Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire
  • omnibus

Kenyan High Court Blocks Parliamentary Authorization of Police Mission to Haiti
Peoples Dispatch
22 Nov 2023
Kenya Supreme Court Building
Kenya Supreme Court Building (Capital News)

Originally published in Peoples Dispatch.

The high court in Nairobi will issue a ruling on a legal challenge to the deployment of 1,000 Kenyan police forces to Haiti as part of a “multinational force.” The US and UN-backed mission has been condemned as yet another attempt to undermine the sovereignty of the Haitian people. 

A High Court in Nairobi has extended its orders blocking the deployment of Kenyan police officers to Haiti. The ruling was issued by Justice Chacha Mwita on November 16, shortly after the parliament approved a request by the government to authorize sending 1,000 officers to Port-au-Prince.

The Kenyan contingent is set to lead a US- and United Nations-backed “Multinational Security Support” (MSS) mission which will intervene in the Caribbean country to ostensibly “re-establish security in Haiti and build security conditions conducive to holding free and fair elections.”

The deployment has been vehemently rejected by the Haitian people, who have taken to the streets in mass protests against “foreign occupation.”

On October 2, the UN Security Council approved the US-drafted resolution for a year-long MSS mission to Haiti, whose mandate would include the protection of “critical infrastructure” and to provide “operational support” to the Haitian National Police, including through joint security operations. It is important to note, however, that this would not be a “non-UN force,” raising significant concerns surrounding accountability.

Kenya and Haiti established diplomatic ties in September, and Nairobi had also dispatched an “assessment mission” to Port-au-Prince in August, a visit criticized by civil society organizations both within Haiti and abroad.

On October 9, the High Court in Nairobi issued a “conservatory order” halt on the planned deployment until a legal challenge brought by the Thirdway Alliance party could be heard. The Party’s leader, Dr. Ekuru Aukot, has contested that the mission is in violation of Kenya’s constitution, and is not backed by any law or treaty.

The temporary orders were subsequently extended. Thursday’s vote in parliament was held despite the interdict being in place. On November 16, Justice Mwita announced that he would issue a ruling on the matter on January 26, 2024, effectively putting the deployment on hold.

“Despite there being a court order against deployment dated 25 October 2023 by Justice Enock Mwita, a belligerent and politically-expedient parliament… went ahead to approve what’s challenged in court as an illegality to deploy 1,000 police officers to Haiti. Kenya has no leadership but puppets of [the] USA, France, and Canada,” Aukot posted on X.

Meanwhile, the country’s Interior Minister, Kithure Kindiki, told parliament last week that the cost of implementing the mission, which for Kenya is estimated to stand at around USD 240 million, would be “borne through voluntary contributions by United Nations member states and organizations to a trust fund.”

Prior to the UN Security Council vote, the US had already pledged USD 100 million for the deployment.

Nairobi and Washington DC also signed a defense agreement in September, with Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin stating that the US was ready to provide “robust financial and logistical assistance” for the mission in Haiti.

Aside from Kenya, Senegal, Burundi, Chad, Belize, Jamaica, Antigua and Barbuda, Suriname, the Bahamas, Spain are among countries intending to contribute personnel, funds or equipment for the mission, as have, reportedly, Italy, Mongolia, Guatemala, and Peru.

Denouncing the fact that the Kenyan government was participating in the mission without consulting the citizenry, the country’s former Chief Justice, Willy Mutunga, wrote: “We refuse a foreign policy in our name that we have not consented to. We demand that Kenya should stop fighting proxy wars for imperialism… We must also demand that the UN and the US must respect our sovereignty and our Constitution.”

The Communist Party of Kenya (CPK) has steadfastly rejected the deployment of Kenyan forces to Haiti, warning that the government was “diminishing the sovereignty and self-determination of Haitian people, while preserving the neo-colonial interests of the United States, the Core Group [Germany, Brazil, the US, France, Canada, Spain, the European Union and the Organization of American States] and the United Nations”.

In a statement on November 14, the party also emphasized that the “crisis in Haiti is not merely a result of gang violence but a deliberate problem orchestrated by the imperialist core,” adding that Haiti’s historic revolution in the 19th century had “marked” it for “continued interference and retaliation by imperialist forces.”

US History in Haiti

The US— which is now pushing for a foreign intervention in the name of the Haitian people— itself has a long history of direct occupation and interference in Haiti. The US-backed coup against democratically-elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristride in 2004 also opened the door for a UN-led occupation of Haiti which would last about 15 years, marred by instances of abuse, violence, and a deadly disease outbreak.

The re-deployment of foreign forces is being readied at a time when Haiti has been facing a protracted political crisis, which escalated following the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse in 2021.

De facto Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who was swiftly recognized by western imperialist powers despite not being elected by the Haitian people, subsequently called for foreign intervention in 2022.

Having completely disregarded the self-determination of the Haitian people in charting their way out of the present crisis, the deployment of foreign forces is being seen as yet another attempt by the US and the Core Group to enforce its will upon Haiti, especially amid talks of holding long-delayed elections.

“The political objective of this [mission] is to try to have a kind of apparent calm to organize elections through the creation of a new provisional electoral council,” Henry Boisrolin, a member of the Haitian Democratic Committee, had told Barricada TV during an interview.

“We call them ‘selection elections,’ where they will impose someone who will sustain and reproduce the current power that is nothing more than a power in function of a neocolonial state,” he added.

Peoples Dispatch, formerly The Dawn News, is an international media project with the mission of bringing to you voices from people’s movements and organizations across the globe. Since its establishment three years ago, it has sought to ensure that the coverage of news from around the world is not restricted to the rhetoric of politicians and the fortunes of big companies but encompasses the richness and diversity of mobilizations from around the world.

Kenya
Haiti

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles. Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


Related Stories

Mildred Trouilot Aristide
Haiti And The Global Movement For Reparations
16 April 2025
Haiti Action Committee is honored to share the keynote address given by Haiti’s former First Lady Mildred Aristide
Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti
Remembering Mario Joseph, BAI Managing Attorney
09 April 2025
The world has lost a champion of justice with the passing of Mario Joseph, a Haitian human rights lawyer who spent nearly three decades fightin
Clau O'Brien Moscoso , Austin Cole
The Struggle for a Zone of Peace Continues!: A Conversation with Austin Cole
26 February 2025
The newly launched U.S./NATO Out of the Americas Network activates local grassroots organizations across the region in an effort to make this h
Kit Klarenberg
USAID Exported CIA Balkan Terror to Haiti
26 February 2025
/*-->*/ /*-->*/
Nato Koury
Guantánamo Bay’s forgotten history of detaining Haitian migrants
19 February 2025
The threats by the Trump administration to detain migrants in Guantanamo Bay will not be the first time the United States has used the facility
Jake Johnston
Where Does the Money Go? A Look at USAID Spending in Haiti
12 February 2025
The Trump administration is dismantling USAID, intending to absorb its mission into the State Department. USAID's engagement with Haiti demonst
Clau O'Brien Moscoso
Combatting Imperialism, Defending Sovereignty: Zone of Peace in Haiti and the Americas
22 January 2025
On Sunday, January 19th, 2025, the Haiti/Americas Team of the Black Alliance for
Travis Ross
How Aristide’s Lavalas Family Party Has Lurched to the Right
22 January 2025
Fanmi Lavalas has fallen far from its roots as a popular progressive movement and is now nothing more than a servant of imperialism.
Editors, The Black Agenda Review
INTERVIEW: The Problem of Haiti is the Same as Latin America: Gerard Pierre-Charles, 1983
15 January 2025
Despite selling out Haiti, former Haitian leftist Gerard Pierre-Charles’s 1
Business Ghana
Haiti, Africa, And the Unfinished Project Of Black Sovereignty
15 January 2025
In excerpts from a speech given in Accra, Ghana, BAR editor and contributor Dr.

More Stories


  • Black Alliance for Peace Africa Team
    Now is the Time for All Anti-Imperialists and All Justice Loving People to Stand Unequivocally in Defense of Burkina Faso
    07 May 2025
    The Black Alliance for Peace demands an end to U.S. and Western interference in Burkina Faso, the rejection of neocolonial policies in the Sahel, and a stance affirming Africans' rights to…
  • Maxwell Evans
    South Side Neighbors Want Housing Protections Before City OKs ‘Luxury’ Hotel Near Obama Center
    07 May 2025
    Community residents say that Chicago's City Council should pass a slate of housing protections centered on low-income renters instead of advancing plans for a hotel near the Obama Center site.
  • Allen Myers
    Vietnam: A Victory Never To Be Forgotten
    07 May 2025
    Vietnam’s defeat of U.S. forces stands as a landmark anti-colonial victory, proving that determined resistance can overcome even the world’s most powerful military—yet its legacy remains fiercely…
  • BAR Radio Logo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Black Agenda Radio May 2, 2025
    02 May 2025
    In this week’s segment, we hear about an upcoming conference dedicated to Black, radical organizers in the U.S. But first, we have an update on the Congo and the principles of agreement between Congo…
  • congo
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    The Congo and Trump's Mineral Deal
    02 May 2025
    The Democratic Republic of Congo and the Republic of Rwanda recently signed a Declaration of Principles in Washington. Is Rwanda ending its M23 group’s incursion into the DRC?
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us