Stressing crime prevention, Security Council extends UN mission in Haiti by 6 months
UN 15 August 2006 – Calling on the United
Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) to step up its
efforts to prevent crime and reduce violence in the impoverished
Caribbean country, the Security Council today extended the mission’s
mandate by another six months.
At a meeting at UN Headquarters in New York, the Council voted unanimously to extend
the mandate through 15 February next year, six months earlier than the
date requested by Secretary-General Kofi Annan in a recent report.
The resolution passed by the Council calls for MINUSTAH to be comprised
of up to 7,200 peacekeeping troops and as many as 1,951 police
officers, as well as 16 corrections officers seconded from other UN
Member States. As of mid-July, there were some 6,200 troops and 1,687
police.
Violent crime remains a problem of enormous magnitude in Haiti,
especially in the capital, Port-au-Prince, where the number of
kidnappings by armed groups has started to surge again after declining
at the beginning of the year.
The Council asked MINUSTAH to reorient its programme of disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration of combatants “towards a comprehensive
community violence reduction programme adapted to local conditions,”
including the provision of job opportunities for gang members and other
at-risk youths.
The mission was also asked to work closely with Haitian authorities to
combat cross-border drugs and arms trafficking, train police officers
and help reform the justice sector, which is plagued by problems
ranging from prison overcrowding to impunity for many violent crimes.
Council members also asked Haiti to complete run-off legislative and
municipal elections as soon as feasible, and for MINUSTAH to help in
the organization of those polls.
In his most recent report on the mission, Mr. Annan said that Haiti is
posed for a fresh start after the successful staging of elections
earlier this year and the subsequent formation of a broad-based
government, which has representatives from seven different political
parties in the 18-member cabinet.