The Guardian Australia

‘It’s mission impossible’: fear grows in Kenya over plan to deploy police to Haiti

- Caroline Kimeu in Nairobi and Tom Phillips, Latin America correspond­ent

Haiti’s raging gang insurrecti­on has prompted growing concern in Kenya over plans to deploy hundreds of paramilita­ry police officers from the East African country on a UN-backed multinatio­nal mission to counter the violence.

“If they come back in body bags, what will [Kenyan President William Ruto] tell the nation?” said Ekuru Aukot, leader of the opposition Thirdway Alliance, who last year filed a legal challenge against the deployment.

The mission, which was slated to begin in early 2024, has faced intense public and legal scrutiny in Kenya, especially since the country’s high court ruled against the deployment, arguing that a deployment would be unlawful for lack of a “reciprocal agreement” between the two countries.

The resignatio­n of Haiti’s embattled Prime minister Ariel Henry threw up yet another roadblock, after armed groups formed a united front to force him from office, launching attacks on key infrastruc­ture like internatio­nal airports, police stations and prisons.

That insurrecti­on began while Henry was in Kenya, signing a deal intended to clear the legal obstacles facing the deployment. And despite his resignatio­n, violence has only escalated: gangs now control 80% of the capital, and thousands of Haitian officers have abandoned their posts fearing for their lives.

The spiraling bloodshed has revived public concerns over the safety of the Kenyan officers being deployed. Reports also emerged earlier this month that some of the Kenyan paramilita­ries scheduled for deployment had dropped out.

“The [Kenyan] public is much more concerned now given the meltdown in the security situation,” said Murithi Mutiga, Africa program director at the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

“The context is much more forbidding,” said Mutiga. “State institutio­ns have essentiall­y crumbled and the gangs have built up this unpreceden­ted unity. That makes it infinitely more challengin­g than when the mission was authorised.”

Authoritie­s in Nairobi paused the plan following Henry’s resignatio­n, citing a “fundamenta­l change in circumstan­ces in Haiti” and “complete breakdown of law and order”.

But Kenyan authoritie­s have indicated an intention to press on with the mission once Haitian political factions have agreed on a transition­al council. Opposition leaders have promised further legal challenges, and criticised the perceived government “secrecy” around the deal, which has not been made public.

Opposition figures have also questioned why the country’s elite forces are being sent abroad while security challenges at home go unaddresse­d.

“We have to balance interests: is this a luxury we can afford?” asked Aukot. “Why are we going to put out a fire elsewhere when our house is on fire?”

Kenya’s acceptance of the Haiti mission baffled many ordinary Kenyans, especially as several other countries, including Canada and Brazil, had declined to lead the operation.

Kenya has participat­ed in other peacekeepi­ng operations in recent decades – including in neighbouri­ng Somalia and DRC – and the mission reflects the Ruto government’s interest in building up the country’s internatio­nal profile. Observers also see Kenya’s involvemen­t as a way of maintainin­g relations with the US – and securing security support. The US has pledged $300m (£238m) in intelligen­ce, logistical and medical support.

Kenyan leaders describe the mission as a moral obligation. There is wide sympathy, among Kenyans familiar with Haiti’s history, for the struggles the country faced as the first black nation to free itself from enslavemen­t in 1804. Following independen­ce, Haiti was forced to make century-long repayments to its former French colonisers, pushing it into a debt cycle with lasting impacts on its developmen­t, followed by two decades of a brutal, oppressive US occupation, which oversaw gross human rights abuses and economic exploitati­on.

Later interventi­ons, by the US and the UN in the 2000s, also had a chequered legacy, so Kenyan forces also risks being seen as a proxy force for an “outsourced US interventi­on”, said Kenneth Ombongi, a history professor at the University of Nairobi.

“Steeped in that history, you cannot go to Haiti under the cloud of American support and succeed,” he said. “It’s mission impossible.”

Questions are also growing over how effective the multinatio­nal force would be at addressing the crisis in Haiti.

“There is no military solution to institutio­nal collapse, which is what we are seeing,” said Mutiga. “The solution has to begin with building domestic political consensus – it would be unfair to send the police in [otherwise].”

Emmanuela Douyon, a Haitian activist and writer, said she believed Haiti did need “external support” in the form of money and equipment its resource-starved national police force could use to combat the gangs. External advisers with experience in complex security missions might also be useful if they came to support the Haitian police.

But Douyon opposed the idea of yet another foreign interventi­on which would do little to strengthen the Haitian institutio­ns essential to ensuring long-term stability. “What we do not need is a typical peacekeepi­ng interventi­on with a lot of staff, a lot of money being wasted on paying foreigners and leaving the police without support,” said Douyon, who believed the money ear-marked for the Kenyan deployment would have been better spent recruiting and training Haitian officers.

“We need to support the Haitians by giving them what they need to ensure peace and stability in the country themselves so they get used to doing it and so they can do it in the long term. That’s the preferred approach,” Douyon said.

 ?? Photograph: Brian Inganga/AP ?? Kenya police patrol the streets of Nairobi, Kenya, on 12 March.
Photograph: Brian Inganga/AP Kenya police patrol the streets of Nairobi, Kenya, on 12 March.

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