
As Haiti’s national police struggled to regain control of Port-au-Prince last month after days of government paralysis following a violent anti-government protest, guards at a security checkpoint noticed a suspicious-looking White Nissan Patrol.
After searching the vehicle, police found an M4 rifle, four 9mm semi-automatic pistols including a Glock, a .380 caliber pistol and several magazines and rounds of ammunition. Among the vehicle’s five passengers were government employees and a known gang member, Johnny Metellus, who would later identify himself to police as vice delegate of Port-au-Prince, a position appointed by the president.
The men were immediately taken into custody. But even before the paperwork on their arrests could be filed with the courts, they were back on the streets, freed on the orders of an assistant government prosecutor after he personally showed up at the police station.
The prosecutor, Gérald Norgaisse, later defended his intervention on local radio. But Marie Yolene Gilles, the human-rights advocate who detailed the incident in a recent report — including Metellus’ past run-ins with Haiti National Police and U.N. peacekeepers — said the arrest and release underscore Haiti’s current precarious state. The United Nations, she said, is failing in its mission to reenforce justice and security, and the 15,735-member Haiti National Police force is being outgunned by heavily armed gangs and paramilitary units within its own ranks.
“They were here to reenforce justice, and the courts have been shut down for two months,” Gilles said, referring to a strike launched by the Port-au-Prince Bar Association. The Bar is demanding the recall of the Port-au-Prince public prosecutor and the arrest of the director of the Haiti National Police for the West region and other police officers, after they were accused of police brutality against the clerk of court and lawyers in October. “If the situation remains like this, we will end up worse than we were in 2004.”
That period, which brought a U.N. peacekeeping force to Haiti after the departure of then-President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, was marked by warring armed gangs and innocent bystanders caught in the crossfire. Two-thirds of Haiti’s police stations had either been burned or vandalized, and the force, once 6,500-strong, was less than 2,000.
“Back then it was primarily Cite Soleil and Bel-Air that were off limits. Today we have more no-go zones,” Gilles said naming several Port-au-Prince neighborhoods where today even the police can’t enter. ”If they want for the police to do their job, they have to encourage the police, because when the police arrests under one code and the courts release with another, you weaken the police and prevent them from doing their job.”
The concerns over the fragility of Haiti’s police force comes as the U.S. State Department last month warned American citizens to reconsider travel to Haiti and authorized non-essential diplomatic personnel and their families to leave. Amid the security concerns, the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti is preparing to reduce its presence even further, with the withdrawal this month of two police units. On Wednesday, the U.N. Security Council, which had set an Oct. 15, 2019, deadline for the mission to exit, will debate its future presence in Haiti.
In preparation for the discussions, U.N. Secretary General António Guterres earlier this month issued a report to the council on the situation in Haiti. He noted that inflation was at 14 percent in August, the domestic currency continues to depreciate against the U.S. dollar and calls intensify for a credible investigation into the use of funds from a Venezuela subsidized energy program, PetroCaribe. The campaign, which began on social media, has since evolved into a referendum on President Jovenel Moïse, as opposition groups call for his resignation while demanding an accounting of the funds.
Unlike human rights advocates and some politicians who have increasingly been expressing concerns about Haiti’s rising armed-gang problem, Gueterres sees the national police as a success story compared to all the other areas of governance.
The force has gone from 2,500 to nearly 16,000 officers in 14 years, and is present in all municipalities with 189 working police stations.
“At the end of the day the HNP has passed the test,” said Serge Therriault, police commissioner of the United Nations Mission for Justice Support. ”But there are some people who are somehow pushing the test too far in the sense that they don’t accept that it’s a professional police force that is able to do the work.”
Therriault said he recently watched videos of the police managing some of the recent protests and “whether it was in Les Cayes, or Cap-Haitien or Port-au-Prince, their application of the technique is what I had seen at the academy when we were training them in 2014, 2015.”
But it is not the national police’s ability to handle protests that has raised concern. It’s the fact that today, there are divisions within the national police, with some ignoring the orders of the chief and taking them directly from the palace. Officers are being burned alive and accused of staging killings in neighborhoods and controlling gangs, some of whom have exchanged gunfire with cops while themselves dressed as cops.
“They are destroying,” the national police, said former Police Chief Mario Andresol, who was tasked with rebuilding the force in 2004 after its was decimated by drug trafficking and politics.
Pierre Esperance, a human-rights advocate, agreed, saying that there is another element working inside the police, which does not fall under the control of its police chief but rather takes its orders from the executive branch. Continue reading