Jump to navigation

Kenya

Judges sink Ruto's plan to send police to Haiti

A High Court ruling has said Kenya's National Police Force cannot be deployed to keep peace outside the country

The prospects for a United Nations-backed plan for Kenya to deploy 1,000 police officers to Haiti to combat armed gangs have receded after the High Court in Nairobi ruled that it would breach the national constitution (AC Vol 64 No 16, Kenyan cops vs Haitian gangs).

The result marks the latest in a series of legal defeats for President William Ruto, who had pushed forward the plan. It had been enthusiastically welcomed by Haiti, the United States, Canada and the wider international system.

President Ruto offered to deploy police officers to Haiti last July, following a request for support from the Haitian government (AC Vol 64 No 16). The UN Security Council then gave their green light for the mission on 10 October (Dispatches 15/11/23, Finance needed before UN police mission, say ministers).

But the plan was halted by an opposition petition challenging its constitutionality and, in his ruling on 26 January, Justice Enock Chacha Mwita said the constitution only allows members of the Kenya Army, Kenya Air Force and Kenya Navy to be deployed to keep the peace outside the country.

The National Police Service does not fall under the category of defence forces and 'therefore cannot be deployed to Haiti,' the judge said.

It is hard to see how the government can get around the court judgement and there is little enthusiasm for an overstretched army to be redeployed to Haiti.



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 the inter...


DISPATCHES

Finance needed before UN police mission, say ministers

Plans to deploy personnel to tackle gang violence in Haiti have been held up in the courts and by a lack of funding for training

The mission in which 1,000 Kenyan police officers would lead a UN multinational deployment in Haiti appear are being held up by disputes over funding and training, ministers in Nai...

READ FOR FREE

Counting on the counties

Hopes are high that however dangerous national politics may be, regional government will reduce ethnic and economic tension

Devolving power to Kenya's 47 counties was one of the main provisions of the 2010 constitution drafted in response to the post-election violence in 2007-08. Moderate government and...


Seriously, though

The horror of the bombings brought a political truce, but it's proving temporary

The threat of a national strike by 260,000 teachers on 5 October appears to mark the end of the political calm which descended after the bombing of the United States’ Embassy on 7 ...


The international Islamist

The row over the fate of Jamaican Islamist Abdullah al Faisal points to political and security failures in Africa and the West

On 15 January, some five people died in clashes between demonstrators and police in Nairobi after protests against the detention of Jamaican Islamist preacher Abdullah al Al Faisal...