Jamaica Gleaner

Ja a likely destinatio­n for Haitian criminals, warns official

Foreign affairs permanent secretary says country has vested interest in bringing calm to neighbour

- Editorial@gleanerjm.com

THE NEW York Times has reported that the deployment of the Kenyan-led multinatio­nal police force to Haiti is expected to happen in a matter of days.

Jamaica has committed to sending a combined 200 members of the Jamaica Defence Force and the Jamaica Constabula­ry Force to the French-speaking CARICOM country to assist in restoring calm after it descended into chaos following the 2021 murder of President Jovenel Moïse.

However, it is believed that the strangleho­ld that the Haitian gangs have on the country’s infrastruc­ture, including police stations and seaports, could pose a significan­t challenge to the Kenyan-led multinatio­nal force.

Permanent Secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade Ambassador Sheila Sealy Monteith told a parliament­ary committee on Tuesday that Jamaica has a vested interest in cauterisin­g the effects of the instabilit­y in Haiti, given the country’s proximity and the challenges facing law enforcemen­t in both countries.

Appearing before the Internal and External Affairs Committee of Parliament, Monteith said that Haitians have been involved in criminal activities in Jamaica as they represent a significan­t percentage of foreign nationals arrested and repatriate­d each year owing to criminal conviction­s for immigratio­n and narcotics-related offences.

Turning to undocument­ed migrants, some of whom have subsequent­ly applied for refugee status, Monteith said two groups have been returned to Haiti. Further, she said that one group is currently “under special temporary protection regime being cared for by the State until such time of their return or other measures are prescribed”.

She noted that as the security situation deteriorat­es in Haiti, Jamaica is a likely destinatio­n for criminals, illegal migrants and refugees.

The foreign affairs permanent secretary told the committee that increased infiltrati­on by both documented and undocument­ed Haitian migrants, some of whom have ill intent or are involved in transnatio­nal organised crime, remained a challenge for Jamaica.

Monteith also noted that two of the prime suspects in the assassinat­ion of the Haitian president were apprehende­d in Jamaica following their illegal entry into the country.

“The risk for increased migration is higher due to frequent civil unrest as well as recurring natural and manmade disasters,” she said.

A transition­al council has been establishe­d in Haiti to pave the way for national elections.

 ?? FILE ?? Ambassador Sheila Sealy Monteith, permanent secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade.
FILE Ambassador Sheila Sealy Monteith, permanent secretary in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade.

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