Kenyan police to be treated as invaders in Haiti; gang leader Jimmy Cherizier

Haiti gang boss warns foreign forces including Kenyan police intervention in the Caribbean nation will be treated as invaders
Haiti gang boss warns foreign forces including Kenyan police intervention in the Caribbean nation will be treated as invaders.
Powerful gang leader Jimmy Cherizier, known universally as ‘Barbecue’, has said if international troops or police move into the streets of Haiti he would consider them as aggressors.
Jimmy Cherizier predicted that more violence is imminent, adding that a recent halt in the fighting is purely a technical pause.
“There is nothing calm, but when you’re fighting you have to know when to advance and when to retreat,” he said.
“I think every day that passes we are coming up with a new strategy so we can advance, but there’s nothing calm.
“In the days that are coming things will get worse than they are now…” he told me sitting in an alleyway in his stronghold.
Meanwhile, Haiti’s raging gang insurrection has prompted growing concern in Kenya over plans to deploy hundreds of paramilitary police officers on a UN-backed multinational mission to counter the violence.
The mission, which was slated to begin in early 2024, has faced intense public and legal scrutiny in Kenya, especially since the country’s high court ruled against the deployment, arguing that a deployment would be unlawful for lack of a “reciprocal agreement” between the two countries.
Political parties in Haiti, overseen by CARICOM, the Caribbean Economic Union of countries, are trying to form a transitional council that will take over the running of the country after Prime Minister Ariel Henry, who is currently in the United States, stands down.
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Cherizier has said they ‘respect CARICOM a lot’ but dismissed the process as unrepresentative of the needs of the ordinary people and a smokescreen to allow “corrupt politicians” and what he calls “corrupt oligarchs” to continue running the country.
The only way the situation can move on, he insisted, is if the peace process includes him and his gang coalition.
“If the international community comes with a detailed plan where we can sit together and talk, but they do not impose on us what we should decide, I think that the weapons could be lowered,” he added.
“We don’t believe in killing people and massacring people, we believe in dialogue, we have weapons in our hand and it’s with the weapons that we must liberate this country.”
Haiti has been paralyzed by weeks of violence that has seen whole districts burnt to the ground, tens of thousands of people displaced from their homes, and murder, rape, and gun battles are a daily occurrence.
Port-au-Prince is 80% controlled by the gangs and normal life has virtually stopped.
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