Kenyan police deployed to Haiti to tackle gangs

Hundreds of Kenyan police officers departed for Haiti on Monday, where they will lead a multinational force against the powerful gangs whose deadly violence has surged this year, contributing to a change in government.

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The deployment is controversial. Kenyan President William Ruto’s government is defying a court ruling that deemed it unconstitutional. Critics are also concerned about the long history of alleged abuses by Kenyan police officers.

The 400 police officers are the first of the 1,000 Kenya expects to send for the United Nations-led force in Haiti. Although Ruto’s sendoff ceremony on Monday was closed to the media, his office shared a speech in which he urged the officers to uphold integrity.

“We have mediated many conflicts and are currently engaged in resolving more,” he said. “Don’t let down the confidence the people of Kenya and the international community have in you.”

A court case seeking to block the deployment is pending, but an initial ruling had called the deployment unconstitutional, citing the lack of a reciprocal agreement between Kenya and Haiti.

U.S. President Joe Biden, however, thanked Ruto for Kenya’s leadership of the multinational force during Ruto’s recent state visit to Washington. The United States has agreed to contribute $300 million to the force, but Biden argued that an American troop presence in Haiti would raise “all kinds of questions that can easily be misrepresented.”

Gang violence spikes in Haiti

More than 2,500 people were killed or injured in the first three months of the year in Haiti. The spike in violence began in late February and has displaced more than half a million people. Gangs now control at least 80% of the capital, Port-au-Prince, and key roads. Trapped outside the country as the international airport was closed, Prime Minister Ariel Henry was forced to resign.

The most recent allegations against Kenyan police for using excessive force came last week when two people died during anti-government protests. One protester was shot dead by a suspected plainclothes officer. The other was killed by a tear gas canister thrown by police.

Kenya’s Independent Policing Oversight Authority is investigating police conduct during the protests, in which more than 200 other people were injured.

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Read: Escalating crisis in Haiti drives mass displacement

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