US to deliver 24 more armoured vehicles to Kenyan police in Haiti

US to deliver 24 more armoured  vehicles to Kenyan police in Haiti

A Kenyan police officer walks in front of an armoured personnel carrier during a joint operation with Haitian police, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, on July 29. File photo credit Reuters/Jean Feguens Regala.

 

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti--The US military said on Friday that it would deliver 24 additional armoured vehicles to Kenyan personnel deployed in Haiti, who are heading a long-delayed security operation in the conflict-ravaged Caribbean nation.

Some 400 Kenyan police, leading a UN-ratified security mission mandated to fight heavily armed gangs that have taken over most of the capital, recently deployed to Haiti.

The mission was first requested by Haiti's previous government in 2022, and of the handful of countries that have together pledged over 2,500 troops, the Kenyan contingent remains the only group to have arrived.

The US Southern Command, the Department of Defense's joint military command covering Latin America and the Caribbean known as SouthCom, said it would deliver the mine-resistant ambush protected (MRAP) MaxxPros to the capital's main airport via US Air Force C-17 cargo aircraft.

It said the deliveries would start from Friday, adding to an existing fleet of 10 US-provided MRAPs.

The aircraft will also deliver 34 Overhead Gunner Protection Kits, or "turrets", which military-funded contractors will install onto the armoured vehicles to boost their field view during joint operations with national police, it added.

Kenyan troops were forced to withdraw from the Haitian town of Ganthier late July, marking a major setback in one of the mission's first significant outings from the capital.

Citing a spokesperson for the Kenyan forces, the “Miami Herald” reported that the problem with the first MRAPs supplied by the Americans was that they did not have towers, preventing personnel from fighting or responding to attacks from inside.

Violence in Ganthier had by August 1 displaced nearly 6,000 residents, UN data showed.

Close to 600,000 people have been internally displaced by the conflict and hundreds of thousands of would-be migrants deported back to Haiti, where nearly five million people are suffering from severe hunger.

The mission's initial 12-month mandate is set to end in October.

The Daily Herald

Copyright © 2020 All copyrights on articles and/or content of The Caribbean Herald N.V. dba The Daily Herald are reserved.


Without permission of The Daily Herald no copyrighted content may be used by anyone.

Comodo SSL
mastercard.png
visa.png

Hosted by

SiteGround
© 2024 The Daily Herald. All Rights Reserved.