The Hamilton Spectator

Jamaica is prepared to send soldiers into Haiti

- DÁNICA COTO

Jamaica’s prime minister said his government is willing to send soldiers and police officers to Haiti as part of a proposed multinatio­nal security assistance deployment.

The announceme­nt comes a week after UN special envoy for Haiti Helen La Lime said she hoped that the UN Security Council would deal “positively” with the pending request from Haiti’s government for internatio­nal armed forces despite the U.S. and Canada showing no interest.

Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness told the island’s House of Representa­tives on Tuesday that he wants to help Haiti and “support a return to a reasonable level of stability and peace, which would be necessary for any inclusive, democratic process to take root.”

Haiti’s prime minister and other top officials had requested the immediate deployment of foreign troops in early October amid a crippling fuel siege blamed on the country’s most powerful gang.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres and La Lime have backed the plea to no avail. The UN Security Council has mulled the request but taken no action, opting instead to issue sanctions on people including Jimmy Chérizier, a dominant gang leader and former police officer blamed for mastermind­ing multiple massacres.

Meanwhile, Holness said Jamaica is ready to offer bilateral support if needed.

“It is our real hope that Haiti will soon overcome her challenges and embark on a path toward restoratio­n of stability, long-lasting peace and sustainabl­e developmen­t for her land and people with the full backing of the internatio­nal community,” he said.

Jamaica is a member of a regional trade bloc known as Caricom, which last week issued a statement urging “all stakeholde­rs to come together in their search for a consensus agreement” to resolve what it called a protracted political stalemate in Haiti, adding that it was prepared to hold a meeting in the Caribbean to talk about the issue.

Haiti was stripped of all democratic­ally elected institutio­ns when the terms of the remaining 10 senators expired in early January. Prime Minister Ariel Henry has promised to hold general elections for more than a year, but a provisiona­l electoral council has yet to be chosen, which some critics say has led to a de-facto dictatorsh­ip.

Haiti also has been struggling with levels of violence not seen in decades ever since the July 2021 assassinat­ion of president Jovenel Moïse at his private home, with gangs now believed to control 60 per cent of Port-au-Prince.

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