Haitians hold their breath as newly arrived Kenyan police force prepares to face gangs

Haitians hold their breath as newly arrived Kenyan police force prepares to face gangs

Haitians hold their breath as newly arrived Kenyan police force prepares to face gangs

Anticipation is mingling with fear across Haiti as the country welcomes the fourth major foreign intervention in its history to fight gang violence

ByDÁNICA COTO Associated Press and EVENS SANON Associated Press

June 26, 2024, 2:20 PM

    PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti -- Anticipation is mingling with fear across Haiti as the country welcomes the fourth major foreign intervention in its history to fight gang violence choking the Caribbean country.

    A couple hundred police officers from Kenya met early Wednesday with Prime Minister Garry Conille as they prepare to deploy in upcoming days. No one except high-ranking officials knows their assignment, which officials have said is for security reasons.

    Expectations are high: Haitians are scared and tired of gangs that have pillaged their way through the capital of Port-au-Prince and surrounding areas, killing, raping and kidnapping thousands of people in recent years and leaving hundreds of thousands of others homeless and unemployed, which in turn has deepened poverty.

    “I’m asking the prime minister and the Kenyans to free Haiti from these gangs,” said Mathurin Jean François, a 30-year-old math teacher who has been unemployed for two years because gang violence forced his school to close. “Many people are suffering.”

    The first U.N.-backed contingent of foreign police arrived Monday. They will later be joined by police and soldiers from the Bahamas, Bangladesh, Barbados, Benin, Chad and Jamaica for a total of 2,500 personnel.

    “The Haitian strategy is to restore security house by house, neighborhood by neighborhood, town by town,” Conille said Wednesday as he met with Kenyan police.

    Whether that will happen remains to be seen. Gangs control 80% of Port-au-Prince, and they are better equipped than Haiti’s National Police, brandishing assault rifles and showing off ammunition on social media that includes .50 caliber bullets.

    On Feb. 29, gangs launched coordinated attacks that eventually led Prime Minister Ariel Henry to resign. They raided more than two dozen police stations, opened fire on the main international airport, forcing it to remain closed for nearly three months, and stormed Haiti’s two biggest prisons, releasing more than 4,000 inmates.

    The Kenyan-led mission in Haiti will have to prove it’s effective, said Sabrina Karim, an assistant professor of government at New York’s Cornell University who focuses on conflict and peace processes.

    “It’s a very tricky mandate that requires experience and strong local knowledge,” she said, noting that the Kenyans must gain the trust of Haitians already distrustful of a government long linked to corruption and gangs. “The accountability piece is really important. That ultimately decides whether the Haiti public is going to accept the mission or not.”

    Previous interventions have gone awry. The U.N.’s 2004-2017 peacekeeping mission was marred by allegations of sexual assault and the introduction of cholera, which killed nearly 10,000 people.

    “The track record isn’t great for the Kenyan police either,” Karim said in a phone interview. “All eyes are on the Kenyan police to demonstrate that they can do better.”

    Kenyan police have faced allegations of abuse for years, including extrajudicial killings. Most recently, they were accused of opening fire on protesters that stormed the parliament in the Kenyan capital on Tuesday.

    Nonprofit organizations who work in Haiti have said they’re concerned about the Kenyan-led mission, especially since the U.N. recently announced that between 30% to 50% of members of armed groups are now children.

    “The risk of child casualties is significant,” the U.S.-based nonprofit Save the Children said in a statement. “An increasing number of children in Haiti have been driven to join armed groups due to hunger and desperation. These children are victims of child rights violations, and must be treated as children, not as militias.”

    It noted that aid agencies have received “alarming reports” of armed groups using children and teenagers in confrontations with Haiti’s police.

    For now, Haitians are closely watching the Kenyans with mixed feelings.

    “There’s a breeze of hope in the air,” said Frantz Pradieu, a 39-year-old carpenter who was making a table, his first job in many months.

    “If the Kenyans work hard, maybe in a few months from now, the economy will turn around,” he said as sweat rolled down his face and bare chest while he worked. “A lot of people want to work. A lot of people lost their jobs. This has been a catastrophic situation for the last three years. Everybody is living in fear. People are being kidnapped. People are being raped. This needs to stop.”

    ___

    Coto reported from San Juan, Puerto Rico. Associated Press videographer Pierre Richard Luxama in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, contributed.

    OTHER NEWS

    28 minutes ago

    Taylor Swift Glastonbury update as fans 'eagerly await' surprise performance

    28 minutes ago

    Prop life chooses you, says Junior Bok captain Porthen

    28 minutes ago

    Colin Montgomerie admits he's 'quite depressed' by golf issue that's 'great for PGA Tour'

    28 minutes ago

    Gatwick Airport braces for disruption as 300 staff announce strike dates in July

    28 minutes ago

    Fact Check: About Biden's Claim that '158 or 159 Presidential Historians' Voted Trump Worst President in US History

    29 minutes ago

    John Deere CEO puts 80-acre horse farm up for sale

    32 minutes ago

    Wow! These amazing drone's-eye views of our world are up for best drone photo

    34 minutes ago

    The London neighbourhood where over a third of people don't bother voting because 'it's pointless'

    35 minutes ago

    HECS debt up to $100,000 waived, incentives offered for graduate GPs to come to Tasmania

    35 minutes ago

    It’s official, a silk headscarf is summer's new must-have accessory

    35 minutes ago

    Christian Horner hits back after Max Verstappen's dad reignites feud with Red Bull boss

    35 minutes ago

    Occupational therapist urges parents to allow children to grow at their own pace

    35 minutes ago

    Butter yellow athleisure is all I want to wear in this heat: 9 picks that prove it’s the it shade of the summer

    35 minutes ago

    Germany vs. Denmark prediction, live stream: Where to watch UEFA Euro 2024 round of 16 live online, TV, odds

    35 minutes ago

    The 10 best Wimbledon outfits of all-time and how to recreate them

    35 minutes ago

    Women's League Cup final - all you need to know

    35 minutes ago

    Rugby-Erasmus pleased with Springboks’ mindset ahead of Ireland tests

    35 minutes ago

    A split lip triggered Steph Hancock’s first comeback. Now she’s 42 and still can’t retire

    35 minutes ago

    This new threat infects devices with a dozen malware at once

    35 minutes ago

    National weather forecast for Saturday June 29

    35 minutes ago

    Heathrow claims security officer wore Palestinian badge ‘to show she speaks Arabic’

    35 minutes ago

    Billionaire-led corporations launch campaign to sway US Supreme Court in future-altering lawsuit: 'I have never, ever seen this kind of overt political campaign'

    35 minutes ago

    Tugendhat defends defence policies amid recruitment woes

    35 minutes ago

    Nigel Farage: Trump learned a lot from me

    35 minutes ago

    A carefree trip with your dog: things that you must know!

    35 minutes ago

    Health budgets, Lough Neagh and the soaring legal aid bill: Newton Emerson on the week that was

    35 minutes ago

    In the Eye of the Storm: Discover Ukrainian Modernism at London's Royal Academy of Arts

    39 minutes ago

    Service record row and Sunak’s D-Day blunder – but Johnny Mercer fights on for one last campaign

    39 minutes ago

    IDLES lead Glastonbury crowd in anti-King chart as pro-immigration Banksy work appears in crowd

    39 minutes ago

    This one-time fast-growth stock has become a dividend play — with benefits!

    39 minutes ago

    Mike Perry accuses Jake Paul of steroid use ahead of July boxing match

    39 minutes ago

    Nepal landslides kill nine, including 3 children

    39 minutes ago

    Why the new form of lung disease connected with kitchen revamps is so aggressive

    39 minutes ago

    Energy supplier OVO to explore options including sale

    39 minutes ago

    Wimbledon Day 1 order of play revealed: Carlos Alcaraz, Emma Raducanu, Coco Gauff headline action

    39 minutes ago

    M&S launches clothing repair service to give clothes 'another life'

    39 minutes ago

    Roy Keane went too far and 'crossed the line' mocking Man Utd player on Sky Sports

    39 minutes ago

    Eighties legend Cyndi Lauper reveals what she really thinks about Taylor Swift, Donald Trump and why she still just wants to have fun

    39 minutes ago

    My trip to the uninhabited Scottish island that's yours for £500,000! JANE FRYER visits a place to take your breath away, if you are hardy enough to make it there...

    39 minutes ago

    Would you give a crack addict mouth-to-mouth if you found him unconscious on your doorstep? I did, and I was convinced I was going to die, writes SACHIN KUREISHI