiti to neighborin­g Caribbean islands, with many seeking to eventually reach the U.S. Dozens have died in such attempts as they cram into rickety boats captained by human smugglers.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration announced last month it documented at least 321 migrant deaths and disappeara­nces in the Caribbean last year, the highest number recorded since 2014 and a spike compared with the 180 deaths registered in 2021.

Last year, the Bahamas repatriate­d nearly 5,000 migrants, the majority of them Haitians. In January, the government sent home 570 migrants, of whom 368 were Haitians. The government of the Turks & Caicos Islands intercepte­d more than 3,000 such migrants last year.

In late January, the Bahamian government announced no new work permit applicatio­ns for Haitians would be processed until authoritie­s could better authentica­te documents issued by Haiti’s government. Also that month, the Turks & Caicos government approved a six-month moratorium on visitor visas for Haitians.

Both government­s have complained about an increase in migrant shantytown­s and on spending related to patrolling waters surroundin­g both archipelag­os.

“There is no question as to whether Haiti will be discussed” at this week’s meeting, Caricom spokesman Leonard Robertson said. “Haiti has been at the front and center of the community’s interest and agenda.”

Critics say Caricom has failed to produce a more managed approach to Haiti’s situation.

“We are either all brothers on one ship or not,” said Mark Kirton, an author and former professor at the University of the West Indies. “We need a strong, sustained interventi­on from Caricom as Haiti is a member. This has been severely lacking.”

Earlier this month, Jamaica’s prime minister said he was willing to send soldiers and police officers to Haiti as part of a proposed multinatio­nal security assistance deployment. Last year, the Bahamas said it would send troops or police if asked to do so.

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