
THE United States, aided by Panama, is urging the United Nations security council to authorise a 5,550-strong armed intervention into Haiti with the power to detain militia members, with the aim of stopping the escalating violence in the Caribbean nation, it was reported today.
The two countries say in a draft resolution to the UN security council that the new proposals aim to transform the Kenya-led multinational force now deployed in Haiti into a much larger force.
The first Kenyans arrived in Haiti in June 2024 and the force was supposed to have 2,500 troops, but it has been plagued by a lack of funding and its current strength is below 1,000.
Militias have grown in power since the assassination of president Jovenel Moise in 2021. They now control 90 per cent of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and have expanded their activities, including looting, kidnapping, sexual assaults and rape, into the countryside.
Haiti has not had a president since the assassination.
The six-page draft resolution expresses appreciation to Kenya for leading the multinational force but reaffirms secretary-general Antonio Guterres’s finding in February that it hasn’t been able to keep pace with the dramatic expansion of the gangs and needed to be scaled up.
Acting US ambassador Dorothy Shea had announced on August 28 that the US was seeking UN authorisation for a new “Gang Suppression Force.”
The draft resolution would authorise UN member nations to transition the mission into such a force in co-operation with Haiti’s government for an initial period of 12 months. The force would be given powers to detain and arrest Haitians.
The draft says that the force would consist of 5,500 uniformed personnel and 50 civilians who would be paid from voluntary contributions. But it does not specify whether Kenya or any other country would contribute troops or police.
The resolution would authorise participants in the new force to “conduct independent, intelligence-led targeted counter-gang operations to neutralise, isolate, and deter gangs that continue to threaten the civilian population, abuse human rights and undermine Haitian institutions.”
The new force would also provide security for critical infrastructure, including the airport and ports, schools and hospitals, along with the Haitian police and armed forces.
The proposed new force would support Haitian efforts “to combat illicit trafficking and diversion of arms and related material.”
The UN security council mandate for the Kenyan led military force ends on October 2. Council members are expected to vote on the US and Panama draft resolution at the end of September.