UN REPLACES HAITIAN PEACEKEEPING MISSION WITH SMALLER POLICE PRESENCE
The United
Nations on Monday replaced its peacekeeping mission in Haiti with a smaller
police presence which is expected to be drawn down after two years as the
country boosts its own force.
The new mission
is known as the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH)
and is aimed at focusing on justice, human rights and police development.
The UN on Monday
called the transition to MINUJUSTH a “turning point” for Haiti and said “the
United States believes the transition from MINUSTAH to MINUJUSTH can serve as a
model for how UN peacekeeping missions should adapt as a country’s needs change
and its political situation evolves,”
“MINUJUSTH is
composed of seven police units for a total of 980, whose work it will be to
maintain order in the country. Three of these unites will be in the
Port-au-Prince region and four others in the provinces,” said Special
representative of the United Nations Mission for justice in Haiti, Mamadou
Diallo.
The peacekeeping
mission known as MINUSTAH, one of the longest-running in the world, was dogged
by controversies, including the introduction of cholera to the island nation
and sexual abuse claims.
“After 13 years
of MINUSTAH presence, stability exists only name. It is a fai lure by MINUSTAH.
This mission arrived in the country at a time of crisis. It was to calm the
game. Maybe it has done it. But speaking of stability, the country isn’t
stable,” said General Cordinator for the Haitian Observatory of Human Rights,
Joinet Merzius.
President
Jovenel Moise had earlier in the year said Haiti’s police force now stands at
15,000 officers, including rapid response personnel, up from 2,000 in 2004 when
the U.N. mission arrived.
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