The head of the United Nations Integrated Office in Haiti (BINUH), Maria Isabel Salvador, says the French-speaking Caribbean Community (Caricom) country is showing signs of progress on the political front despite serious setbacks in terms of security.
Haiti’s Prime Minister Alix Didier Fils-Aimé says the arrival of 218 Kenyan police and military personnel illustrates the determination of the government and the international community to eradicate armed gangs and restore peace and security in the French-speaking Caribbean Community (Caricom) country.
Despite several positive political developments in Haiti, a worsening security situation - compounded by organized crime - has resulted in death
Colombian President Gustavo Petro arrived in Haiti's southeastern city of Jacmel on Wednesday afternoon in a rare visit by a foreign head of state to the Caribbean nation, as Haiti endures an extended conflict with armed gangs.
Criminal gangs still control some 85 percent of the capital Port-au-Prince, the United Nations estimates ... eventually be deployed. The UN Security Council in September 2024 extended the ...
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Ruto: I'm happy Trump supports Haiti mission
President Wiliam Ruto has said that US President Donald Trump supports Kenya's mission in the Carribean country of Haiti. The President said he was happy that the new administration in America is happy with Kenya's work in Haiti.
Haiti is showing signs of progress on the political front despite serious setbacks in terms of security, the Special Representative and Head of the UN office in the country, BINUH, told the Security Council on Wednesday.
The president of Haiti’s transitional presidential council said the Trump administration’s decisions to freeze aid programs, deport migrants and block refugees will be “catastrophic”
Trump’s foreign aid freeze “undermines American leadership and credibility around the world,” lawmakers tell Secretary of State Marco Rubio.
Haiti’s gangs caused thousands of deaths and the displacement of over a million people in the past year, according to the UN, highlighting the extreme humanitarian consequences of their increasing control over the country.
The Haitian people must have the security and freedom to engage in daily activities without fear – whether it’s going to work, school, or a house of worship,” said Ambassador Shea.