Times Colonist

Canada relocating some diplomats from Haiti, following other countries

- DYLAN ROBERTSON

OTTAWA — Canada has reduced the number of diplomats at its embassy in Haiti to less than half its normal cadre, citing an increasing­ly unpredicta­ble security situation in the Caribbean country.

“The security situation remains volatile,” Sébastien Beaulieu, Global Affairs Canada’s chief security officer, told reporters Thursday.

He said most Canadian staff at the Port-au-Prince embassy were airlifted in a chartered helicopter early Thursday to the neighbouri­ng Dominican Republic, where they will work remotely.

The helicopter also brought in security experts who were already assigned to the embassy in Haiti but were abroad and found themselves unable to reenter the country when gangs took over the main airport in recent weeks.

The move to limit Canada’s diplomatic presence to only essential employees comes a week after peer countries made the same move. Since then, Canada had already closed access to the embassy and required staff to work remotely.

Beaulieu would not say whether Canada has emulated a U.S. decision to deploy marines to protect its embassy, but he said Canada had reduced its diplomatic footprint in order to better protect those remaining.

“The drawdown is also part of that rationale, in terms of being able to focus our security, our assets, our life support, to support that core team,” he said.

Canada has advised all Canadians in Haiti to leave since Oct. 2022, but Beaulieu said there are still “close to 3,000” Canadians officially registered as remaining in the country.

Embassy staff are messaging those people and asking them to shelter in place, respect the country’s curfew and stock up on water, food and medicine, since Haiti has lost most of its ability to import goods.

Beaulieu said the remaining cohort of Canadian diplomats amounts to between 10 and 50 per cent of the embassy’s usual staffing.

According to data Global Affairs Canada previously submitted to Parliament, the Port-auPrince embassy had 15 Canadian diplomats and 37 local hires as of July 2022.

The news comes two days after unelected Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry agreed to resign once a transition­al council is formed to oversee an internatio­nal military interventi­on led by Kenya.

Canada has contribute­d $80.5 million to the mission and has offered to help train Haitian police, but will not send soldiers. Kenya said it has suspended the mission until the transition­al council takes power in Haiti.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with his Kenyan counterpar­t about the mission on Wednesday, and he seemed to imply during a news conference Thursday that Kenya wasn’t guaranteed to lead the mission.

“They will be, hopefully, leading a multinatio­nal security interventi­on force to help stabilize Haiti,” Trudeau told reporters in Windsor, Ont.

“The humanitari­an and security catastroph­e that’s going on in Haiti right now is extraordin­arily challengin­g.”

Sylvie Bédard, the acting associate deputy minister for the Americas, said after Trudeau’s comments that Canada has no doubt Kenya will follow through.

“We remain confident that this mission will be deployed,” she said.

 ?? AP ?? Canada reduced the number of diplomats at its embassy in Haiti, citing the volatile security situation in the Caribbean country. A pedestrian crosses a street free of traffic in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Wednesday.
AP Canada reduced the number of diplomats at its embassy in Haiti, citing the volatile security situation in the Caribbean country. A pedestrian crosses a street free of traffic in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, Wednesday.

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