Jump to navigation

Kenya

No pay, no way

The Nairobi-led police peacekeeping force in Haiti faces more challenges, with reports of resignations over delayed wages and insufficient ammunition

The difficulties facing the Kenya-led police peacekeeping effort tackling gang warfare in Haiti continue to mount amid reports that around 20 of the 400 Kenyan police officers have tendered their resignation citing delays to wage payments.

None of the officers – which include several senior commanders – have left the mission but are understood to have tendered written resignations over the past two months. Officers have also complained of having insufficient ammunition after armed gangs in Haiti stepped up attacks on their positions.

Police chief Douglas Kanja has refuted the claims, saying that the reports of resignations are ‘malicious’. He says that officers have been paid up until the end of October.

During a visit to Haiti in October, President William Ruto promised to expand the deployment to 1,000 in the coming weeks. However, that promise was originally made last year and the first batch of 400 Kenyan police only arrived in Port-au-Prince in June (AC Vol 64 No 16, Kenyan cops vs Haitian gangs). The extra 600 men have not materialised, while cashflow for the mission has been a long-running problem.

In late November, the finance ministry in Nairobi confirmed that it had spent 2.1 billion shillings (US$15 million) on the mission so far, money that Treasury Secretary John Mbadi says the United States has promised to reimburse.

The UN aims for a total deployment of over 2,000 officers, but so far, only a handful from other countries have arrived. Ruto insists that ‘when resources are made available, there will be demonstrable progress of the mission,’ but has warned that without new funding the mission would run out of cash by March 2025 (Dispatches, 15/10/24, More cops will be sent but cash is needed).



Related Articles

Kenyan cops vs Haitian gangs

Kenya's offer to send 1,000 police to help train and assist the Haitian National Police in the Caribbean state's battle against criminal gangs has been warmly welcomed by...


DISPATCHES

More cops will be sent but cash is needed

Ruto has pledged additional officers for the UN-backed mission to Haiti while urging the international community to do more to fund the force

Despite President William Ruto’s promise that 600 additional police officers would be deployed to the peacekeeping effort tackling gang warfare in Haiti, the mission is set to run...

READ FOR FREE

An African 'war on terror'

The murder of an activist and the police reaction to a criminal conspiracy reveal another dark side of Kenyan politics

Oscar King'ara was murdered a day after he had pointed to a cabinet minister and the Kenyan police as being directly responsible for a two-year wave of extrajudicial...


Digging deeper into debt

Debt and spending have mushroomed, but vested interests will fight attempts to rein in the elite’s cash cows

The Treasury's recent successful flotation of a billion dollars in Eurobonds signals that Kenya is not about to wean itself off a dangerous addiction to expensive commercial credit....


How the fighting spread

A report shows how politicians, administrators and churchmen fostered the post-election slaughter and calls for their prosecution

The state-funded Kenya National Commission on Human Rights has produced a well researched but politically explosive report which links six government ministers to the violence that followed this...