An agreement was reached between Nairobi and Port-au-Prince to send police officers to the gang-ridden island.

Kenya and Haiti signed an agreement on Friday March 1 to send Kenyan police officers as part of an international mission supported by the United Nations, according to a press release signed by Kenyan President William Ruto. 

The Kenyan head of state and Haitian Prime Minister Ariel Henry, traveling to Nairobi, "discussed the next steps to enable the acceleration of the deployment", according to the document, which does not specify whether this agreement is contrary to the decision of a Kenyan court having ruled "illegal", at the end of January, the planned sending of police officers.

The agreement signed on Friday provides for the “reciprocal” sending of police officers, without giving further details.

“I take this opportunity to reiterate Kenya’s commitment to contributing to the success of this multinational mission. We believe that this is a historic duty, because peace in Haiti is good for the world as a whole” , indicates President William Ruto in the text.

Faced with increasingly pressing calls from the Haitian government and the UN, Kenya agreed in July 2023 to lead this force of 2,500 to 2,600 men, hoped for "during the first quarter of 2024", according to the special representative. UN Deputy in Haiti.

The UN gave the green light in October to this force, also supported by the United States.

Four police officers killed Thursday in Port-au-Prince

The Kenyan Parliament validated the deployment, before it was blocked by a court decision at the end of January.

The government had announced its intention to appeal.

Opponent Ekuru Aukot, who had filed a complaint against this deployment, told AFP on Friday that he would file a complaint for "contempt of court".

Kenya must lead this multinational mission.

At the end of February, five countries, including Benin with more than 1,500 men, notified the UN of their participation in the future mission.

The other members of this mission are the Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados and Chad, said the spokesperson for the UN Secretary General, Stéphane Dujarric.

The situation on the ground is increasingly tense.

On Thursday, four police officers were killed and five were injured in exchanges of fire with gangs in the Haitian capital, Port-au-Prince.

Also read: In Haiti, “Port-au-Prince is like a city at war”

Heavy gunfire was heard in several neighborhoods in the Port-au-Prince area, as security forces attempted to repel the attackers who targeted police stations, the police academy and other strategic sites such as the airport. international Toussaint-Louverture.

Since the assassination in 2021 of President Jovenel Moïse, Haiti has faced a political, security and humanitarian crisis.

Armed gangs have taken control of swaths of the country and the number of homicides will more than double in 2023.

“Gang Domination”

In power since 2021, Ariel Henry should have left office at the beginning of February.

The situation in Haiti "continues to get worse day after day," Ariel Henry lamented Friday, during a discussion with students at a university in Nairobi, before thanking the Kenyan president for giving the island a " help".

The Haitian Prime Minister also said that elections would be organized "as soon as possible." 

At a Caribbean Community summit on Wednesday, Ariel Henry agreed to "share power" with the opposition in a deal to pave the way for elections within a year, according to Prime Minister of Antigua and Barbuda Gaston Browne.

Read alsoBy taking the lead of an international force in Haiti, Kenya “plays a card”

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres insisted Thursday on the importance of reaching a "political solution" in Haiti, where the arrival of an international force to help local police curb gang violence would not be enough. according to the UN chief.

“We need a security system that can put an end to the domination of gangs and the crime that is destroying the country,” he continued, deploring the lack of “international support (...) on the humanitarian and economic plan" in Haiti.

The month of January 2024 was “the most violent in more than two years” in Haiti, according to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, which deplores that the “already disastrous situation” has “further deteriorated, against a backdrop of relentless and increasing gang violence.”

The UN on Tuesday launched an appeal for donations of $674 million to help 3.6 million people in Haiti, a country facing one of the most serious food crises in the world.

With AFP

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