Los Angeles Times

A welcome U.N. departure

Haiti is glad to see the peacekeepe­rs leave. But what’s in store next?

- By Ann M. Simmons ann.simmons@latimes.com Twitter: @AMSimmons1

The United Nations’ recent announceme­nt that it would end its peacekeepi­ng mission in Haiti in midOctober, removing its soldiers and leaving a smaller contingent of police, has been met with celebratio­n, apathy and concern.

It also raised the perennial question: What’s in store for Haiti now?

The decision to pull out the military component of the United Nations Stabilizat­ion Mission in Haiti, commonly known by the French acronym MINUSTAH, recognizes the progress that the Caribbean nation has made toward stabilizat­ion, including last year’s presidenti­al election and the return to constituti­onal order, U.N. officials said.

“These are all indication­s that the people of Haiti are ready to move forward,” Sandra Honore, U.N. special representa­tive and head of MINUSTAH, said in an interview with The Times.

The resolution calls for the more than 2,300 bluehelmet­ed personnel to gradually depart while 1,275 U.N. police remain for an initial period of six months. The mandate of the followup mission will be to train Haitian national police and support the government in maintainin­g the rule of law, human rights and stability, Honore said.

“Haiti is ready to move on without the presence of the military contingent,” she added.

But what will this mean for the povertystr­icken country of more than 10.4 million people that has been beset by political tumult and had successive U.N. peacekeepi­ng missions for more than two decades?

Unwanted guests

The U.N. military presence was never really welcome. Peacekeepe­rs first arrived in 1994 to facilitate the return of ousted President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, secure a stable environmen­t in the country and promote the rule of law.

Various U.N. missions followed until MINUSTAH was establishe­d in 2004 after Aristide’s second removal from power. His overthrow was among more than 20 military coups in Haiti since the country won independen­ce from France in 1804.

But the presence of U.N. troops in the country sparked controvers­y.

“There’s been an ongoing question over whether Haiti ever needed peacekeepe­rs,” said Jake Johnston, a research associate at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington. “It’s not a country with an ongoing civil war. It’s not at war with any of its neighbors.”

“In many respects, Haitians have chafed over this incursion into their sovereignt­y,” said Robert Maguire, a professor of internatio­nal affairs at George Washington University. And various politician­s had called for the U.N. mission to end. Beset by scandals

In recent years, the peacekeepe­rs have been plagued by controvers­y. They were blamed for a 2010 outbreak of cholera in Haiti that killed at least 9,100 people and sickened hundreds of thousands more. Scientists traced the source of the waterborne disease to a U.N. base.

Some U.N. troops also have been implicated in a sexual abuse scandal, including a sex ring that exploited Haitian children, according to an internal U.N. report obtained by the Associated Press.

“You’re talking about a mission of foreign soldiers who were ostensibly sent to protect people and caused quite a bit of harm to those they were meant to protect,” said Johnston, adding that a U.N. resolution passed last year to tackle the issue of abuse by peacekeepe­rs does little to hold them accountabl­e.

“It’s very troubling that MINUSTAH is withdrawin­g from Haiti without a real concrete commitment to repair harms that it has caused,” said Beatrice Lindstrom, a staff attorney at the Boston-based Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti.

Lindstrom’s group is among several organizati­ons that filed a federal class-action lawsuit seeking compensati­on for the cholera victims. But “promises to provide a remedy to the victims remain unfilled,” she said.

The U.N. is trying to raise $400 million to compensate the cholera victims, including money to support survivors and renovate the shoddy water and sanitation infrastruc­ture. But so far, less than 2% of the total has been raised, according to the agency’s data.

With regard to the sexual abuse scandal, Honore said that the U.N. had taken steps to sanction the abusers, that a zero tolerance policy was now in place, and that support and advocacy for the victims were continuing.

Gains and pitfalls

Despite these setbacks, U.N. officials praise the peacekeepi­ng mission as a success. Accomplish­ments include training police personnel, creating a law enforcemen­t office dedicated to addressing sexual and gender-based violence, reestablis­hing law and order in the capital, undertakin­g humanitari­an work, helping to draft a law aimed at increasing judicial independen­ce, strengthen­ing the nation’s human rights institutio­n and bolstering the renewal of democratic institutio­ns.

“Just the presence of those troops kept the Haitian political scene in balance,” said Maguire, who in 2000 served as Haiti specialist in the U.S. State Department’s Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs. “There’s always the chance and risk in Haiti that a coup d’etat can occur against the government in power, especially when the leader of the country is away. The U.N. effectivel­y put an umbrella over Haiti and kept it a politicall­y stable place.”

The peacekeepe­rs were also valuable in providing logistics and manpower during catastroph­ic emergencie­s in Haiti, which since 2000 has endured repeated natural disasters including mudslides, hurricanes and a 7.0 earthquake in 2010 that killed at least 220,000 people.

Honore cautioned that Haiti would continue to need internatio­nal assistance after the peacekeepe­rs’ departure, and U.N. humanitari­an programs, such as those focused on developmen­t, education and children, would persist, she said.

Further progress was still needed in areas such as the internal management and oversight of the national police and the force’s geographic­al reach, U.N. officials said.

Analysts warned of other potential pitfalls that could hinder Haiti’s advancemen­t in the absence of peacekeepe­rs, including the re-creation of the Haitian army.

Aristide disbanded the force in 1990s, but Michel Martelly, who ruled the country from 2011 to 2016, launched initial steps to restore it.

“Now without any soldiers there from the U.N. this will undoubtedl­y give more push among those who want to create a Haitian army to do so,” Maguire said. “The presence of a Haitian army is a particular­ly problemati­c and dangerous thing. There is the long history of the Haitian army becoming directly involved in politics and being used as a tool by political leaders to destabiliz­e government­s.”

Emigres in Miami

In Miami’s Little Haiti, home to a sizable population of Haitian emigres, news of the U.N. mission’s departure was greeted with satisfacti­on, relief and nonchalanc­e.

Woosler Delifort, a Haitian photojourn­alist, welcomed the move.

“Growing up Haitian American, we always heard negative stories about the peacekeepe­rs” from family members who remain on the island, Delifort said. “Stories of mistreatme­nt and stories of them not even doing the peacekeepi­ng.”

While conceding that some Haitian leaders had caused the country harm by exploiting their people and resources, many Haitians pointed to outside influences as being equally responsibl­e for the nation’s woes.

Independen­ce of the world’s first black republic was met with isolation, meddling and exploitati­on from the U.S. and France.

Sandy Dorsainvil, a Miami-based consultant, said the departure of the peacekeepe­rs would allow the new government “to have an opportunit­y to take full responsibi­lity and run the country.”

“As one of the first countries to be free in the Western Hemisphere, it’s dishearten­ing to see that we’ve gotten to the point where it seems as if we need help from other people to govern ourselves,” Dorsainvil said. “And I don’t think that’s necessary. It’s become more of a hindrance. All of these outside nations having a presence in Haiti has not helped the country move forward.”

“That they’re leaving, it’s not too soon,” artist Edouard Duval Carrie said of the peacekeepe­rs. “Haiti has to grow up. We can’t be under tutelage all the time.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Dieu Nalio Chery Associated Press ?? U.N. PEACEKEEPE­RS from Brazil patrol the Cite Soleil slum in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in February. The United Nations has announced that it will end its peacekeepi­ng mission in Haiti in mid-October.
Photograph­s by Dieu Nalio Chery Associated Press U.N. PEACEKEEPE­RS from Brazil patrol the Cite Soleil slum in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, in February. The United Nations has announced that it will end its peacekeepi­ng mission in Haiti in mid-October.
 ??  ?? BRAZILIAN peacekeepe­rs greet children. In recent years, the overall U.N. force in Haiti has been plagued by controvers­y, including a cholera outbreak.
BRAZILIAN peacekeepe­rs greet children. In recent years, the overall U.N. force in Haiti has been plagued by controvers­y, including a cholera outbreak.

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