Jitters in violence-torn Haiti after Kenyan court blocks police force deployment
Radio stations across Haiti were flooded with calls just hours after a court in Kenya blocked the deployment of a United Nations (UN)-backed police force to help fight gangs in the troubled Caribbean country.
Many callers wondered and demanded: What’s next?
According to the Associated Press (AP), uncertainty and fear have been spreading since Friday’s ruling, with violence reaching new records as gangs tighten their grip on Haiti’s capital and beyond.
“Absent a robust external mission that would be deployed very soon, we are facing quite a tragic scenario in Haiti,” warned Diego Da Rin with the International Crisis Group, who was quoted in the AP report.
It is estimated that gangs control approximately 80 per cent of Haiti’s capital, and in recent weeks have attacked and seized power in previously peaceful communities, killing and injuring dozens, leading to widespread concerns that they will soon control all of Port-au-Prince.
“The number of people reported killed last year in Haiti more than doubled to nearly 4,500, and the number of reported kidnappings surged by more than 80 per cent to nearly 2,500 cases, according to the most recent UN statistics,” the report stated.
Meanwhile, Haiti’s National Police is losing officers at “an alarming rate,” while those still in service continue to be overwhelmed by gangs, according to a UN report released this week. More than 1,600 officers left the department last year, and another 48 were reported killed.
In addition, equipment sent by the international community to help bolster an underfunded police department has crumpled beneath heavy fights with gangs. Only 21 of 47 armoured vehicles were operational as of mid-November, with 19 “severely damaged during anti-gang operations or broken down,” according to the UN report. The remaining seven vehicles “are permanently disabled,” it stated.
“The situation has gone overboard. Enough is enough,” said a man who identified himself as Pastor Malory Laurent when he called Radio Caraibes to vent about Friday’s ruling. “Every day, you feel there is no hope.”
Kenya’s government said it would appeal the ruling. Still, it’s unclear how long that might take and whether other countries who pledged to send smaller forces to boost the multinational mission would consider going at it alone.
Among those who planned to send forces were the Bahamas, Jamaica, Belize, Burundi, Chad and Senegal.
But, Bahamian Prime Minister Philip Davis did not return messages for comment, nor did the office of Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness.
Hugh Todd, Guyana’s foreign minister, told The Associated Press that the trade bloc will likely meet soon to discuss the implications of the ruling as it awaits word from Jamaica.
Additionally, UN officials have not commented since the court ruling.
Edwin Paraison, a former Haitian diplomat and executive director of a foundation that seeks to strengthen ties between Haiti and the Dominican Republic, said he would be surprised if international leaders didn’t have a plan B.
However, he said the ruling would allow Haiti to implement its own solutions to gang violence, and that he believes it has enough resources to do so, the AP reported.