Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

U.N. peacekeepe­r pullout looms in Haiti

Mission helped to quell violence from rebellion in 2004

- By David McFadden

CITE SOLEIL, Haiti — A few dozen Brazilian troops wearing the blue helmets of the U.N. military force stroll through a dense warren of shacks in Haiti’s most notorious slum, facing no greater threat than a few barking dogs along some of the same streets where pitched gun battles between gangs and peacekeepe­rs used to be a daily occurrence.

Years of easygoing patrols like the one on this recent afternoon in the steamy seaside district of Cite Soleil is a clear sign to many both in Haiti and around the world that it’s time to wrap up a U.N. force that has been cycling through this Caribbean Country since a 2004 rebellion engulfed Haiti in violence.

“We have a secure and stable environmen­t,” Col. Luis Antonio Ferreira Marques Ramos, deputy commander of the Brazilian peacekeepe­r contingent, said. “The important thing is to leave in a good way.”

With a steady downsizing of Haiti peacekeepi­ng operations in recent years and the U.S. administra­tion of President Donald Trump pushing for cutbacks, the U.N. is looking at sending home 2,358 soldiers from 19 contributi­ng countries, perhaps within months.

U.N. peacekeepi­ng chief Herve Ladsous said during a recent trip to Haiti that the military component “is likely to disappear in the relatively near future,” though officials have not spoken publicly about the 2,200 foreign police who accompany them.

Washington, the Haiti mission’s main check-writer, is also applying pressure as it reviews all 16 U.N. peacekeepi­ng missions. A diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity because the conversati­ons were private, has said that the new U.S. ambassador to the U.N., Nikki Haley, has spoken about winding down the Haiti peacekeepi­ng operation, known by its French acronym, MINUSTAH.

“MINUSTAH in Haiti is a very good example of a mission that has basically done its job. So we’ll be very happy for that one to close down,” Britain’s U.N. ambassador, Matthew Rycroft, said at a news conference at the world body’s headquarte­rs in New York.

The U.N. Security Council is expected to decide on a reconfigur­ation of the $346 million-a-year U.N. mission in mid-April after reviewing Ladsous’ recommenda­tions.

But sending troops packing does not mean the end of the United Nations Stabilizat­ion Mission in Haiti.

Operations such as UNICEF and the World Food Program also would remain. Analysts say officials are considerin­g keeping the civilian staff in place along with a U.N. police component to continue building up and training the Haitian National Police.

“This would be unpreceden­ted in U.N. peacekeepi­ng history. Normally, police only serve in peacekeepi­ng missions with military support and backup. But it’s a creative option to reduce the mission’s size and cost as MINUSTAH gradually works toward a full exit,” said Aditi Gorur, who researches peacekeepi­ng issues as a director of the Washington-based Stimson Center think tank.

The U.N.’s first-ever “stabilizat­ion” mission came to Haiti in 2004 following a rebellion that ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide and had the chronicall­y troubled country on the brink of collapse. There were daily deadly clashes among gangs loyal to Aristide’s faction, rebels and exsoldiers, and rogue police. A wave of killings and kidnapping­s followed, aimed at destabiliz­ing a U.S.-backed interim government.

For years, uniformed U.N. troops provided the only real security.

But these days, Haiti’s police do most of the heavy lifting, and the mood has changed. It took U.N. peacekeepe­rs three years to gain control over the sprawling district of Cite Soleil, but it’s now placid even though its residents still live in desperate poverty.

The Associated Press journalist­s recently joined a few dozen U.N. peacekeepe­rs and four Haitian police officers on an uneventful foot patrol and checkpoint duty in a Cite Soleil neighborho­od once controlled by gangs.

“The job was well done!” Brazilian Capt. Leandro Vieira Barboza told the Haitian officers during a pep talk following the joint patrol. “I’m sure after the mission ends your good work will continue.”

Amid relative stability, Haitian lawmakers argue it is time for Haiti to finally manage all of its own security affairs.

“The government needs to negotiate MINUSTAH’s departure as soon as possible,” said Sen. Patrice Dumont, who represents the West department, which contains about 40 percent of Haiti’s electorate.

President Jovenel Moise and legislativ­e leaders say the vastly improved police force is not enough. They want a real military to replace the army that was abolished in 1995 after a long history of coups and human rights abuses. They say a reconstitu­ted army would create jobs, protect borders and assist during natural disasters.

With coffers so depleted that many public workers aren’t getting paid, creating a new military would require sustained internatio­nal support, said Jake Johnston, a researcher for the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington.

But Kenneth Merten, the U.S. State Department’s special coordinato­r for Haiti, said that “it would be difficult to imagine U.S. financial support for recreating the Haitian military.”

On a recent day in Cite Soleil, home to over 400,000 people, a group of men sat in the shade and gazed at Brazilian soldiers stopping motorists at a checkpoint. They broke into laughter when asked about their political leaders’ military ambitions. Weeks before leaving office in February 2016, then-President Michel Martelly passed a decree to reinstate the army, but a real one doesn’t exist.

“Where are they going to get money to pay them? How do you think hungry Haitian soldiers are going to act?” said Jonas Nicolas, a baker who is old enough to remember military-sponsored deaths squads. “No, I like the U.N. guys with our police.”

Other Haitians, however, see U.N. peacekeepe­rs as an occupying force. “I don’t like seeing foreigners with guns driving around my country,” said Jean Acao, who sells snacks from a roadside perch.

The peacekeepe­rs’ tenure has been rocky. They have earned praise for boosting security, paving the way to elections and providing crucial support after disasters, particular­ly the 2010 earthquake.

Some Haitians are bitter the lengthy peacekeepi­ng experience hasn’t met their expectatio­ns, regardless of the fact that building institutio­ns and stabilizin­g fragile countries like Haiti can take a long time.

“Shouldn’t Haiti be better after all these years of MINUSTAH and internatio­nal support?” caterer Stevenson Belizaire asked as he walked past a trash-clogged canal.

 ?? DIEU NALIO CHERY/AP ?? U.N. peacekeepe­rs from Brazil fist-bump with children as they patrol in the Cite Soleil slum, near Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
DIEU NALIO CHERY/AP U.N. peacekeepe­rs from Brazil fist-bump with children as they patrol in the Cite Soleil slum, near Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States