The Manila Times

Canada warships sail to Haiti for surveillan­ce mission

- AFP

Canada is deploying two warships off the coast of Haiti over the coming weeks to conduct surveillan­ce of the crisishit country and support local police, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Thursday (Friday in Manila).

Speaking to a meeting of Caribbean leaders in the Bahamian capital Nassau, he said the ships will “conduct surveillan­ce, gather intelligen­ce and maintain a maritime presence off the Haitian coast in the coming weeks.

At a news conference later, he said the frigates would “assist the Haitian National Police in their efforts to control gang activity.”

He also said that their mere presence in Port-au-Prince Bay would likely dissuade gangs from using the waterway for criminal activities.

Haiti, the poorest country in the western hemisphere, has been mired for years in a vicious cycle of humanitari­an, economic and political crises exacerbate­d by brutal gang violence.

Last Friday, the United Nation’s top human rights official Volker Turk called for an internatio­nal force to be deployed to Haiti to help end this “living nightmare.”

Trudeau said after a meeting with Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry that Canada “is very concerned about the ongoing unrest and instabilit­y in Haiti.”

“Right now Haiti is confronted with unrelentin­g gang violence, political turmoil and corruption. Armed groups are committing murder, rape and other genderbase­d violence, kidnapping innocent people and recruiting children to terrorize and subjugate people,” he said.

Speaking to reporters, he blamed much of the instabilit­y on “a small number of powerful elite families who are fomenting instabilit­y and financing violence for their own gains at a terrible cost to the Haitian people.”

He said Canada is working with allies to increase sanctions on them, adding “that until the Haitian elites and leadership are held to account for their role in this horrific crisis in Haiti, we will not be able to deal with it.”

Canada has imposed sanctions on former Haitian president Michel Martelly and two ex-prime ministers, as well as Haiti’s only billionair­e, Gilbert Bigio, and others.

On Thursday, Ottawa added more names to its sanctions list, and announced CA$12.3 million ($9.1 million) in new humanitari­an aid for Haiti as well as CA$10 million ($7.4 million) for the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration to protect migrants in the region.

Canada’s deployment of navy ships comes after patrol aircraft with reconnaiss­ance capabiliti­es were sent for a few days earlier this month to assist local authoritie­s.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? WORSENING UNREST
Journalist­s demonstrat­e to demand the release of their colleague Jean Thony Lorthé and his two relatives, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2023. Another Haitian journalist has been kidnapped by gangs, a government office announced on Feb. 8, 2023. Canada is deploying two warships off the coast of Haiti over the coming weeks to conduct surveillan­ce of the crisishit country and support local police, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on Thursday, Feb. 16, 2023 (February 17 in Manila).
AFP PHOTO WORSENING UNREST Journalist­s demonstrat­e to demand the release of their colleague Jean Thony Lorthé and his two relatives, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti on Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2023. Another Haitian journalist has been kidnapped by gangs, a government office announced on Feb. 8, 2023. Canada is deploying two warships off the coast of Haiti over the coming weeks to conduct surveillan­ce of the crisishit country and support local police, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on Thursday, Feb. 16, 2023 (February 17 in Manila).

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