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United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti

The United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti (French: Mission des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation en Haïti), also known as MINUSTAH, an acronym of the French name, was a UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti that was in operation from 2004 to 2017. The mission's military component was led by the Brazilian Army and commanded by a Brazilian. The force was composed of 2,366 military personnel and 2,533 police, supported by international civilian personnel, a local civilian staff and United Nations Volunteers.[1]

United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti
Brazilian soldiers patrol the camp Jean Marie Vincent in Port-au-Prince, Haiti
AbbreviationMINUSTAH (French: Mission des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation en Haïti)
Formation1 June 2004
Dissolved13 April 2017
TypePeacekeeping mission
Legal statusReplaced by MINUJUSTH
Head
Sandra Honoré (Special Representative of the Secretary-General)
Parent organization
UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations, United Nations Security Council
WebsiteUN Peacekeeping: MINUSTAH, www.minustah.org (in French)

The 2010 Haiti earthquake caused the collapse of the mission's headquarters in Port-au-Prince and killed the mission's chief, Hédi Annabi of Tunisia, his deputy Luiz Carlos da Costa of Brazil, and the acting police commissioner, RCMP Supt. Doug Coates of Canada.[2][3][4] On 14 January 2010, UN headquarters dispatched the former head of MINUSTAH and current Assistant Secretary-General for Peacekeeping Operations, Edmond Mulet, as the organisation's Acting Special Representative of the Secretary-General and interim head of MINUSTAH.[5] Following the earthquake, MINUSTAH concentrated on assisting the Haitian National Police in providing security within the country, while American and Canadian military forces distributed humanitarian aid and provided security for aid distribution.[6]

Due to fears of instability,[7] United Nations Security Council Resolution 1944 extended MINUSTAH's mandate,[8] and it was periodically renewed until 2017.[9]

On 13 April 2017, the United Nations Security Council announced that the mission would end in October 2017.[10] It was replaced by a much smaller follow-up mission, the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH),[11] which itself concluded in 2019.

Background edit

According to its mandate from the UN Security Council, MINUSTAH was required to concentrate the use of its resources, including civilian police, on increasing security and protection during the electoral period and to assist with the restoration and maintenance of the rule of law, public safety and public order in Haiti.[12] MINUSTAH was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1542 on 30 April 2004 because the Security Council deemed the situation in Haiti to be a threat to international peace and security in the region.[13] In 2004, UN peacekeepers entered Cité Soleil in an attempt to gain control of the area and end the anarchy.[14]

 
U.S. Marines patrol the streets of Port-au-Prince in March 2004.
 
Brazilian MINUSTAH soldier with a Haitian girl in February 2005
 
Brazilian soldier stands security in Port-au-Prince

In 2004, independent human rights organizations accused the Haitian National Police (HNP) and sometimes MINUSTAH of atrocities against civilians.[15][16][17] It is still argued if any, or how many civilians were killed as a by-product of MINUSTAH crackdowns on criminals operating from slums. The UN and MINUSTAH expressed deep regret for any loss of life during operations.[18][19]

In early 2005, MINUSTAH force commander Lieutenant-General Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira testified at a congressional commission in Brazil that "we are under extreme pressure from the international community to use violence", citing Canada, France, and the United States.[20] Having ended his tour of duty, on 1 September 2005, Heleno was replaced by General Urano Teixeira da Matta Bacellar as force commander of MINUSTAH. On 7 January 2006, Bacellar was found dead in his hotel room.[21] The death was considered to be suicide, however later some suspicion of assassination arose.[22] His interim replacement was Chilean General Eduardo Aldunate Hermann.

On 17 January 2006, it was announced that Brazilian General José Elito Carvalho Siqueira would be the permanent replacement for Bacellar as the head of the United Nations' Haiti force.[23]

On 14 February 2006, in its Resolution 1658, the United Nations Security Council extended MINUSTAH's mandate until 15 August 2006.[24]

MINUSTAH is also a precedent as the first mission in the region to be led by the Brazilian and Chilean military, and almost entirely composed of, Latin American forces, particularly from Brazil, Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Ecuador and Uruguay.[25] From 1 September 2007 until his death following the earthquake on 12 January 2010, the mission was led by Tunisian Hédi Annabi.[26]

India provided three units of around 500 police personnel for MINUSTAH. The Indian contingent joined the mission in October 2008, and were stationed in Port-au-Prince and Hinche. They were tasked with maintaining law and order, setting up and operating checkpoints, and anti-crime operations.[27] Two Indian police units will remain in Haiti after MINUSTAH ends on 15 October 2017, to serve in the successor mission, the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH).[28]

United Nations reports and resolutions edit

On 23 February 2004, the United Nations Security Council was convened at the request of CARICOM for the first time in four years to address the deteriorating situation in Haiti.[29]

 
Brazilian Army snipers are positioned to defend UN base during combat with gangs in the Haitian capital Port-au-Prince in 2011.

On 29 February 2004, the Security Council passed a resolution "taking note of the resignation of Jean-Bertrand Aristide as President of Haiti and the swearing-in of President Boniface Alexandre as the acting President of Haiti in accordance with the Constitution of Haiti" and authorized the immediate deployment of a Multinational Interim Force.[30]

On 30 April 2004, MINUSTAH was established and given its mandate with a military component of up to 6,700 troops.[31]

In July, the General Assembly authorized the financing of the mission with US$200 million[32] which followed a donors' conference in Washington DC.[33]

The first progress report from MINUSTAH was released at the end of August.[34]

In September the interim president of Haiti, Boniface Alexandre, spoke to the United Nations General Assembly in support of MINUSTAH.[35]

In November there was a second report,[36] and the Security Council mandate for MINUSTAH.[37]

The mandate has most recently been extended by the Security Council until October 2010 "with the intention of further renewal".[38]

Status and history edit

 
Brazilian Army U.N. peacekeeper.
 
UN headquarters, UNDP compound, UNICEF offices, in relation to the city of Port-au-Prince

Although the United Nations Stabilization Mission (MINUSTAH) has been in Haiti since 2004, as of 2007, it continued to struggle for control over the armed gangs. It maintains an armed checkpoint at the entrance to the shanty town of Cité Soleil and the road is blocked with armed vehicles.[39] In January 2006, two Jordanian peacekeepers were killed in Cité Soleil.[40] In October 2006, a heavily armed group of the Haitian National Police were able to enter Cité Soleil for the first time in three years and were able to remain one hour as armoured UN troops patrolled the area. Since this is where the armed gangs take their kidnap victims, the police's ability to penetrate the area even for such a short time was seen as a sign of progress.[41] The situation of continuing violence is similar in Port-au-Prince. Ex-soldiers, supporters of the ex-president, occupied the home of ex-president Jean-Bertrand Aristide against the wishes of the Haitian government.[42] Before Christmas 2006, the UN force announced that it would take a tougher stance against gang members in Port-au-Prince. However, since then, the atmosphere there has not improved and the armed roadblocks and barbed wire barricades have not been moved. After four people were killed and another six injured in a UN operation exchange of fire with criminals in Cité Soleil in late January 2007, the United States announced that it would contribute $20 million to create jobs in Cité Soleil.[43][44]

In early February 2007, 700 UN troops flooded Cité Soleil, which led to a major gun battle. Although the troops make regular forcible entries into the area, a spokesperson said this one was the largest attempted so far by the UN troops.[45] On 28 July 2007, Edmond Mulet, the UN Special Representative in Haiti and MINUSTAH Mission Chief, warned of a sharp increase in lynchings and other mob attacks in Haiti. He said MINUSTAH, which now has 9,000 troops there, will launch a campaign to remind people that lynchings are a crime.[46]

On 2 August 2007, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon arrived in Haiti to assess the role of the UN forces, announcing that he would visit Cité Soleil during his visit. He said that it was Haiti's largest slum and, as such, was the most important target for U.N. peacekeepers in gaining control over the armed gangs. During his visit, he announced an extension of the mandate of the UN forces in Haiti.[47] It took MINUSTAH three months and 800 arrests to deal with the gangs and decrease the number of kidnappings on the streets.[48]

President René Préval has expressed ambivalent feelings about the UN security presence, stating that "if the Haitian people were asked if they wanted the UN forces to leave they would say yes."[49] Survivors frequently blame the UN peacekeepers for deaths of relatives.[50]

In April 2008, Haiti was facing a severe food crisis as well as governmental destabilization to Parliament's failure to ratify the president's choice of a prime minister. There were severe riots, so the UN force fired rubber bullets in Port-au-Prince and the riot calmed.[51] The head of MINUSTAH called for a new government to be chosen as soon as possible. Meanwhile, the UN provided emergency food.[52] Haiti was hit by four consecutive hurricanes between August and September 2008. These storms crippled coastal regions, requiring humanitarian aid for 800,000 people.[53]

Critics of MINUSTAH's goal of providing security say that the provision of increased police presence is coming with the unfortunate consequence of neglecting the vast socioeconomic problems in the area, the lack of effort in addressing infrastructure improvement, the joblessness, and the pervasive poverty. In 2009, with the appointment of former U.S. President Bill Clinton as the UN Special Envoy, there is hope that the international donor community will provide increased aid. MINUSTAH renewed its commitment to Haiti, and $3 billion for projects has been pledged by the international community, mainly for rebuilding after the hurricanes. However, in Cité Soleil, there are signs of a desire for political independence that the international community would rather ignore.[48]

In October 2010, nine months after the earthquake, the UN extended MINUSTAH's mission. In the capital, there were protests from those who want the MINUSTAH to leave. Demonstrators chanted "Down with the occupation" and burned the flag of Brazil, as representative of the largest contingent of MINUSTAH.[54]

2010 earthquake edit

 
The collapsed headquarters after the 2010 earthquake.

On 12 January 2010, the United Nations reported that headquarters of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH), the Christopher Hotel in Port-au-Prince, collapsed, and several other UN facilities were damaged; a large number of UN personnel were unaccounted for in the aftermath of a major earthquake.[55] The Mission's Chief, Hédi Annabi, was reported dead on 13 January by President René Préval and French news sources, and on 16 January, the United Nations confirmed the death after his body was recovered by a search and rescue team from China.[56] Principal Deputy Special Representative Luiz Carlos da Costa was also confirmed dead, as well as the Acting Police Commissioner, Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Superintendent Doug Coates, who were meeting with eight Chinese nationals—four peacekeepers and a delegation of four police officers from China—when the earthquake struck.[57] The Chinese search and rescue team recovered the bodies of the ten individuals on 16 January 2010. Jens Kristensen, senior humanitarian officer for the UN, was rescued by a team from the state of Virginia after five days trapped in the rubble.[58]

Mission composition edit

 
Map of MINUSTAH deployment in December 2006
 
Nepalese members of MINUSTAH secure an airdrop of aid supplies in Mirebalais in January 2010
 
Brazilian military in helping the victims after the earthquake, 12 January 2010.

Heads of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti edit

Force commanders of the MINUSTAH military component edit

Countries contributing military personnel (7,208 in all)[69][70] edit

Countries contributing police and/or civilian personnel (2,038 in all) edit

Cholera controversy edit

 
U.S. Marine Corps Cpl. Matt Kirkland and a United Nations peacekeeper from Sri Lanka Army provide security for Haitian women receiving bags of rice for their families at a food distribution point in the city of Carrefour

In October 2010, a cholera outbreak was confirmed in Haiti—the first in the country's modern history. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as of 4 August 2013, over 800,000 cases and 9,600 deaths had been reported since the outbreak first began in October 2010.[73] MINUSTAH was linked with introducing the disease to the country by sources such as the CDC, the American Society for Microbiology, Yale Law School and the School of Public Health.[74] The cause of the disease was attributed to faulty construction of UN sanitation systems in its base located in the town of Méyè.[75] Many reports from Méyè stated that people had seen sewage spilling from the UN base into the Artibonite River, the largest river in Haiti, and which is used by residents for drinking, cooking, and bathing.[76]

In December 2010, a study traced the Haitian cholera strain to South Asia. The UN conducted an independent investigation into the origin of the epidemic at the end of 2010. A panel of independent UN experts was assembled and their collective findings were compiled in a report. The panel determined that the evidence implicating the Nepalese troops was inconclusive. Though they admitted that the cholera strain was most likely from Nepal, it cited a confluence of factors that also contributed to the outbreak and that no one "deliberate action of, a group or individual was to blame".[77] However, in 2013, the committee changed its statement concluding that the UN troops from Nepal "most likely" were the cause of the outbreak.[78]

The Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI), a Haitian coalition of lawyers, and the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti (IJDH), its U.S. affiliate, filed claims with MINUSTAH on behalf of 5,000 Haitian petitioners in November 2011. The claims asked for the installation of the water and sanitation infrastructure necessary to control the epidemic, compensation for the victims, and an apology.[79] Fifteen months later, in February 2013, the UN stated that the case was "not receivable," because it involved "review of policy matters", citing the Convention on Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations.[80] In October 2013, BAI, IJDH, and another U.S. law firm filed a lawsuit challenging UN immunity in U.S. federal court on behalf of Haitian and Haitian-American victims of the cholera epidemic.[81] In January 2015, Judge J. Paul Oetken of the U.S. District Court in Manhattan dismissed the lawsuit, affirming UN immunity.[82] In May 2015, an appeal to Oetken's decision was filed.[83]

In February 2013, the Haitian government created its National Plan for the Elimination of Cholera, a 10-year plan set to eradicate the disease. Two of the ten years will be devoted as a short-term response to the epidemic. The last eight will be to completely eliminate the disease. The projected budget for the plan is $2 billion.[84] To support the initiative, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon pledged $23.5 million to combat cholera. However, following the pledge, there was much discontent with the UN's progress. 19 members of the U.S. Congress urged the UN to take responsibility for cholera in Haiti. In two separate occasions, members of the US Congress sent a letter to the US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, urging her and the organization to ensure that the cholera initiative was fully funded and implemented quickly.[85] Nineteen US Representatives also wrote to Ban Ki-Moon to express concerns about the seeming lack of progress in the UN's cholera response.[86] Ban Ki-moon told members of the US Congress that the UN was committed in helping Haiti overcome the epidemic though no financial compensation to the victims would be granted.[87] Since 2010, the UN has spent and/or committed more than $140 million to the epidemic.

On 9 May 2013, the Haitian Senate unanimously voted—save for one abstention—on a policy that would demand the UN to compensate the nation's cholera victims. The Senators also proposed to form "a commission of experts in international and penal law to study what legal means, both nationally and internationally, could be used to prove MINUSTAH's responsibility for starting the cholera outbreak."[88]

Legacy edit

In August 2016, a report written by UN special rapporteur Philip Alston was leaked to the New York Times. Alston issued a scathing condemnation of the UN's legal approach to cholera in Haiti, which he termed "morally unconscionable, legally indefensible and politically self-defeating." Alston also lamented that the UN's approach "upholds a double standard according to which the U.N. insists that member states respect human rights, while rejecting any such responsibility for itself."[89]

Four months later, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon issued an apology for the UN's role in the cholera outbreak and stressed the organization's "moral responsibility" to fight the disease.[90] Though the apology stopped short of admitting fault for introducing the disease to Haiti, many victim advocates saw it as a major milestone. Ban also launched "a new approach" to cholera by the UN, in the form of a two-track plan. The UN would raise $400 million in voluntary contributions from member states, with $200 million dedicated to providing material assistance to communities most affected by cholera, and another $200 million going to fight the disease.[91] However, the plan gained little traction among member states. Because remaining funds allocated to MINUSTAH were not required to be repurposed for cholera reparations, many member states took back their contributions, and by July 2017 just $9.22 million had been raised.[92]

Criticism edit

From the beginning, MINUSTAH has been squeezed between traditional conservative sectors—which demanded more action—and the leftist parties, mainly linked to ousted President Aristide, which criticize its actions and constantly appeal for its departure.[citation needed]

Political overtones edit

Even though mostly composed by military forces—the recruitment of large numbers of foreign police officers has proven difficult—the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti is a police mission of the United Nations dispatched to a country facing uncontained violence stemming from political unrest and from common criminals.[93] Partidaries of former President Jean-Bertrand Aristide have characterized MINUSTAH as an attempt by the United States, Canada and France to neutralize the supporters of Fanmi Lavalas, Aristide's party.[94] and secure the more pro-Western government of Gérard Latortue. The mission was mandated to assist and reinforce the action of the Haitian Police in Port-au-Prince's slums.[95]

6 July 2005 incident edit

On 6 July 2005, MINUSTAH, led by Brazilian general Augusto Heleno[96] carried out a raid in the Cité Soleil section of Port-au-Prince.[97] The raid targeted a base of illegally armed rebels led by the known bandit Dread Wilme. Reports from pro-Lavalas sources, as well as journalist Kevin Pina, contend that the raid targeted civilians and was an attempt to destroy the popular support for Haiti's exiled former leader, Aristide, before scheduled upcoming elections.

Estimates on the number of fatalities range from five to as high as 80, with the higher numbers being claimed by those reporting that the raid targeted civilians. All sources agree that no MINUSTAH personnel were killed. All sources also agree that Dread Wilme (born "Emmanuel Wilmer") was killed in the raid. MINUSTAH spokespeople called Wilme a "gangster." Other sources, such as the pro-Aristide Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network call Wilme a community leader and a martyr.[98]

The incident has been since heralded by groups who oppose the MINUSTAH presence in Haiti and who support the return of ousted President Aristide.[39] MINUSTAH has also been accused by Fanmi Lavalas supporters of allowing the Haitian National Police to commit atrocities and massacres against Lavalas supporters and Haitian citizens.

On 6 January 2006, UN mission head Juan Gabriel Valdés announced that MINUSTAH forces would undertake another action on Cité Soleil. On one side, traditional Haitian sectors criticized MINUSTAH for "standing by and not stopping the violence taking place in slums like Cité Soelil"; on the other hand, human rights groups were prepared to condemn MINUSTAH for any collateral damage deriving from their actions. It was reported that Valdés said, "We are going to intervene in the coming days. I think there'll be collateral damage but we have to impose our force, there is no other way."[99]

Rape scandal edit

MINUSTAH soldiers have been accused of being involved in a number of sexual assault cases. In 2011, four Uruguayan UN marines were accused of gang raping a 19-year-old Haitian male in Port-Salut. It was said the alleged rape was recorded with a cell phone by the peacekeepers themselves and leaked to the Internet.[100] The teenager and his family were forced to relocate their house after the video went viral.[101] In March 2012, three Pakistani MINUSTAH officers were found guilty of raping a mentally challenged 14-year-old boy in the town of Gonaïves. Pakistani officials sentenced each officer to one year in a Pakistan prison.[102]

In November 2007, 114[103] members of the 950-member Sri Lanka peacekeeping contingent in Haiti were accused of sexual misconduct and abuse.[104][105] 108 members, including 3 officers were sent back after being implicated in alleged misconduct and sexual abuse.[106] UN spokeswoman Michele Montas said: "The United Nations and the Sri Lankan government deeply regret any sexual exploitation and abuse that has occurred."[105] The Sri Lankan Officials claim that there is little tangible evidence on this case.[103] After inquiry into the case the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) has concluded 'acts of sexual exploitation and abuse (against children) were frequent and occurred usually at night, and at virtually every location where the contingent personnel were deployed.' The OIOS is assisting in the pending legal proceedings initiated by the Sri Lankan Government and has said charges should include statutory rape "because it involves children under 18 years of age".[107] In 2015, a new investigation was released, accusing MINUSTAH peacekeepers of abusing further hundreds of Haitians.[108]

Human rights cases edit

In 2010, Gérard Jean-Gilles, a 16-year-old Haitian boy who ran miscellaneous errands for the Nepalese soldiers in Cap-Haitien, was found dead hanging inside of MINUSTAH's Formed Police Unit base. UN personnel denied responsibility, claiming that the teen committed suicide. The troops released the body for autopsy seventy-two hours after the death; the examination ruled out suicide as a potential cause of death.[109] Nepalese UN troops were also accused for other misdeeds. Several days before the Jean-Gilles incident, the local press charged a Nepalese soldier of torturing a minor in a public area in Cap-Haitien. The soldier was said to have forced "his hands into the youth's mouth in an attempt to separate his lower jaw from his upper jaw, tearing the skin of his mouth."[110]

People related to Fanmi Lavalas (Haiti's largest leftist party) have repeatedly expressed discontent with MINUSTAH and its management of political public dissent. Protests on 15 November 2010 in Cap-Haitien and other areas of the country resulted in at least two civilian deaths and numerous injuries. MINUSTAH stated that the protests seemed politically motivated, "aimed at creating a climate of insecurity on the eve of elections." Regarding the deaths, it stated that a UN peacekeeper shot out of self-defence.[111]

Fanmi Lavalas (the party of former President Aristide) took part in the burial of Catholic priest Gerard Jean-Juste on 18 June 2009. It was later reported that the procession was suddenly interrupted by gunfire. Fanmi Lavalas witnesses said that Minustah Brazilian soldiers opened fire after attempting to arrest one of the mourners; the UN denied the shooting and reported that the victim had been killed by either a rock thrown by the crowd or a blunt instrument.[112]

Legal proceedings edit

A trial is currently in progress at the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (IACHR). The case, brought forward by Mario Joseph from the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux (BAI) and Brian Concannon from the Institute for Justice & Democracy in Haiti, concerns Jimmy Charles, a grassroots activist who was arrested by UN troops in 2005, and handed over to the Haitian police. His body was found a few days later in the morgue, filled with bullet holes.[113] The BAI filed a complaint in Haitian courts, to no avail, and in early 2006 it filed a petition with the IACHR. The IACHR accepted the case regarding the State of Haiti, and rejected the complaint against Brazil.[114]

Ending edit

On 13 April 2017, the Security Council announced the replacement of this mission by a follow-up operation called the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti (MINUJUSTH) from 15 October 2017.[10]

Awards edit

18 Rwanda National Police officers were decorated with service medals for their outstanding peacekeeping role in Haiti.[115]

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Official website (in French)
  • Official website
  • MINUSTAH Background
  • MINUSTAH Historique (in French)
  • Documentation of Nepal's contribution to MINUSTAH
  • Documentation of Argentine Navy's contribution to MINUSTAH
  • Documentation of Japan's contribution to MINUSTAH
  • Sri Lanka's contribution to MINUSTAH
  • MINUSTAH Photos in Haiti
  • MINUSTAH Videos in Haiti
  • MINUSTAH FM RADIO Streaming iTunes

united, nations, stabilisation, mission, haiti, french, mission, nations, unies, pour, stabilisation, haïti, also, known, minustah, acronym, french, name, peacekeeping, mission, haiti, that, operation, from, 2004, 2017, mission, military, component, brazilian,. The United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti French Mission des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation en Haiti also known as MINUSTAH an acronym of the French name was a UN peacekeeping mission in Haiti that was in operation from 2004 to 2017 The mission s military component was led by the Brazilian Army and commanded by a Brazilian The force was composed of 2 366 military personnel and 2 533 police supported by international civilian personnel a local civilian staff and United Nations Volunteers 1 United Nations Stabilization Mission in HaitiBrazilian soldiers patrol the camp Jean Marie Vincent in Port au Prince HaitiAbbreviationMINUSTAH French Mission des Nations Unies pour la stabilisation en Haiti Formation1 June 2004Dissolved13 April 2017TypePeacekeeping missionLegal statusReplaced by MINUJUSTHHeadSandra Honore Special Representative of the Secretary General Parent organizationUN Department of Peacekeeping Operations United Nations Security CouncilWebsiteUN Peacekeeping MINUSTAH www minustah org in French The 2010 Haiti earthquake caused the collapse of the mission s headquarters in Port au Prince and killed the mission s chief Hedi Annabi of Tunisia his deputy Luiz Carlos da Costa of Brazil and the acting police commissioner RCMP Supt Doug Coates of Canada 2 3 4 On 14 January 2010 UN headquarters dispatched the former head of MINUSTAH and current Assistant Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operations Edmond Mulet as the organisation s Acting Special Representative of the Secretary General and interim head of MINUSTAH 5 Following the earthquake MINUSTAH concentrated on assisting the Haitian National Police in providing security within the country while American and Canadian military forces distributed humanitarian aid and provided security for aid distribution 6 Due to fears of instability 7 United Nations Security Council Resolution 1944 extended MINUSTAH s mandate 8 and it was periodically renewed until 2017 9 On 13 April 2017 the United Nations Security Council announced that the mission would end in October 2017 10 It was replaced by a much smaller follow up mission the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti MINUJUSTH 11 which itself concluded in 2019 Contents 1 Background 2 United Nations reports and resolutions 3 Status and history 4 2010 earthquake 5 Mission composition 5 1 Heads of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti 5 2 Force commanders of the MINUSTAH military component 5 3 Countries contributing military personnel 7 208 in all 69 70 5 4 Countries contributing police and or civilian personnel 2 038 in all 6 Cholera controversy 6 1 Legacy 7 Criticism 7 1 Political overtones 7 2 6 July 2005 incident 7 3 Rape scandal 7 4 Human rights cases 7 5 Legal proceedings 7 6 Ending 8 Awards 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksBackground editSee also 2004 Haitian coup d etat According to its mandate from the UN Security Council MINUSTAH was required to concentrate the use of its resources including civilian police on increasing security and protection during the electoral period and to assist with the restoration and maintenance of the rule of law public safety and public order in Haiti 12 MINUSTAH was established by United Nations Security Council Resolution 1542 on 30 April 2004 because the Security Council deemed the situation in Haiti to be a threat to international peace and security in the region 13 In 2004 UN peacekeepers entered Cite Soleil in an attempt to gain control of the area and end the anarchy 14 nbsp U S Marines patrol the streets of Port au Prince in March 2004 nbsp Brazilian MINUSTAH soldier with a Haitian girl in February 2005 nbsp Brazilian soldier stands security in Port au PrinceIn 2004 independent human rights organizations accused the Haitian National Police HNP and sometimes MINUSTAH of atrocities against civilians 15 16 17 It is still argued if any or how many civilians were killed as a by product of MINUSTAH crackdowns on criminals operating from slums The UN and MINUSTAH expressed deep regret for any loss of life during operations 18 19 In early 2005 MINUSTAH force commander Lieutenant General Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira testified at a congressional commission in Brazil that we are under extreme pressure from the international community to use violence citing Canada France and the United States 20 Having ended his tour of duty on 1 September 2005 Heleno was replaced by General Urano Teixeira da Matta Bacellar as force commander of MINUSTAH On 7 January 2006 Bacellar was found dead in his hotel room 21 The death was considered to be suicide however later some suspicion of assassination arose 22 His interim replacement was Chilean General Eduardo Aldunate Hermann On 17 January 2006 it was announced that Brazilian General Jose Elito Carvalho Siqueira would be the permanent replacement for Bacellar as the head of the United Nations Haiti force 23 On 14 February 2006 in its Resolution 1658 the United Nations Security Council extended MINUSTAH s mandate until 15 August 2006 24 MINUSTAH is also a precedent as the first mission in the region to be led by the Brazilian and Chilean military and almost entirely composed of Latin American forces particularly from Brazil Argentina Chile Bolivia Ecuador and Uruguay 25 From 1 September 2007 until his death following the earthquake on 12 January 2010 the mission was led by Tunisian Hedi Annabi 26 India provided three units of around 500 police personnel for MINUSTAH The Indian contingent joined the mission in October 2008 and were stationed in Port au Prince and Hinche They were tasked with maintaining law and order setting up and operating checkpoints and anti crime operations 27 Two Indian police units will remain in Haiti after MINUSTAH ends on 15 October 2017 to serve in the successor mission the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti MINUJUSTH 28 United Nations reports and resolutions editOn 23 February 2004 the United Nations Security Council was convened at the request of CARICOM for the first time in four years to address the deteriorating situation in Haiti 29 nbsp Brazilian Army snipers are positioned to defend UN base during combat with gangs in the Haitian capital Port au Prince in 2011 On 29 February 2004 the Security Council passed a resolution taking note of the resignation of Jean Bertrand Aristide as President of Haiti and the swearing in of President Boniface Alexandre as the acting President of Haiti in accordance with the Constitution of Haiti and authorized the immediate deployment of a Multinational Interim Force 30 On 30 April 2004 MINUSTAH was established and given its mandate with a military component of up to 6 700 troops 31 In July the General Assembly authorized the financing of the mission with US 200 million 32 which followed a donors conference in Washington DC 33 The first progress report from MINUSTAH was released at the end of August 34 In September the interim president of Haiti Boniface Alexandre spoke to the United Nations General Assembly in support of MINUSTAH 35 In November there was a second report 36 and the Security Council mandate for MINUSTAH 37 The mandate has most recently been extended by the Security Council until October 2010 with the intention of further renewal 38 Status and history editSee also 2004 Haitian coup d etat nbsp Brazilian Army U N peacekeeper nbsp UN headquarters UNDP compound UNICEF offices in relation to the city of Port au PrinceAlthough the United Nations Stabilization Mission MINUSTAH has been in Haiti since 2004 as of 2007 it continued to struggle for control over the armed gangs It maintains an armed checkpoint at the entrance to the shanty town of Cite Soleil and the road is blocked with armed vehicles 39 In January 2006 two Jordanian peacekeepers were killed in Cite Soleil 40 In October 2006 a heavily armed group of the Haitian National Police were able to enter Cite Soleil for the first time in three years and were able to remain one hour as armoured UN troops patrolled the area Since this is where the armed gangs take their kidnap victims the police s ability to penetrate the area even for such a short time was seen as a sign of progress 41 The situation of continuing violence is similar in Port au Prince Ex soldiers supporters of the ex president occupied the home of ex president Jean Bertrand Aristide against the wishes of the Haitian government 42 Before Christmas 2006 the UN force announced that it would take a tougher stance against gang members in Port au Prince However since then the atmosphere there has not improved and the armed roadblocks and barbed wire barricades have not been moved After four people were killed and another six injured in a UN operation exchange of fire with criminals in Cite Soleil in late January 2007 the United States announced that it would contribute 20 million to create jobs in Cite Soleil 43 44 In early February 2007 700 UN troops flooded Cite Soleil which led to a major gun battle Although the troops make regular forcible entries into the area a spokesperson said this one was the largest attempted so far by the UN troops 45 On 28 July 2007 Edmond Mulet the UN Special Representative in Haiti and MINUSTAH Mission Chief warned of a sharp increase in lynchings and other mob attacks in Haiti He said MINUSTAH which now has 9 000 troops there will launch a campaign to remind people that lynchings are a crime 46 On 2 August 2007 UN Secretary General Ban Ki moon arrived in Haiti to assess the role of the UN forces announcing that he would visit Cite Soleil during his visit He said that it was Haiti s largest slum and as such was the most important target for U N peacekeepers in gaining control over the armed gangs During his visit he announced an extension of the mandate of the UN forces in Haiti 47 It took MINUSTAH three months and 800 arrests to deal with the gangs and decrease the number of kidnappings on the streets 48 President Rene Preval has expressed ambivalent feelings about the UN security presence stating that if the Haitian people were asked if they wanted the UN forces to leave they would say yes 49 Survivors frequently blame the UN peacekeepers for deaths of relatives 50 In April 2008 Haiti was facing a severe food crisis as well as governmental destabilization to Parliament s failure to ratify the president s choice of a prime minister There were severe riots so the UN force fired rubber bullets in Port au Prince and the riot calmed 51 The head of MINUSTAH called for a new government to be chosen as soon as possible Meanwhile the UN provided emergency food 52 Haiti was hit by four consecutive hurricanes between August and September 2008 These storms crippled coastal regions requiring humanitarian aid for 800 000 people 53 Critics of MINUSTAH s goal of providing security say that the provision of increased police presence is coming with the unfortunate consequence of neglecting the vast socioeconomic problems in the area the lack of effort in addressing infrastructure improvement the joblessness and the pervasive poverty In 2009 with the appointment of former U S President Bill Clinton as the UN Special Envoy there is hope that the international donor community will provide increased aid MINUSTAH renewed its commitment to Haiti and 3 billion for projects has been pledged by the international community mainly for rebuilding after the hurricanes However in Cite Soleil there are signs of a desire for political independence that the international community would rather ignore 48 In October 2010 nine months after the earthquake the UN extended MINUSTAH s mission In the capital there were protests from those who want the MINUSTAH to leave Demonstrators chanted Down with the occupation and burned the flag of Brazil as representative of the largest contingent of MINUSTAH 54 2010 earthquake edit nbsp The collapsed headquarters after the 2010 earthquake On 12 January 2010 the United Nations reported that headquarters of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti MINUSTAH the Christopher Hotel in Port au Prince collapsed and several other UN facilities were damaged a large number of UN personnel were unaccounted for in the aftermath of a major earthquake 55 The Mission s Chief Hedi Annabi was reported dead on 13 January by President Rene Preval and French news sources and on 16 January the United Nations confirmed the death after his body was recovered by a search and rescue team from China 56 Principal Deputy Special Representative Luiz Carlos da Costa was also confirmed dead as well as the Acting Police Commissioner Royal Canadian Mounted Police RCMP Superintendent Doug Coates who were meeting with eight Chinese nationals four peacekeepers and a delegation of four police officers from China when the earthquake struck 57 The Chinese search and rescue team recovered the bodies of the ten individuals on 16 January 2010 Jens Kristensen senior humanitarian officer for the UN was rescued by a team from the state of Virginia after five days trapped in the rubble 58 Mission composition edit nbsp Map of MINUSTAH deployment in December 2006 nbsp Nepalese members of MINUSTAH secure an airdrop of aid supplies in Mirebalais in January 2010 nbsp Brazilian military in helping the victims after the earthquake 12 January 2010 Heads of the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti edit Juan Gabriel Valdes of Chile August 2004 to May 2006 59 Edmond Mulet of Guatemala June 2006 to August 2007 60 Hedi Annabi of Tunisia September 2007 to January 2010 61 Edmond Mulet of Guatemala January 2010 to June 2011 62 Mariano Fernandez of Chile June 2011 to January 2013 63 Nigel Fisher of Canada January 2013 to July 2013 interim appointment 64 Sandra Honore of Trinidad and Tobago July 2013 to October 2017 65 Force commanders of the MINUSTAH military component edit Maj General Augusto Heleno Ribeiro Pereira Brazil 2004 to August 2005 Maj General Urano Teixeira da Matta Bacellar Brazil September 2005 to January 2006 66 Maj General Eduardo Aldunate Hermann Chile January 2006 interim appointment Lt General Jose Elito Carvalho Siqueira Brazil January 2006 to January 2007 67 Maj General Carlos Alberto dos Santos Cruz Brazil January 2007 to April 2009 68 Maj General Floriano Peixoto Vieira Neto Brazil April 2009 to March 2010 Maj General Luiz Guilherme Paul Cruz Brazil March 2010 to March 2011 Maj General Luiz Eduardo Ramos Baptista Pereira Brazil March 2011 to March 2012 Maj General Fernando Rodrigues Goulart Brazil March 2012 to March 2013 Lt General Edson Leal Pujol Brazil March 2013 to March 2014 Lt General Jose Luiz Jaborandy Junior Brazil March 2014 to August 2015 Brig General Jorge Pena Leiva Chile September to October 2015 interim appointment Lt General Ajax Porto Pinheiro Brazil October 2015 to October 2017 Countries contributing military personnel 7 208 in all 69 70 edit nbsp Argentina 558 including a field hospital nbsp Bolivia 208 nbsp Brazil 2 200 nbsp Bangladesh 2 200 nbsp Canada 10 nbsp Chile 499 nbsp Croatia 3 nbsp Dominican Republic 2 nbsp Ecuador 67 nbsp France 2 nbsp Guatemala 118 nbsp Indonesia 167 nbsp Jordan 728 nbsp Kyrgyzstan 25 71 nbsp Mexico 6 nbsp Nepal 1 075 nbsp Paraguay 31 nbsp Peru 209 nbsp Philippines 157 nbsp South Korea 242 nbsp Sri Lanka 959 nbsp United States 4 Countries contributing police and or civilian personnel 2 038 in all edit nbsp Algeria 1 nbsp Benin 32 nbsp Brazil 4 nbsp Burkina Faso 26 nbsp Cameroon 8 nbsp Canada 94 nbsp Central African Republic 7 nbsp Chad 3 nbsp Chile 15 nbsp China 143 nbsp Colombia 37 69 72 nbsp Cote d Ivoire 60 nbsp DR Congo 2 nbsp Egypt 22 nbsp El Salvador 7 nbsp France 64 nbsp Grenada 3 nbsp Guinea 55 nbsp India 139 nbsp Israel 14 nbsp Italy 4 nbsp Jamaica 5 nbsp Jordan 312 nbsp Madagascar 2 nbsp Mali 55 nbsp Nepal 168 nbsp Niger 62 nbsp Nigeria 128 nbsp Oman 2 nbsp Pakistan 248 nbsp Philippines 18 nbsp Romania 23 nbsp Russian Federation 10 nbsp Rwanda 14 nbsp Senegal 131 nbsp Serbia 5 nbsp South Africa 2 nbsp Spain 41 nbsp Sri Lanka 7 nbsp Togo 5 nbsp Thailand 20 nbsp Turkey 46 nbsp United States 48 nbsp Uruguay 7 nbsp Yemen 1 69 70 Cholera controversy edit nbsp U S Marine Corps Cpl Matt Kirkland and a United Nations peacekeeper from Sri Lanka Army provide security for Haitian women receiving bags of rice for their families at a food distribution point in the city of CarrefourIn October 2010 a cholera outbreak was confirmed in Haiti the first in the country s modern history According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention CDC as of 4 August 2013 over 800 000 cases and 9 600 deaths had been reported since the outbreak first began in October 2010 73 MINUSTAH was linked with introducing the disease to the country by sources such as the CDC the American Society for Microbiology Yale Law School and the School of Public Health 74 The cause of the disease was attributed to faulty construction of UN sanitation systems in its base located in the town of Meye 75 Many reports from Meye stated that people had seen sewage spilling from the UN base into the Artibonite River the largest river in Haiti and which is used by residents for drinking cooking and bathing 76 In December 2010 a study traced the Haitian cholera strain to South Asia The UN conducted an independent investigation into the origin of the epidemic at the end of 2010 A panel of independent UN experts was assembled and their collective findings were compiled in a report The panel determined that the evidence implicating the Nepalese troops was inconclusive Though they admitted that the cholera strain was most likely from Nepal it cited a confluence of factors that also contributed to the outbreak and that no one deliberate action of a group or individual was to blame 77 However in 2013 the committee changed its statement concluding that the UN troops from Nepal most likely were the cause of the outbreak 78 The Bureau des Avocats Internationaux BAI a Haitian coalition of lawyers and the Institute for Justice amp Democracy in Haiti IJDH its U S affiliate filed claims with MINUSTAH on behalf of 5 000 Haitian petitioners in November 2011 The claims asked for the installation of the water and sanitation infrastructure necessary to control the epidemic compensation for the victims and an apology 79 Fifteen months later in February 2013 the UN stated that the case was not receivable because it involved review of policy matters citing the Convention on Privileges and Immunities of the United Nations 80 In October 2013 BAI IJDH and another U S law firm filed a lawsuit challenging UN immunity in U S federal court on behalf of Haitian and Haitian American victims of the cholera epidemic 81 In January 2015 Judge J Paul Oetken of the U S District Court in Manhattan dismissed the lawsuit affirming UN immunity 82 In May 2015 an appeal to Oetken s decision was filed 83 In February 2013 the Haitian government created its National Plan for the Elimination of Cholera a 10 year plan set to eradicate the disease Two of the ten years will be devoted as a short term response to the epidemic The last eight will be to completely eliminate the disease The projected budget for the plan is 2 billion 84 To support the initiative UN Secretary General Ban Ki moon pledged 23 5 million to combat cholera However following the pledge there was much discontent with the UN s progress 19 members of the U S Congress urged the UN to take responsibility for cholera in Haiti In two separate occasions members of the US Congress sent a letter to the US ambassador to the UN Susan Rice urging her and the organization to ensure that the cholera initiative was fully funded and implemented quickly 85 Nineteen US Representatives also wrote to Ban Ki Moon to express concerns about the seeming lack of progress in the UN s cholera response 86 Ban Ki moon told members of the US Congress that the UN was committed in helping Haiti overcome the epidemic though no financial compensation to the victims would be granted 87 Since 2010 the UN has spent and or committed more than 140 million to the epidemic On 9 May 2013 the Haitian Senate unanimously voted save for one abstention on a policy that would demand the UN to compensate the nation s cholera victims The Senators also proposed to form a commission of experts in international and penal law to study what legal means both nationally and internationally could be used to prove MINUSTAH s responsibility for starting the cholera outbreak 88 Legacy edit In August 2016 a report written by UN special rapporteur Philip Alston was leaked to the New York Times Alston issued a scathing condemnation of the UN s legal approach to cholera in Haiti which he termed morally unconscionable legally indefensible and politically self defeating Alston also lamented that the UN s approach upholds a double standard according to which the U N insists that member states respect human rights while rejecting any such responsibility for itself 89 Four months later Secretary General Ban Ki moon issued an apology for the UN s role in the cholera outbreak and stressed the organization s moral responsibility to fight the disease 90 Though the apology stopped short of admitting fault for introducing the disease to Haiti many victim advocates saw it as a major milestone Ban also launched a new approach to cholera by the UN in the form of a two track plan The UN would raise 400 million in voluntary contributions from member states with 200 million dedicated to providing material assistance to communities most affected by cholera and another 200 million going to fight the disease 91 However the plan gained little traction among member states Because remaining funds allocated to MINUSTAH were not required to be repurposed for cholera reparations many member states took back their contributions and by July 2017 just 9 22 million had been raised 92 Criticism editFrom the beginning MINUSTAH has been squeezed between traditional conservative sectors which demanded more action and the leftist parties mainly linked to ousted President Aristide which criticize its actions and constantly appeal for its departure citation needed Political overtones edit Even though mostly composed by military forces the recruitment of large numbers of foreign police officers has proven difficult the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti is a police mission of the United Nations dispatched to a country facing uncontained violence stemming from political unrest and from common criminals 93 Partidaries of former President Jean Bertrand Aristide have characterized MINUSTAH as an attempt by the United States Canada and France to neutralize the supporters of Fanmi Lavalas Aristide s party 94 and secure the more pro Western government of Gerard Latortue The mission was mandated to assist and reinforce the action of the Haitian Police in Port au Prince s slums 95 6 July 2005 incident edit On 6 July 2005 MINUSTAH led by Brazilian general Augusto Heleno 96 carried out a raid in the Cite Soleil section of Port au Prince 97 The raid targeted a base of illegally armed rebels led by the known bandit Dread Wilme Reports from pro Lavalas sources as well as journalist Kevin Pina contend that the raid targeted civilians and was an attempt to destroy the popular support for Haiti s exiled former leader Aristide before scheduled upcoming elections Estimates on the number of fatalities range from five to as high as 80 with the higher numbers being claimed by those reporting that the raid targeted civilians All sources agree that no MINUSTAH personnel were killed All sources also agree that Dread Wilme born Emmanuel Wilmer was killed in the raid MINUSTAH spokespeople called Wilme a gangster Other sources such as the pro Aristide Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network call Wilme a community leader and a martyr 98 The incident has been since heralded by groups who oppose the MINUSTAH presence in Haiti and who support the return of ousted President Aristide 39 MINUSTAH has also been accused by Fanmi Lavalas supporters of allowing the Haitian National Police to commit atrocities and massacres against Lavalas supporters and Haitian citizens On 6 January 2006 UN mission head Juan Gabriel Valdes announced that MINUSTAH forces would undertake another action on Cite Soleil On one side traditional Haitian sectors criticized MINUSTAH for standing by and not stopping the violence taking place in slums like Cite Soelil on the other hand human rights groups were prepared to condemn MINUSTAH for any collateral damage deriving from their actions It was reported that Valdes said We are going to intervene in the coming days I think there ll be collateral damage but we have to impose our force there is no other way 99 Rape scandal edit Main article Sexual abuse scandal in Haiti MINUSTAH soldiers have been accused of being involved in a number of sexual assault cases In 2011 four Uruguayan UN marines were accused of gang raping a 19 year old Haitian male in Port Salut It was said the alleged rape was recorded with a cell phone by the peacekeepers themselves and leaked to the Internet 100 The teenager and his family were forced to relocate their house after the video went viral 101 In March 2012 three Pakistani MINUSTAH officers were found guilty of raping a mentally challenged 14 year old boy in the town of Gonaives Pakistani officials sentenced each officer to one year in a Pakistan prison 102 In November 2007 114 103 members of the 950 member Sri Lanka peacekeeping contingent in Haiti were accused of sexual misconduct and abuse 104 105 108 members including 3 officers were sent back after being implicated in alleged misconduct and sexual abuse 106 UN spokeswoman Michele Montas said The United Nations and the Sri Lankan government deeply regret any sexual exploitation and abuse that has occurred 105 The Sri Lankan Officials claim that there is little tangible evidence on this case 103 After inquiry into the case the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services OIOS has concluded acts of sexual exploitation and abuse against children were frequent and occurred usually at night and at virtually every location where the contingent personnel were deployed The OIOS is assisting in the pending legal proceedings initiated by the Sri Lankan Government and has said charges should include statutory rape because it involves children under 18 years of age 107 In 2015 a new investigation was released accusing MINUSTAH peacekeepers of abusing further hundreds of Haitians 108 Human rights cases edit In 2010 Gerard Jean Gilles a 16 year old Haitian boy who ran miscellaneous errands for the Nepalese soldiers in Cap Haitien was found dead hanging inside of MINUSTAH s Formed Police Unit base UN personnel denied responsibility claiming that the teen committed suicide The troops released the body for autopsy seventy two hours after the death the examination ruled out suicide as a potential cause of death 109 Nepalese UN troops were also accused for other misdeeds Several days before the Jean Gilles incident the local press charged a Nepalese soldier of torturing a minor in a public area in Cap Haitien The soldier was said to have forced his hands into the youth s mouth in an attempt to separate his lower jaw from his upper jaw tearing the skin of his mouth 110 People related to Fanmi Lavalas Haiti s largest leftist party have repeatedly expressed discontent with MINUSTAH and its management of political public dissent Protests on 15 November 2010 in Cap Haitien and other areas of the country resulted in at least two civilian deaths and numerous injuries MINUSTAH stated that the protests seemed politically motivated aimed at creating a climate of insecurity on the eve of elections Regarding the deaths it stated that a UN peacekeeper shot out of self defence 111 Fanmi Lavalas the party of former President Aristide took part in the burial of Catholic priest Gerard Jean Juste on 18 June 2009 It was later reported that the procession was suddenly interrupted by gunfire Fanmi Lavalas witnesses said that Minustah Brazilian soldiers opened fire after attempting to arrest one of the mourners the UN denied the shooting and reported that the victim had been killed by either a rock thrown by the crowd or a blunt instrument 112 Legal proceedings edit A trial is currently in progress at the Inter American Court of Human Rights IACHR The case brought forward by Mario Joseph from the Bureau des Avocats Internationaux BAI and Brian Concannon from the Institute for Justice amp Democracy in Haiti concerns Jimmy Charles a grassroots activist who was arrested by UN troops in 2005 and handed over to the Haitian police His body was found a few days later in the morgue filled with bullet holes 113 The BAI filed a complaint in Haitian courts to no avail and in early 2006 it filed a petition with the IACHR The IACHR accepted the case regarding the State of Haiti and rejected the complaint against Brazil 114 Ending edit On 13 April 2017 the Security Council announced the replacement of this mission by a follow up operation called the United Nations Mission for Justice Support in Haiti MINUJUSTH from 15 October 2017 10 Awards edit18 Rwanda National Police officers were decorated with service medals for their outstanding peacekeeping role in Haiti 115 See also editUnited Nations Mission in Haiti List of UN peacekeeping missions List of countries where United Nations peacekeepers are currently deployedReferences edit MINUSTAH Facts and Figures United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti 16 June 2016 Briefing by Martin Nesirky Spokesperson for the Secretary General and Jean Victor Nkolo Spokesperson for the President of the General Assembly United Nations 13 January 2010 Retrieved 13 January 2010 Clinton visits quake hit Haitians BBC News 16 January 2010 Retrieved 16 January 2010 Haiti MINUSTAH Facts and Figures un org Retrieved 2007 08 14 Ban mourns deaths of top UN officials in Haiti quake United Nations 16 January 2010 Retrieved 18 January 2010 Joint UN team to assess protection issues in quake hit Haiti United Nations 22 January 2010 Retrieved 22 January 2010 Security Council Renewing Haiti Mission Mandate in Resolution 1944 2010 Looks to Review of Situation After Pending Elections New Government UN Department of Public Information News and Media Division 14 October 2010 Retrieved 25 December 2010 United Nations Security Council 13 October 2009 Resolution 1892 2009 PDF United Nations Retrieved 2010 01 14 Resolution 2012 2011 14 October 2011 a b Section United Nations News Service 2017 04 13 UN News Security Council decides UN Mission in Haiti will close by October approves smaller follow on operation UN News Service Section Retrieved 2017 04 13 Security Council decides UN Mission in Haiti will close by October approves smaller follow on operation United Nations 13 April 2017 Retrieved 2 June 2017 Haiti former Senator detained after UN mission finds illegal weapons un org 3 January 2006 Retrieved 2007 08 14 Haiti MINUSTAH Mandate United Nations Retrieved 2007 08 15 UN peacekeepers storm Haiti slum BBC News 15 December 2004 Retrieved 2007 08 16 Haiti Human Rights Investigation November 11 21 2004 PDF Miami Law Archived from the original PDF on 2007 08 10 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Haiti Amnesty International calls on the transitional government to set up an independent commission of enquiry into summary executions attributed to members of the Haitian National Police Amnesty International Archived from the original on 2005 05 25 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Document currently not found PDF Harvard Law Archived from the original PDF on 2006 02 03 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Buncombe Andrew 2006 01 10 UN admits civilians may have died in Haiti peacekeeping raid The Independent London Archived from the original on 2007 09 30 Retrieved 2007 08 15 MINUSTAH Statement Relating to the Operation Conducted on 05 July 2005 at Cite Soleil PDF UN United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti Retrieved 2007 08 15 Canada plays big role in propping up Haiti regime ZNet Retrieved 2007 08 15 Haiti UN mission chief found dead BBC News 2006 01 08 Retrieved 2007 08 15 WikiLeaks points to US meddling in Haiti Guardian UK by Kim Ives The Guardian 21 January 2011 New peacekeeping head for Haiti BBC News 2006 01 18 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Security Council calls on Haitians to refrain from violence China View Archived from the original on 2011 05 14 Retrieved 2007 08 15 The Changing Role of the Military in Latin America PDF Focal Archived from the original PDF on 2007 07 10 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Prise de fonction du nouveau Representant special du Secretaire general des Nations Unies pour Haiti et Chef de la MINUSTAH MINUSTAH Archived from the original on 2008 01 08 Retrieved 2007 08 31 Indian peacekeepers in Haiti safe says CISF The Hindu 13 January 2010 Retrieved 20 April 2017 Two Indian police contingents to remain in Haiti as UN ends peacekeeping mission The New Indian Express Retrieved 20 April 2017 United Nations Security Council Verbatim Report 4917 S PV 4917 26 February 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations Security Council Resolution 1529 S RES 1529 2004 29 February 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations Security Council Resolution 1542 S RES 1542 2004 30 April 2007 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations General Assembly Session 58 Resolution 311 A RES 58 311 30 July 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations Security Council Presidential StatementS PRST 2004 32 page 2 10 September 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations Security Council Document 698 S 2004 698 30 August 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations General Assembly Session 59 Verbatim Report 6 A 59 PV 6 page 8 President Alexandre Haiti 22 September 2004 at 15 00 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations Security Council Document 908 Report of the Secretary General on the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti S 2004 908 18 November 2004 Retrieved 2010 01 14 United Nations Security Council Verbatim Report 5090 S PV 5090 29 November 2004 Retrieved 2007 10 18 United Nations Security Council Resolution 1892 S RES 1892 2009 page 3 13 October 2009 Retrieved 2009 10 29 a b Hoping for change in Haiti s Cite Soleil International Red Cross Retrieved 2007 08 16 Two UN soldiers killed in Haiti BBC News 18 January 2006 Retrieved 2007 08 16 Haiti police visit gang stronghold BBC Caribbean Retrieved 2007 08 02 Ex soldiers occupy Aristide home BBC News December 16 2004 Retrieved 2007 08 16 HAITI Poor Residents of Capital Describe a State of Siege ipsnews Archived from the original on 2007 08 14 Retrieved 2007 08 02 US aid for Cite Soleil BBC Caribbean Retrieved 2007 08 02 UN troops flood into Haiti slum BBC New Retrieved 2007 08 14 UN concerned at Haiti lynchings BBC News 2007 07 28 Retrieved 2007 08 02 UN chief visits Haiti BBC Caribbean Retrieved 2007 08 15 On 9 October 2009 11 UN peacekeepers in Haiti were killed in a plane crash in the city of Ganthier a b Guidi Ruxandra 20 August 2009 MINUSTAH Focuses on Security in Haiti s Cite Soleil Slum Americas Quarterly America Council and Society of the Americas Retrieved 2010 01 29 UN chief visits Haiti BBC Caribbean Retrieved 2007 08 02 Jordan Sandra 2007 04 01 Haiti s children die in UN crossfire London Guardian Unlimited Retrieved 2007 08 02 Calm returns to Haiti after riots BBC News 2008 04 10 Retrieved 2008 07 13 UN appeals to Haitian politicians BBC News 2008 04 17 Retrieved 2008 07 13 Andre Richard 14 January 2010 A Haitian American Perspective Resilience in the Face of Tragedy Americas Quarterly America Council and Society of the Americas Retrieved 2010 01 29 Anti UN protesters block Haiti base Americas Al Jazeera English Retrieved 2012 05 02 Briefing by Martin Nesirky Spokesperson for the Secretary General and Jean Victor Nkolo Spokesperson for the President of the General Assembly United Nations 2010 01 13 Retrieved 2010 01 13 U N mission chief in Haiti killed in quake Reuters 2009 02 09 Retrieved 2010 01 13 Statement of confirmation of death of Special Representative of the Secretary General in Haiti Hedi Annabi Principal Deputy Special Representative Luiz Carlos da Costa and Acting UN Police Commissioner in Haiti Doug Coates PDF United Nations Retrieved 17 January 2010 Christian Science Monitor Haiti earthquake How a top UN official was plucked from the rubble Howard LaFranchi 26 January 2010 accessed 30 January 2010 Juan Gabriele Valdes appointed special representative and head of UN Mission in Haiti www un org Retrieved 2008 07 13 Secretary General appoints Edmond Mulet of Guatemala his special representative in Haiti www un org Retrieved 2008 07 13 Secretary General appoints Hedi Annabi OF Tunisia Special Representative Head of United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti www un org Retrieved 2008 07 13 Secretary General appoints Edmond Mulet of Guatemala his special representative in Haiti www un org Retrieved 2008 07 13 Secretary General appoints Mariano Fernandez of Chile as special Representative for Haiti and Head of Stabilization Mission there www un org News Press 2010 04 29 Secretary General Appoints Nigel Fisher Canada Deputy Special Representative Ad Interim for Haiti The UN Website retrieved 20 October 2011 Secretary General appoints Sandra Honore of Trinidad and Tobago as his Special Representative in Haiti Article Department of Public Information 31 May 2013 New commander leads Haiti force BBC News 2005 09 01 Retrieved 2008 07 13 Secretary General Appoints Lieutenant General Jose Elito Siqueira Carvalho new Force Commander of UN Mission in Haiti www unis unvienna org Retrieved 2008 07 13 Haiti Brazilian general to be new Force Commander for UN peacekeeping mission www un org 9 January 2007 Retrieved 2008 07 13 a b c United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti United Nations Retrieved 2007 11 25 a b UN Mission s Contributions by Country United Nations Kyrgyzskie mirotvorcy otpravyatsya v Siriyu More Colombian police headed to Haiti for UN mission Archived from the original on 2010 01 09 Retrieved 2010 09 15 Cholera in Haiti Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Retrieved 12 September 2013 Edmonds Kevin Who protects us from you Minustah and Haiti Guyana Publications Inc Retrieved 12 September 2013 Rosalyn Chan Tassity Johnson Charanya Krishnaswami Samuel Oliker Friedland amp Celso Perez Carballo Peacekeeping Without Accountability PDF Yale Law School Retrieved 9 September 2013 Haiti cholera UN peacekeepers to blame report says bbc co uk BBC News 8 December 2010 Retrieved 25 July 2013 Sontag Deborah 31 March 2012 In Haiti Global Failures on a Cholera Epidemic NY Times Retrieved 25 July 2013 UN s Own Independent Experts Now Say MINUSTAH Troops Most Likely Caused Cholera Epidemic Center for Economic and Policy Research Retrieved 9 September 2013 The Cholera Accountability Project Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti Retrieved 25 July 2013 Haiti s Cholera Outbreak Tied To Nepalese U N Peacekeepers NPR org NPR Retrieved 9 September 2013 Cholera litigation www ijdh org Institute for Justice amp Democracy in Haiti Retrieved June 16 2015 Ingram David 10 January 2015 U S judge rules Haitians cannot sue U N for cholera epidemic www reuters com Reuters Retrieved 16 June 2015 15 455 cv United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit PDF www ijdh org Institute for Justice amp Democracy in Haiti Retrieved 16 June 2015 Watts Jonathan 29 November 2012 Haiti seeks 2bn for cholera epidemic introduced by UN peacekeepers Guardian News and Media Limited Retrieved 9 September 2013 Members of U S Congress urge U S government to support UN cholera initiative Canada Haiti Action Network Waters Maxine 19 Members of U S Congress urge UN to take responsibility for cholera in Haiti The Defend Haiti Archived from the original on 2013 12 25 Retrieved 2013 09 30 Lederer Edith UN chief assures US Congress of commitment to help Haiti overcome cholera epidemic Star Tribune Ives Kim 22 May 2013 Cholera Legal Suit Against the UN Takes Shape Lawyers Seek Haitian Claimants in New York Haiti Analysis Katz Jonathan M 2016 08 17 U N Admits Role in Cholera Epidemic in Haiti The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2017 06 08 Sengupta Somini 2016 12 01 U N Apologizes for Role in Haiti s 2010 Cholera Outbreak The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2017 06 08 Section United Nations News Service 2016 11 30 UN News Haiti UN s new approach on cholera puts people at heart of the response UN News Service Section Retrieved 2017 06 08 Will State Inaction at UN Imperil Haiti Cholera Response IPI Global Observatory Retrieved 2017 06 08 Lindsay Reed Peace despite the Peacekeepers in Haiti NACLA Report on the Americas 39 6 May 2006 31 6 p 34 Evens Sanon and Jonathan Katz 2009 12 24 US lawmaker criticizes Haiti election exclusions Taiwan News Retrieved 23 January 2010 Harvard Law Student Advocates for Human Rights and Centro de Justica Global Keeping the Peace in Haiti An Assessment of the UN Stabilization Mission In Haiti March 2005 Gabriel Stargardter November 29 2018 General behind deadly Haiti raid takes aim at Brazil s gangs www reuters com Retrieved November 29 2018 Klein Naomi July 21 28 2005 My date with Aristide Ousted Haitian prez reveals he was tossed because he refused to privatize Now Archived from the original on 2009 10 14 Retrieved 2009 04 20 Haitian Lawyers Leadership Network Retrieved 2007 08 15 Half Hour for Haiti Stop Collateral Damage in Cite Soleil Institute for Justice amp Democracy in Haiti Archived from the original on 2007 07 29 Retrieved 2007 08 15 Weisbrot Mark 3 September 2011 Is this Minustah s Abu Ghraib moment in Haiti Guardian News and Media Limited Retrieved 11 September 2013 Klarreich Kathie 13 June 2012 Will the United Nations legacy in Haiti be all about scandal The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 10 September 2013 World Report 2013 Haiti Human Rights Watch Haiti 2013 Retrieved 12 September 2013 a b Haiti Over 100 Sri Lankan blue helmets repatriated on disciplinary grounds UN United Nations 2007 11 02 Retrieved 2007 11 04 Williams Carol J 2007 12 15 U N confronts another sex scandal Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2008 11 07 a b Sri Lanka to probe UN sex claims BBC 2007 11 03 Retrieved 2007 11 05 Reddy B Muralidhar 2007 11 05 Part of Sri Lankan contingent in Haiti to be sent back The Hindu Archived from the original on 2007 11 06 Retrieved 2007 11 05 UN confirms sex charges Sundaytimes 2008 03 30 Retrieved 2008 03 30 UN peacekeepers sexually abused hundreds in Haiti in exchange for food and medicine Report Times of India 10 June 2015 Archived from the original on 10 June 2015 Retrieved 10 June 2015 MINUSTAH Keeping the peace or conspiring against it PDF Harvard University Retrieved 9 September 2013 What Happened to Gerald Jean Gilles Center for Policy and Economic Research Retrieved 12 September 2013 In Response to Protests MINUSTAH Disregards Legitimate Grievances Center for Policy and Economic Research Retrieved 12 September 2013 Pena Kevin 20 June 2009 A funeral and a boycott The struggle continues in Haiti San Francisco Bay View Retrieved 2010 01 14 Photo of Jimmy Charles in morgue Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti Retrieved 2009 06 26 Admissibility Jimmy Charles v Haiti Case 81 06 Report No 65 06 Inter Am C H R OEA Ser L V II 127 Doc 4 rev 1 2007 umn edu Retrieved 2012 05 02 Press ed 24 April 2017 Rwandan Police peacekeepers in Haiti decorated The New Times Retrieved 24 April 2017 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti MINUSTAH Official website in French Official website MINUSTAH Background MINUSTAH Historique in French U S State Department Bureau of International Affairs Fact Sheet Documentation of Nepal s contribution to MINUSTAH Documentation of Argentine Army s contribution to MINUSTAH Documentation of Argentine Air Force s contribution to MINUSTAH Documentation of Argentine Navy s contribution to MINUSTAH Documentation of Japan s contribution to MINUSTAH Sri Lanka s contribution to MINUSTAH MINUSTAH Photos in Haiti MINUSTAH Videos in Haiti MINUSTAH FM RADIO Streaming iTunes MINUSTAH FM RADIO Streaming Windows Media Player Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United Nations Stabilisation Mission in Haiti amp oldid 1193607855, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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