US steps up campaign to transform Kenya-led force in Haiti to a UN peacekeeping force
UNB
Publish: 16 Nov 2024, 02:57 PM
UNITED
NATIONS, Nov 16 (AP/UNB) - The United States has stepped up its campaign to
transform the Kenya-led multinational force in Haiti into a U.N. peacekeeping
force, spurred by escalating gang violence that shut all air traffic to the
capital of Port-au-Prince this week.
The U.S. proposed a U.N.
peacekeeping mission in early September as one way to secure regular funding
for the U.N.-backed multinational force that is trying to help Haiti's national
force control the gangs which faces a serious funding crisis.
Since then, the gangs
have intensified their attacks, with violence exploding last Sunday in the
capital when Haiti's transitional council created to restore democratic order
fired the interim prime minister amid political infighting. The gangs, now
estimated by the U,N, to control 85% of the capital, shut down the country's
main airport there on Monday after shooting a number of planes, wounding one
flight attendant.
The United States tried
to get all 15 members of the U.N. Security Council to sign off on a draft
resolution this week that would start the wheels rolling to transform the
Kenya-led force. It asks U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres "to
undertake expeditiously contingency preparations and planning" tor a
transformation, which would take many months to accomplish.
The U.S. set a deadline
Thursday for objections to the draft resolution, and two diplomats said Russia
and China, which have publicly raised concerns about moving to a U.N. force,
refused to give a green light.
Russia said it wanted an
open Security Council briefing from the U.N. Secretariat followed by closed
council consultations on the latest situation in Haiti -- and that has been
scheduled for Wednesday afternoon, the diplomats said, speaking on condition of
anonymity because contacts have been private.
The force was supposed
to have 2,500 international police but the head of the U.N.'s political mission
in Haiti, Maria Isabel Salvador, told the council late last month that just around
430 are deployed -- some 400 from Kenya and the rest from the Bahamas, Belize
and Jamaica.
Last month, Kenya's
President William Ruto said another 600-strong contingent would be sent to
Haiti in November.
Salvador said the U.N.
trust fund that finances the multinational force and relies on voluntary
contributions, "remains critically under-resourced, which could impact
deployment and impede it from carrying out its tasks in support of the Haitian
National Police."
The U.N. said Friday
that the trust fund has received $85.3 million of the $96.8 million pledged.
The United States agreed to contribute $300 million to the multinational force.
But that's still far
below the $600 million cost to deploy a 2,500-strong force for a year,
according to the Security Council. And whether President-elect Donald Trump's
incoming administration would continue voluntary funding for a multinational
force remains in question.
The power of gangs in
Haiti has grown since the 2021 assassination of President Jovenel Moise. The
surge in killings, rapes and kidnappings has led to a violent uprising by
civilian vigilante groups.
Haiti's leaders have
asked for a U.N. peacekeeping force, and the U.S. draft resolution notes that
the permanent council of the Organization of American States adopted a
resolution on Nov. 13 entitled "In Support of Haiti's Request for a United
States Peacekeeping Operation."
The arrival of the first
Kenyans in June marked the fourth major foreign military intervention in Haiti.
While some Haitians
welcomed them, others view the multinational force and the possibility of a new
U.N. peacekeeping force with extreme caution.
Since the early 1900s,
there have been at least three major foreign military interventions in Haiti
led by the United States and the United Nations.
The most recent U.N.
peacekeeping mission from 2004-2017 was marred by allegations of sexual assault
and the introduction of cholera, which killed nearly 10,000 people.
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