Under pressure to lead a force, PM Trudeau manoeuvred to dodge a potential quagmire
Evan Dyer · CBC News
It seems that the situation in Haiti is much more complex than how it appears on the outside. The suggestion to make the current head of state step down would probably make gangs stronger, whereas getting rid of gangs would require the collaboration of the government. Doing both at the same time could have unexpected results.
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But as the same Caribbean countries gather with the Trudeau government in Ottawa this month for a follow-up meeting, they’ve realized that Canada will not be leading the mission and won’t be sending any of its forces to help.
Never far from front-of-mind for President Joe Biden and his team was the desire to avoid a surge in Haitian migration that inevitably would lead to rafts off the Florida coast and migrant caravans at the Rio Grande.
The stalemate was made worse by the endless infighting among Haiti’s political elite, and by the obstinate refusal of de facto leader Ariel Henry to leave office.
MP Anthony Oluoch told the National Assembly that Kenya’s own security needs, which include defending itself from the al-Shabab terrorist group, “ought to take first precedence before any foreign commitments.”
Kenyan President William Ruto has pledged “not to fail the people of Haiti” — but he also took decisive action when his own foreign minister got out over his skis by promising the mission would begin “within a short time.”
And yet, Chalmers LaRose, Haitian-born co-director of the Observatoire des Amériques at the Université du Québec à Montréal, told the Senate committee the soldiers will have to come too.
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