Miami Herald

Biden orders $60 million released for Kenya-led mission to help Haiti

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

Moments after Haiti made a new transition­al presidenti­al council official on Friday, the Biden administra­tion ordered the release of $60 million in assistance for the beleaguere­d country. Most of the money will go toward equipment and training for a multinatio­nal police force to be headed by Kenya to help the Haitian police force battle gangs.

The order by President Joe Biden came shortly after a new, nine-member transition­al presidenti­al council became official with the publicatio­n of an executive order in Port-auPrince by Prime Minister Ariel Henry’s government, establishi­ng the new governing framework.

The Biden administra­tion, which supports the deployment of Kenyan police officers to assist Haitian police combat ruthless armed gangs sowing chaos in the country, has faced congressio­nal roadblocks despite pledging $300 million for the mission. To get around some of the resistance, Biden used a little known executive power known as Presidenti­al Drawdown Authority. The authority was establishe­d under the Foreign Assistance Act of 1961, and Biden has been using it to get around congressio­nal resistance to funding weapons for

Ukraine.

The equipment, which can come from the stockpiles of any U.S. government agency, and the training from the Defense Department will help get the Multinatio­nal Security Support mission off the ground.

The mission has been on hold since Henry, under pressure from Washington, announced his resignatio­n on March 11.

Kenya, which is supposed to deploy 1,000 of its police officers to serve as the backbone of the force, has said it would not deploy its officers to Haiti unless the funding was in place.

Both the United States and the United Nations, which establishe­d a trust fund for Haiti, have struggled to raise the money. A U.N. trust fund only has $10.8 million despite pledges of assistance from several nations. Top Republican­s in the House and Senate have expressed skepticism about the mission and refused to approve $40 million of the $100 million that the State Department has pledged. The Pentagon, which is supposed to be building a base in Haiti for the mission, has separately pledged $200 million.

Last month, Biden tapped the presidenti­al authority power to get $10 million in weapons and ammunition into the hands of the Haiti National Police. Under that authorizat­ion, the Armed Forces of Haiti, in a first, will receive bulletproo­f vests from the administra­tion.

Jacqueline Charles: 305-376-2616, @jacquiecha­rles

 ?? JOHNNY FILS-AIME Special for the Miami Herald ?? Nothing has been off-limits in the ongoing gang siege of Port-au-Prince: not hospitals, schools, police stations and not even rare books.
JOHNNY FILS-AIME Special for the Miami Herald Nothing has been off-limits in the ongoing gang siege of Port-au-Prince: not hospitals, schools, police stations and not even rare books.

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